940 resultados para Community-Institutional relations
Resumo:
The paper is to introduce the institutional repository (IR) as a powerful tool to support the researchers of the institution to archive and disseminate their research findings freely to the scholarly community on the Internet. The IR can improve the access to an institution’s research output enormously. The operations of an IR also require various interactions with researchers, which enables the library to gain a solid understanding of research needs and expectations. Through such interaction, the relationship and mutual trust between researchers and the library are strengthened. The experiences of the Institute of Developing Economies (IDE) library can be useful to other special libraries.
Resumo:
Community development must be accompanied by a social involvement process which creates functional groups of citizens capable of taking responsibility for their own development. It is important that this process promotes the structuring of all population groups and provides the appropriate institutional and technical support. The present paper addresses these issues based on over 25 years of experience by the Association Instituto de Desarrollo Comunitario de Cuenca in revitalizing rural areas of the Spanish province of Cuenca. This paper analyses the social involvement process encouraged by this association, the relationships between public institutions and local associations, the role of these associations and the difficulties encountered in the rural areas. The long-term perspective of this experience provides some keys which can be used to successfully support the process of social involvement ―such as information on its characteristics and methodological tools―, establish local associations and create sustainable partnerships that foster the growth of leadership within the community development process.
Resumo:
This work studies the most beneficial way of allocating water in an irrigation community in water shortage situations. Therefore, it proposes that the irrigation surface area be divided into homogeneous zones, each with a beneficial relationship with respect to the water applied. The mathematical formula that enables one to obtain the optimal quota for the users or irrigation community as a whole has been found for individual relations of a quadratic or power type, and these have yielded different and complementary characteristics. Dimensionless variables have been used to display the results, and to compare with other alternative allocation rules such as the proportional rule, referencing the situation without water restrictions. As a result, for each water shortage situation, the water that is allocated to each user is obtained, together with the losses in individual income and the losses for the community as a whole. Furthermore, a proposal is put forth for establishing the marginal benefit from the water available, which could be of interest in enabling each community to analyze whether it is in its best interest to invest in increasing the resource, or to sell the resource to other users. Finally, an example is given to demonstrate how the method works and to show that, when the differences between the production schemes are considered, the differences in benefit reduction between the proportional allocation and the optimal allocation are also sizeable. Read More: http://ascelibrary.org/doi/abs/10.1061/(ASCE)IR.1943-4774.0000667
Resumo:
Este estudo teve como objetivo analisar o Projeto Criança Esperança, da Rede Globo de Televisão, buscando identificar se ele é uma atividade de filantropia pela qual a empresa busca ajudar a sociedade brasileira, prestando-lhe contas sobre os resultados e direcionamento das doações por meio de seu veículo de comunicação ou se é uma Estratégia de Comunicação do Marketing de Causas Sociais da organização, que além de ajudar a comunidade com as ações propostas, utiliza os instrumentos de Relações Públicas para auxiliar na consolidação da imagem institucional da empresa, por meio da articulação dos seus vários públicos. A pesquisa embasou suas conclusões na análise dos valores das doações dos telespectadores no show/programa, dos índices de audiência e de participação de parceiros e de patrocinadores. Esses itens mostraram ser indicadores confiáveis de uma estratégia de comunicação de sucesso ou, até então, de insucesso do projeto. A metodologia empregada foi o Estudo de Caso do Programa/Show Criança Esperança, pesquisa bibliográfica embasada em documentos e entrevistas.
Resumo:
Este estudo teve como objetivo analisar o Projeto Criança Esperança, da Rede Globo de Televisão, buscando identificar se ele é uma atividade de filantropia pela qual a empresa busca ajudar a sociedade brasileira, prestando-lhe contas sobre os resultados e direcionamento das doações por meio de seu veículo de comunicação ou se é uma Estratégia de Comunicação do Marketing de Causas Sociais da organização, que além de ajudar a comunidade com as ações propostas, utiliza os instrumentos de Relações Públicas para auxiliar na consolidação da imagem institucional da empresa, por meio da articulação dos seus vários públicos. A pesquisa embasou suas conclusões na análise dos valores das doações dos telespectadores no show/programa, dos índices de audiência e de participação de parceiros e de patrocinadores. Esses itens mostraram ser indicadores confiáveis de uma estratégia de comunicação de sucesso ou, até então, de insucesso do projeto. A metodologia empregada foi o Estudo de Caso do Programa/Show Criança Esperança, pesquisa bibliográfica embasada em documentos e entrevistas.
Resumo:
A educação a distância (EAD) é uma modalidade de ensino antiga que se renova com as novas tecnologias de informação e comunicação (NTIC). O momento presente é promissor para o desenvolvimento de pesquisas neste âmbito, visto o crescimento desta modalidade de ensino no Brasil. Universidades brasileiras (públicas, privadas, comunitárias e confessionais) têm investido em projetos de educação a distância; percebe-se que os modelos utilizados carecem precisão na configuração das funções exercidas pelos vários atores presentes na EAD. Por esta razão, o trabalho tutorial é pe squisado tendo como objetivo o desvelar das relações entre a formação do sujeito e o papel do professor tutor, considerando o Projeto Pedagógico Institucional e o projeto pedagógico dos cursos a distância, bem como suas proposituras sobre a concepção antropológica (homem), a concepção gnosiológica (conhecimento) e a concepção política (relações político-sociais). As hipóteses que sustentaram a pesquisa consideraram a tutoria como: mediadora no processo de construção do conhecimento e desenvolvimento do sujeito e como uma das responsáveis pela articulação da equipe de EAD, nas relações com o corpo discente, da Universidade Metodista de São Paulo. O texto, a seguir, é fruto do desejo de corroborar com o desenvolvimento desta modalidade de ensino no Brasil.(AU)
Resumo:
A educação a distância (EAD) é uma modalidade de ensino antiga que se renova com as novas tecnologias de informação e comunicação (NTIC). O momento presente é promissor para o desenvolvimento de pesquisas neste âmbito, visto o crescimento desta modalidade de ensino no Brasil. Universidades brasileiras (públicas, privadas, comunitárias e confessionais) têm investido em projetos de educação a distância; percebe-se que os modelos utilizados carecem precisão na configuração das funções exercidas pelos vários atores presentes na EAD. Por esta razão, o trabalho tutorial é pe squisado tendo como objetivo o desvelar das relações entre a formação do sujeito e o papel do professor tutor, considerando o Projeto Pedagógico Institucional e o projeto pedagógico dos cursos a distância, bem como suas proposituras sobre a concepção antropológica (homem), a concepção gnosiológica (conhecimento) e a concepção política (relações político-sociais). As hipóteses que sustentaram a pesquisa consideraram a tutoria como: mediadora no processo de construção do conhecimento e desenvolvimento do sujeito e como uma das responsáveis pela articulação da equipe de EAD, nas relações com o corpo discente, da Universidade Metodista de São Paulo. O texto, a seguir, é fruto do desejo de corroborar com o desenvolvimento desta modalidade de ensino no Brasil.(AU)
Resumo:
Studies on positive plant–plant relations have traditionally focused on pair-wise interactions. Conversely, the interaction with other co-occurring species has scarcely been addressed, despite the fact that the entire community may affect plant performance. We used woody vegetation patches as models to evaluate community facilitation in semi-arid steppes. We characterized biotic and physical attributes of 53 woody patches (patch size, litter accumulation, canopy density, vegetation cover, species number and identity, and phylogenetic distance), and soil fertility (organic C and total N), and evaluated their relative importance for the performance of seedlings of Pistacia lentiscus, a keystone woody species in western Mediterranean steppes. Seedlings were planted underneath the patches, and on their northern and southern edges. Woody patches positively affected seedling survival but not seedling growth. Soil fertility was higher underneath the patches than elsewhere. Physical and biotic attributes of woody patches affected seedling survival, but these effects depended on microsite conditions. The composition of the community of small shrubs and perennial grasses growing underneath the patches controlled seedling performance. An increase in Stipa tenacissima and a decrease in Brachypodium retusum increased the probability of survival. The cover of these species and other small shrubs, litter depth and community phylogenetic distance, were also related to seedling survival. Seedlings planted on the northern edge of the patches were mostly affected by attributes of the biotic community. These traits were of lesser importance in seedlings planted underneath and in the southern edge of patches, suggesting that constraints to seedling establishment differed within the patches. Our study highlights the importance of taking into consideration community attributes over pair-wise interactions when evaluating the outcome of ecological interactions in multi-specific communities, as they have profound implications in the composition, function and management of semi-arid steppes.
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The EU’s Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) and its accompanying Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP) missions can be tools used to increase the international profile of the European Union. Nevertheless, CSDP missions garner little news coverage. This article argues that the very nature of the missions themselves makes them poor vehicles for EU promotion for political, institutional, and logistical reasons. By definition, they are conducted in the middle of crises, making news coverage politically sensitive. The very act of reporting could undermine the mission. Institutionally, all CSDP missions are intergovernmental, making press statements slow, overly bureaucratic, and of little interest to journalists. Logistically, the missions are often located in remote, undeveloped parts of the world, making it difficult and expensive for European and international journalists to cover. Moreover, these regions in crisis seldom have a thriving, local free press. Using the Aceh Monitoring Mission (AMM) as a case study, the author concludes that although a mission may do good, CSDP missions cannot fulfil the political function of raising the profile of the EU.
Resumo:
Introduction. The week following his reelection, President Obama traveled to Asia – Thailand, Myanmar, and Cambodia –, while facing at home a fiscal cliff, the need to select the next Secretaries of State, Defense, and Treasury, and the resignation of one of America’s most senior and respected generals and Director of the CIA, David Petraeus; all this at the moment wherein the Middle East is burning in flames due to another round of violence between Israel and Hamas. On the other side of the pond, the EU is currently trying to solve or at least contain several crises: the Eurozone, agreeing on the Multiannual Financial Framework 2014-2020, or MFF 2014-2020,2 and saving France.3 For both giants, the American and European priorities are domestic; they both need to do some ‘nation-building at home.’4 The threat of the fiscal cliff in the US and the one of the Eurocrisis in Europe are too important to be ignored and so visceral that they will affect the way both actors behave internationally and interact with one another. The big question since Obama’s reelection has been what will the EU-US relations look like under his second mandate? And will there be any differences from the first one?5 This paper argues that the US-EU relations will remain quite similar as it was under the first Obama presidency. Nevertheless, with the current shift to Asia, the ‘pivot,’ the EU will be required to increase its contributions to global politics and international security. This paper is structured in three parts. First, the economic and political climax of the EU and the US will be presented. In a second a part, the EU and US strategies and foreign policies will be laid out. Last but not least, several core issues facing the Euro-Atlantic community, such as the Asia pivot, Iran, climate change, and the economy will be addressed. Other issues such as Syria, Afghanistan, and the Middle East and North Africa will not be addressed in this paper.6
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Surveying the landscape following the Swiss referendum on February 9th, Adam Łazowski observes that once Swiss voters are deprived of the benefits of the EU internal market, they may come to appreciate that their days of cherry-picking from among EU policies are over. This might present the EU with a golden opportunity to press for a comprehensive framework agreement with Switzerland that would simplify the existing regime and provide for a uniform institutional set-up. He concludes, however, that what both sides cannot avoid is a frank discussion about free movement of persons, noting that that dossier will be crucial for any future steps that will be taken by the EU and the Swiss authorities.
Resumo:
Sovereign powers are not absolute but exercised in varying areas and to varying degrees by sub-state, state and supra-state entities. The upward dispersion of power to international organisations carries implications for the sub-state level, while sub-state governance poses demands as to the conduct of governance at the international level. It is well recognised that sub-state entities, such as federal states and autonomies, may have the (restricted) capacity to enter into international relations. But what capacities do international organisations have to accommodate autonomies in their institutional frameworks? This paper shall present a case study of one such framework, namely Nordic co-operation and the accommodation of the Nordic autonomies, the Faroe Islands, Greenland and Åland, within its institutional framework. Within ‘Norden’, the position of autonomies has been scrutinised and adapted on several occasions, in the late 1960s, early 1980s and in the mid-2000s. The accommodation of the autonomies has been discussed in light of evident implications of statehood and international legal personality and the institutional arrangements eventually carved serve well to illustrate the challenges and opportunities international organisations face in the attempt to accommodate multi-level systems.
Resumo:
The relations between Turkey and the European Union are special for several reasons. Of all candidates, Turkey has been aspiring to EU membership for the longest time. With 70 million citizens, it is the most populous candidate country, and if it were admitted to the EU, around the year 2020 would become the single most populous Member State. It would also be the only UE Member State inhabited almost exclusively by Muslims. Like Cyprus, it lies almost entirely in the Asian continent. Because of the scale of Turkey's internal problems, the country faces much more serious reservations concerning its accession than the remaining candidates. Turkey's membership application meets with the strongest opposition in the European Union. This paper aims to discuss the history of the complex relations between Turkey and the European Union, the main issues that impede Turkey's integration with the Community, including the country's internal problems in particular, and the transformations taking place in Turkey under the influence of Community policy.
Resumo:
The outbreak of the Arab Spring and the unrest, revolution and war that followed during the course of 2011 have forced the EU to acknowledge the need to radically re-think its policy approach towards the Southern Mediterranean, including in the domain of migration. Migration and mobility now feature as key components of High Representative Catherine Ashton’s new framework for cooperation with the region (Partnership for Democracy and Shared Prosperity), while the EU has declared its intention to strengthen its external migration policy by setting up “mutually beneficial” partnerships with third countries – so-called ‘Dialogues for Migration, Mobility and Security’ – now placed at the centre of the EU’s renewed Global Approach to Migration and Mobility (GAMM). However, the success of this approach and its potential to establish genuine cooperative partnerships that will support smooth economic and political transformation in North Africa hinge on the working arrangements and institutional configurations shaping the renewed GAMM at EU level which has long been marked by internal fragmentation, a lack of transparency and a predominance of home affairs and security actors. This paper investigates the development of the Dialogues for Migration, Mobility and Security with the Southern Mediterranean in a post-Lisbon Treaty institutional setting. It asks to what extent has the application of the Lisbon Treaty and the creation of an “EU Foreign Minister” in High Representative Ashton, supported by a European External Action Service (EEAS), remedied or re-invigorated the ideological and institutional struggles around the implementation of the Global Approach? Who are the principal agents shaping and driving the Dialogues for Migration, Mobility and Security? Who goes abroad to speak on the behalf of the EU in these Dialogues and what impact does this have on the effectiveness, legitimacy and accountability of the Dialogues under the renewed GAMM as well as the wider prospects for the Southern Mediterranean?
Resumo:
With the 1995 Agreement on Trade - related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), a centralised rule - system for the international governance of patents was put in place under the general framework of the World Trade Organisation (WTO). Since then, the number of patent – related institutions has increased monotonically on the multilateral, plurilateral and bilateral levels. I will explain this case of institutional change by focusing on the norm – setting activities of both industrialised and developing countries, arguing that both groups constitute internally highly cohesive coalitions in global patent politics, while institutional change occurs when both coalitions engage in those negotiating settings in which they enjoy a comparative advantage over the other coalition. Specifically, I make the point that industrialised countries’ norm – setting activities take place on the plurilateral and bilateral level, where economic factors can be effectively translated into political outcomes while simultaneously avoiding unacceptably high legitimacy costs; whereas developing countries, on the other hand, use various multilateral United Nations (UN) forums where their claims possess a high degree of legitimacy, but cannot translate into effective political outcomes. The paper concludes with some remarks on how this case yields new insights into ongoing debates in institutionalist International Relations (IR), as pertaining to present discussions on “regime complexity”.