852 resultados para social structures
Resumo:
Esta dissertação parte da compreensão dos sistemas punitivos em meio às estruturas sociais, demonstrando que o uso da coerção pública é um dos pilares fundamentais dos Estados modernos. Sustenta a necessidade de se desvendar os discursos ideológicos que legitimam o poder de criminalização, a fim de politizar o contexto das punições e alcançar a sua função latente. Concentra-se nas características específicas do Estado brasileiro instalado a partir da década de 1990, seguindo a trilha do Leviatã dos EUA neoliberal instaurado desde a década de 1980. Constata a correlação entre os sistemas punitivos brasileiro e norte-americano, com seus extensos campos de controle e semelhantes pensamentos criminológicos. Por fim, encontra a real funcionalidade das penas no Neoliberalismo, conformando um método de promover e manter as políticas econômicas e sociais típicas de sua conjuntura, manejando a insegurança social decorrente do desemprego estrutural, precarização do trabalho, aprofundamento da miséria e desigualdade.
Resumo:
O objetivo desta pesquisa foi estudar a contribuição que a interação vivenciada em grupos operativos pode oferecer ao desenvolvimento da capacidade de aprendizagem no amplo processo de capacitação docente, numa perspectiva psicopedagógica. Buscou-se perceber como a técnica dos grupos operativos contribuiria para a modificação da pratica pedagógica desenvolvida por professores de aceleração de aprendizagem no sentido de otimizar os resultados do trabalho por eles desenvolvidos junto aos alunos dessas classes.Foram acompanhados, em dinâmica de grupo operativo, vinte docentes de classes de aceleração incluídos em um projeto de capacitação para professores desenvolvido em Mangaratiba, RJ. A tarefa explicita nesse grupo foi a elaboração de temas sobre a aprendizagem dos alunos e dos professores, considerando a auto-estima acadêmica de ambos.A base teórica adotada foi a Epistemologia Convergente, na qual Jorge Visca propõe um modelo específico de intervenção psicopedagógica. Neste modelo, a perspectiva relacional está fundada nas contribuições da psicologia social, conforme é compreendida por Pichon-Riviére. Aí, a técnica dos grupos operativos é utilizada para favorecer o desenvolvimento relacional do grupo participante, otimizando suas possibilidades de aprender. Realizou-se então, uma intervenção psicopedagógica para a capacitação de docentes de classe de aceleração de aprendizagem e um dos instrumentos dessa intervenção foi a vivencia em grupo operativo. A pesquisa acompanhou o desenvolvimento desse grupo observando e interagindo para que se produzissem os movimentos que contribuíram para mobilizar a resignificação do modelo de aprendizagem dos seus membros.Essa resignificação possibilitou ao professor considerar a capacidade para aprender em grupo fator de grande importância na tarefa docente, aspecto considerado original na capacitação realizada. Os resultados qualitativos observados tornaram-se explícitos ao longo da vivencia grupal na significativa mudança da relação do grupo com a produção de conhecimento e da auto-estima profissional dos participantes. A pesquisa concluiu que os processos de capacitação docente devem continuar buscando alternativas mais coerentes com os aspectos que se deseja formar nos professores e apresenta os grupos operativos como estratégia psicopedagógica de excelentes possibilidades na capacitação dos mesmos.Enfatiza ainda, a possibilidade de reconstrução do sentido e pratica da cidadania na dinâmica desses grupos já que neles, os sujeitos encontram oportunidades de redefinição dos papeis que desempenham, pelo exercício da flexibilização dos mesmos. Confirma a certeza de que o professor que poderá ensinar a construir conhecimento deverá, ele mesmo, ter construído o seu como a condição para que possa ajudar o aluno a superar as inúmeras dificuldades inerentes à aprendizagem presentes nas estruturas sociais, nos sistemas escolares e em sua própria historia pessoal. É nessa superação que alunos e professores já marcados pelas vivências de fracasso escolar poderão retomar no grupo social a construção de sua condição cidadã, justificando o empenho realizado pela educação escolar.
Manifestações de violência no cotidiano de mulheres cadeirantes: um olhar inovador para a Enfermagem
Resumo:
O objeto deste estudo trata das manifestações de violência no cotidiano das mulheres cadeirantes. Ao reportarmos este fenômeno para Pessoas com Deficiência (PcD) faz-se necessário considerar uma sociedade segregante que valoriza o belo e que atravessa um processo de transformação para a aceitação da diversidade. Compreende-se que estruturas sociais vulnerabilizantes, isolamento, preconceito e violação de direitos aumentam a vulnerabilidade deste grupo e podem deflagrar situações de violência. A violência às mulheres com deficiência é parte da questão maior que envolve a violência às PcD, pois associa fatores socioculturais com as desigualdades de gênero. Partindo do desafio em desvelar a relação das mulheres com sua própria deficiência, com a cadeira de rodas - que traz consigo um importante arsenal simbólico, e suas percepções acerca da violência cotidiana, delimitou-se como participantes deste estudo mulheres com deficiência física cadeirantes. A relevância e as particularidades da violência às mulheres cadeirantes definiu o objetivo geral: discutir as violências vivenciadas por mulheres cadeirantes em seu cotidiano, considerando a perspectiva de gênero e dos estigmas sociais. Objetivos específicos: descrever as perspectivas da mulher cadeirante sobre sua condição; analisar as situações de violência vivenciadas pela mulher cadeirante, em seu cotidiano. Desenvolveu-se uma pesquisa descritivo-exploratória, com abordagem qualitativa, onde optou-se pelo método denominado Narrativa de Vida - referencial metodológico de Daniel Bertaux que contempla de forma ampla a expressão das participantes selecionadas. Para produção dos dados realizou-se treze entrevistas, em dois cenários que atendem PcD. Para complementar a captação das participantes, utilizou-se a técnica "bola de neve". Deste processo emergiram duas categorias analíticas: "A condição de mulher e cadeirante: necessidades e possibilidades" e "As violências cotidianas vivenciadas pela mulher cadeirante". Categorias estas que contemplam nossos objetivos. À guisa da conclusão, verificou-se que o entendimento destas mulheres acerca das manifestações de violência revelou aspectos que fazem parte de seus cotidianos que, primariamente não seriam consideradas situações de violência, e sim situações que envolvem a relação mulher-deficiência, o reconhecimento de um "novo corpo" e sua ligação com a cadeira de rodas. Destacaram-se questões concernentes à gênero que para mulheres com deficiência seriam ainda mais complexas, principalmente no que se referem as questões relativas à sexualidade/maternidade. Quanto às percepções das situações de violência, emergiram manifestações intrafamiliares, interpessoais e sexuais. No entanto, as violências institucionais e as que se relacionam com o cuidado em saúde prevaleceram. Grande parte das manifestações encontradas se relacionariam de alguma forma com a natureza psicológica da violência. Situações estigmatizantes narradas expuseram episódios reveladores, no que se refere ao comportamento de uma sociedade excludente que reage às diferenças. Conhecer o processo de "construção de uma situação de violência" pode significar um instrumento fundamental para a formação de vínculos e uma futura relação dialógica com os profissionais de saúde, particularmente enfermeiros. A enfermagem e suas práticas reúnem subsídios que podem dar início ao preenchimento da lacuna da assistência em saúde à estas mulheres, no tocante à violência.
Resumo:
Previous study using protein electrophoresis shows no polymorphism in 44 nuclear loci of Sichuan golden monkey (Rhinopithecus roxellana), which limits our understandings of its population genetic patterns in the nuclear genome. In order to obtain sufficient information, we scanned 14 microsatellite loci in a sample of 32 individuals from its three major habitats (Minshan, Qinling and Shennongiia). A considerable amount of polymorphisms were detected. The average heterozygosities in the local populations were all above 0.5. The differentiations among local populations were significant. There was evidence of geneflow among subpopullations, but geneflow between Qinling and Shennongjia local populations was the weakest. Minshan and Qinling populations might have gone through recent bottlenecks. The estimation of the ratio of the effective population sizes among local populations was close to that from census sizes. Comparisons to available mitochondria data suggested that R. roxellana's social structures played an important role in shaping its population genetic patterns. Our study showed that the polymorphism level of R. roxellana was no higher than other endangered species; therefore, measures should be taken to preserve genetic diversity of this species.
Resumo:
The digital divide has been, at least until very recently, a major theme in policy as well as interdisciplinary academic circles across the world, as well as at a collective global level, as attested by the World Summit on the Information Society. Numerous research papers and volumes have attempted to conceptualise the digital divide and to offer reasoned prescriptive and normative responses. What has been lacking in many of these studies, it is submitted, is a rigorous negotiation of moral and political philosophy, the result being a failure to situate the digital divide - or rather, more widely, information imbalances - in a holistic understanding of social structures of power and wealth. In practice, prescriptive offerings have been little more than philanthropic in tendency, whether private or corporate philanthropy. Instead, a theory of distributive justice is required, one that recovers the tradition of emancipatory, democratic struggle. This much has been said before. What is new here, however, is that the paper suggests a specific formula, the Rawls-Tawney theorem, as a solution at the level of analytical moral-political philosophy. Building on the work of John Rawls and R. H. Tawney, this avoids both the Charybdis of Marxism and the Scylla of liberalism. It delineates some of the details of the meaning of social justice in the information age. Promulgating a conception of isonomia, which while egalitarian eschews arithmetic equality (the equality of misery), the paper hopes to contribute to the emerging ideal of communicative justice in the media-saturated, post-industrial epoch.
Resumo:
Price, Roger, A Concise History of France (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), pp.xiii+491 RAE2008
Resumo:
Social and ecological factors are important in shaping sexual dimorphism in Anthropoidea, but there is also a tendency for body-size dimorphism and canine dimorphism to increase with increased body size (Rensch's rule) (Rensch: Evolution Above the Species Level. London: Methuen, 1959.) Most ecologist interpret Rensch's rule to be a consequence of social and ecological selective factors that covary with body size, but recent claims have been advanced that dimorphism is principally a consequence of selection for increased body size alone. Here we assess the effects of body size, body-size dimorphism, and social structure on canine dimorphism among platyrrhine monkeys. Platyrrhine species examined are classified into four behavioral groups reflecting the intensity of intermale competition for access to females or to limiting resources. As canine dimorphism increases, so does the level of intermale competition. Those species with monogamous and polyandrous social structures have the lowest canine dimorphism, while those with dominance rank hierarchies of males have the most canine dimorphism. Species with fission-fusion social structures and transitory intermale breeding-season competition fall between these extremes. Among platyrrhines there is a significant positive correlation between body size and canine dimorphism However, within levels of competition, no significant correlation was found between the two. Also, with increased body size, body-size dimorphism tends to increase, and this correlation holds in some cases within competition levels. In an analysis of covariance, once the level of intermale competition is controlled for, neither molar size nor molar-size dimorphism accounts for a significant part of the variance in canine dimorphism. A similar analysis using body weight as a measure of size and dimorphism yields a less clear-cut picture: body weight contributes significantly to the model when the effects of the other factors are controlled. Finally, in a model using head and body length as a measure of size and dimorphism, all factors and the interactions between them are significant. We conclude that intermale competition among platyrrhine species is the most important factor explaining variations in canine dimorphism. The significant effects of size and size dimorphism in some models may be evidence that natural (as opposed to sexual) selection also plays a role in the evolution of increased canine dimorphism.
Resumo:
Contraceptive prevalence in Haiti remains low despite extensive foreign aid targeted at improving family planning. [1] Earlier studies have found that peer-informed learning have been successful in promoting sexual and reproductive health. [2-5] This pilot project was implemented as a three-month, community-based, educational intervention to assess the impact of peer education in increasing contraceptive knowledge among women in Fondwa, Haiti. Research investigators conducted contraceptive information trainings to pre-identified female leaders of existing women’s groups in Fondwa, who were recruited as peer educators (n=4). Later, these female leaders shared the knowledge from the training with the test participants in the women’s group (n=23) through an information session. Structured surveys measuring knowledge of contraceptives were conducted with all participants before the intervention began, at the end of the intervention, and four weeks after the intervention. The surveys measured general contraceptive knowledge, knowledge about eight selected types of modern contraceptives and contraceptive preferences and attitudes. Only test participants showed significant improvement in their general contraceptive knowledge score (p<0.001), but both test participants and peer educators showed significant improvement in overall knowledge scores for identifying the types and uses of modern contraceptive methods. Assessment for knowledge retention remained significantly higher four weeks after the intervention than prior to the intervention. Therefore, a one-time, three-hour peer-based educational intervention using existing social structures is effective, and might be valuable in a population with minimal access to education and little to no knowledge about contraceptives.
Resumo:
According to dialogical self theory (Hermans, 2001), individual identities reflect cultural and subcultural values, and appropriate voices and discourses from the social environment. Bronfenbrenner’s (1979) systemic theory of human development similarly postulates that individual and social development occur in a symbiotic and interdependent fashion. It would therefore be predicted that individual changes in identity reflect macrocosmic changes in cultural values and social structures. The current study investigated narratives of crisis transitions within adults aged 25-40, by way of interviews with 22 participants. An intensive qualitative analysis showed that the narratives of crisis could indeed be viewed as individual manifestations of contemporary cultural changes. National statistics and academic research have documented in the UK substantial cultural shifts over the last twenty years including the lessening popularity of marriage, the rise of freelance and portfolio careers and the growth of accepted alternative gender roles. In individual crises, changes made over the course of the episode were invariably in the same direction as these social changes; towards flexible work patterns, non-marital relationships and redefined gender identities. Before the crisis, participants described their identity as bound into an established discourse of conventionality, a traditional sense of masculinity or feminitity and a singular career role, while after the crisis alternative and fluid identities are explored, and identity is less defined by role and institution. These findings show that changes in the social macrocosm can be found in the individual microcosm, and therefore support dialogical self theory.
Resumo:
The “crisis of the social issue” in the EU has led to a certain consensus in the need to renew the organizational and institutional model of public administration. The core of the reform implies important administrative changes in most of the European welfare states. Those changes are inspired on theories such as the new public management, management by objectives or partnership. Such changes involve both semantic (“sharing responsibilities”, “effective costs”, or the substitution of “citizen under an administration” by “consumer”) and political (predominance of scattered forms of power and the individualization of responsibilities) transformations which operate in the framework of individuals and State relations. The paradigms of activation and flexicurity have been central in this public administration modernization project. This commitment with new forms of governance of social issues has important consequences for the political and moral foundations of social cohesion, and the Spanish case is not an exception. This paper aims at looking at those representations of “modernization” (as they appear in debates about the employment services restructuring policies) in detail as well as providing references to the trajectory of such reforms of public services since the early eighties to the beginning of the crisis.
Resumo:
Recent patterns of migration indicate that international migrants are not confined to urban gateways. Instead many migrants have settled in new destination areas located in rural and small town areas. While this might appear to be a positive phenomenon for rural areas struggling with decline and stagnation, the reality is that many of these areas are ill-equipped to manage the rate and pace of change that has been witnessed in recent years. Migration to established, typically urban areas has been the subject of extensive research. However, little is known about the way in which migrants navigate their way through social structures as they settle into destinations with little experience of immigration. Using empirical research, this article considers the way in which migrants navigate their way through social structures to establish life in a so-called ‘new’ migration destination. It analyses the way in which government and civil society respond to their needs of recent arrivals, showing how both NGO’s and the statutory sector play an important role in this process. It considers the ramifications for these different sectors and the implications for so-called ‘new’ destinations as they become more established or ‘mature’ areas of immigration.
Resumo:
Impromptu accretions such as the buttresses in Robin Walkers photograph are moments that are familiar in the architecture of the everyday. Indeed the buttress is a very common occurrence with these cottages in particular, their mud walls being poor at resisting concentrated lateral loading. While not always required the buttress emerges when requirements to create spaces to support inhabitation are at odds with the external form and construction of the buildings. These points of disjunction are resolved in an additive fashion externally. The location varies from structure to structure, occasionally the buttress is be used as a point of connection for further structures, becoming subsumed in outbuildings or walls. This preponderance to variety means that it is omitted from the reductive drawings of type that classify these buildings and yet it occurs in enough for it to have a fundamental and transformative relationship to the generality of cottages.
What is of interest is not so much what these structures hold in common, but rather what differentiates them. It is their capacity for variety within a defined range which allows them at once to speak at once of broader social structures and of a specific place and person.
Using the above observation this paper treats of the failure of architectural typological studies of the vernacular to derive anything other than formal exemplars, and posits an alternative approach based on a focus on the technical construction of such buildings.
Resumo:
This paper argues that the structured dependency thesis must be extended to incorporate political power. It outlines a political framework of analysis with which to identify who gains and who loses from social policy. I argue that public policy for older people is a product not only of social structures but also of political decision-making. The Schneider and Ingram (1993) ‘ target populations’ model is used to investigate how the social construction of groups as dependent equates with lower levels of influence on policy making. In United Kingdom and European research, older people are identified as politically quiescent, but conversely in the United States seniors are viewed as one of the most influential and cohesive interest groups in the political culture. Why are American seniors perceived as politically powerful, while older people in Europe are viewed as dependent and politically weak? This paper applies the ‘target populations’ model to senior policy in the Republic of Ireland to investigate how theoretical work in the United States may be used to identify the significance of senior power in policy development. I conclude that research must recognise the connections between power, politics and social constructions to investigate how state policies can influence the likelihood that seniors will resist structured dependency using political means.
Resumo:
This article is a response to Ray Pawson’s critique of critical realism, the philosophy of science elaborated by Roy Bhaskar. I argue with Pawson’s interpretation of critical realism’s positions on both natural and social science and his charges concerning its totalizing ontology, its arrogant epistemology and its naive methodology. The differences between critical realism and realist evaluation are not as significant as Pawson contends. The main differences between the two realisms lie in their approaches to the relationship between social structures and human agency, and between facts and values. I argue that evaluation scientists need to clearly distinguish structure and agency. They should also make their values explicit. The uncritical approach of realist evaluation, combined with its underplaying of the importance of agency, leaves it open to implication in the abuses of bureaucratic instrumentalism.