918 resultados para Union of Basque Municipalities (UEMA)
Resumo:
This research analyses opinions on the system of social welfare services from the point of view of clients and the public in general in Finland. The approach is quantitative, drawing on theories of the welfare-state tradition. The data used comes from the comprehensive Welfare and Services in Finland survey compiled by STAKES. While previous research on the welfare state has predominantly focused on surveying public opinion on social protection, this research focuses on social welfare services. The main focus of this research is on publicly funded care provided by municipal social welfare services. In this research, social welfare services include child day care, services for people with disabilities, home-help services, counselling by social workers and social assistance. The research considered in particular whether the clients or the population has different opinions towards social welfare services or social benefits. In addition, the research partly covers areas of informal care provided by family and friends. The research material consisted of the STAKES Welfare and Services in Finland survey. The data was compiled in 2004 and 2006 by Statistics Finland. The research comprises five articles. Additional data have been extracted from social welfare statistics and registers. Multiple approaches were applied in the survey on welfare and services the methods in this research included interviews by phone and mail, and register data. The sample size was 5 810 people in 2004 and 5 798 in 2006. The response rates were 82.7% and 83.7%, respectively. The results indicate that a large majority (90%) of the Finnish population is of the opinion that the public sector should bear the main responsibility for organising social and health services. The system of social welfare services and its personnel have strong public support 73% and 80% respectively. However, new and even negative tones have emerged in the Finnish debate on social welfare services. Women are increasingly critical of the performance of social welfare services and the level of social protection. Furthermore, this study shows that women more often than men wish to see an increase in the amount of privately organised social welfare services. Another group critical of the performance of social welfare services are pensioners. People who had used social welfare services were more critical than those who had not used them. Thus, the severest criticism was received from the groups who use and gain most from public services and benefits. However, the education and income variables identified in earlier studies no longer formed a significant dividing line, although people with higher education tend to foster a more positive view of the performance of social welfare services as well as the level of social protection. Income differences did not bear any significance, that is, belonging to a high or low income group was not a determining factor in the attitude towards social welfare services or social benefits. According to the research, family and friends still form an informal yet significant support network in people's everyday lives, and its importance has not been diminished by services provided by the welfare state. The Finnish public considers child day care the most reliable form of social welfare services. Indeed, child day care has become the most universal sector of our system of social welfare services. Other services that instil confidence included counselling by social workers and services for people with disabilities. On the other hand, social assistance and home-help services received negative feedback. The negative views were based on a number of arguments. One argument contends that the home-help service system, which was originally intended for universal use, is crumbling. The preventive role of home-help services has been reduced. These results mirror the increasingly popular opinion that social welfare services are not produced for all those who need them, but to an increasing extent for a select few of them. Municipalities are struggling with their finances and this, combined with negative publicity, has damaged the public's trust in some municipal social welfare services. A welfare state never achieves a stable condition, but must develop over time, as the world around it changes. Following the 1990's recession, we are now in a position where we can start to develop a system that responds to the needs of the next generation. Study results indicating new areas of dissatisfaction reflect the need to develop and improve the services provided. It is also increasingly essential that social welfare services pay attention to the opinions of clients and the public. Should the gap between opinions and actual activities increase, the legitimacy of the whole system would be questioned. Currently, the vast majority of Finns consider the system of social welfare services adequate, which provides us with the continuity required to maintain and improve client-oriented and reasonably priced social welfare services. Paying attention to the signals given by clients and the general public, and reacting to them accordingly, will also secure the development and legitimacy of the system in the future.
Resumo:
In the title molecule, C23H14N4, the triazoloisoquinoline ring system is nearly planar, with an r.m.s. deviation of 0.038 (2) angstrom and a maximum deviation of -0.030 (2) angstrom from the mean plane of the triazole ring C atom which is bonded to the benzene ring. The benzene and phenyl rings are twisted by 57.65 (8) and 53.60 (9)degrees, respectively, with respect to the mean plane of the triazoloisoquinoline ring system. In the crystal structure, molecules are linked by weak aromatic pi-pi interactions [centroid-centroid distance = 3.8074 (12) angstrom]. In addition, the crystal structure exhibits a nonclassical intermolecular C-H center dot center dot center dot N hydrogen bond.
Resumo:
In the title molecule, C22H14ClN3, the triazoloisoquinoline ring system is approximately planar, with an r.m.s. deviation of 0.033 (2) angstrom and a maximum departure from the mean plane of 0.062 (1) angstrom for the triazole ring C atom, bonded to the benzene ring. The benzene and phenyl rings are twisted by 57.02 (6) and 62.16 (6)degrees, respectively, to the mean plane of the triazoloisoquinoline ring system. The molecule is stabilized by a weak intramolecular pi-pi interaction [centroid-centroid distance = 3.7089 (10) angstrom] between the benzene and phenyl rings. In the crystal structure, weak intermolecular C-H center dot center dot center dot N hydrogen bonds and C-H center dot center dot center dot pi interactions link the molecules.
Resumo:
The conformation about the ethene bond [1.316 (3) angstrom] in the title compound, C25H18BrNO, is E. The quinoline ring forms dihedral angles of 67.21 (10) and 71.68 (10)degrees with the benzene and bromo-substituted benzene rings, respectively. High-lighting the non-planar arrangement of aromatic rings, the dihedral angle formed between the benzene rings is 58.57 (12)degrees.
Resumo:
In the title compound, C18H11ClN2O2, the isatin and 2-chloro-3-methylquinoline units are both almost planar, with r.m.s.deviations of 0.0075 and 0.0086 angstrom, respectively, and the dihedral angle between the mean planes of the two units is 83.13 (7)degrees. In the crystal, a weak intermolecular C-H center dot center dot center dot O interaction links the molecules into chains along the c axis.
Resumo:
This work analyses texts on indigenous women´s participation in the Mexican Zapatista Army, Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional. The EZLN came to public attention after ten years of clandestine organization in 1994 in Chiapas, a southern state of Mexico neighboring Guatemala. Along the invasion of various municipalities in Chiapas, the Zapatista Army published their own Revolutionary Laws, directed to the Mexican government that included a section on women´s own laws. The indigenous women´s participation in a guerrilla movement in the economically poorest area of Mexico raised many questions among Mexican feminists and some of them fiercely criticized the laws for not being liberating or feminist at all. The question is, did the indigenous women want the laws to be feminist? To answer the main research question How is the position of women constructed in the Zapatista discourse? I analyze texts by various actors in the discourse within the theoretical framework of critical discourse analysis and the feminist theories of intersectionality. The connecting point in this interdisciplinary framework is the question of power and hegemony. The actors in the discourse are the women commanders themselves, the men commanders, the Zapatista spokesperson, subcomandante Marcos and the Mexican feminists. The texts analyzed are the letters of the EZLN to the media and discourses in public reunions, first published in Mexican newspapers and international discussion lists on the Internet and after 2005, on the Zapatista´s own webpage. The results show that instead of discussing whether the Zapatista women´s participation is feminist or not, the action itself provoked such wide discussion of the diversity within the feminist movement that it is a contribution itself. The work also shows that the use of language can be one tool in the quite recent paradigm of intersectionality in feminist theories.
Resumo:
In the structure of the title compound, C27H39N3O3, each of the (4-oxopiperidin-1-yl)methyl residues adopts a flattened chair conformation (with the N and carbonyl groups being oriented to either,side of the central C-4 plane) and they occupy positions approximatelym orthogonal to the central benzene ring [C-benzene-C-C-methylene-N torsion angles 103.4 (2), -104.4 (3) and 71.9 (3)degrees]; further, two of these residues are oriented to one side of the central benzene ring with the third to the other side. In the crystal packing, supramolecular layers in the ab plane are sustained by C-H center dotcenter dot center dot O interactions.
Resumo:
In the title compound, C15H11Cl2NO2, the dihedral angle between the two benzene rings is 74.83 (5)degrees. The N-bound and terminal benzene rings are inclined at dihedral angles of 4.09 (10) and 78.38 (9) degrees, respectively, to the mean plane through the acetamide group.Intramolecular C-H center dot center dot center dot O and N-H center dot center dot center dot O hydrogen bonds both generate S(6) rings.
Resumo:
The title molecule, C5H7N3O2, has an almost planar conformation, with a maximum deviation of 0.043 (3) angstrom, except for the methyl H atoms. In the crystal structure, intermolecular C-H center dot center dot center dot O hydrogen bonds link the molecules into layers parallel to the bc plane. Intermolecular pi-pi stacking interactions [centroid-centroid distances = 3.685 (2) and 3.697 (2) angstrom] are observed between the parallel triazole rings.
Resumo:
The title compound, C13H14OS, crystallizes with two independent molecules in the asymmetric unit. The unit cell contains three voids of 197 angstrom(3), but the residual electron density (highest peak = 0.24 e angstrom(-3) and deepest hole = -0.18 e angstrom(-3)) in the difference Fourier map suggests no solvent molecule occupies this void. The crystal structure is stabilized by pi-pi interactions between the isocoumarin ring systems, with centroid-centroid distances of 3.6793 (14) and 3.6566 (15) angstrom.
Resumo:
In the title compound, C16H13ClN2O, the quinoline ring system is approximately planar [maximum deviation 0.021 (2) angstrom] and forms a dihedral angle of 85.93 (6)degrees with the pyridone ring. Intermolecular C-H center dot center dot center dot O hydrogen bonding, together with weak C-H center dot center dot center dot pi and pi-pi interactions [centroid-to-centroid distances 3.5533 (9) and 3.7793 (9) angstrom], characterize the crystal structure.
Resumo:
All the non-H atoms of the title compound, C10H11NO2, are almost coplanar [maximum deviation = 0.040 (3) angstrom]. The crystal structure is stabilized by C-H center dot center dot center dot O hydrogen bonds.
Resumo:
In the title compound, C15H12ClN3O, the quinoline ring system is essentially planar, with a maximum deviation of 0.017 (1) angstrom. The crystal packing is stabilized by pi-pi stacking interactions between the quinoline rings of adjacent molecule, with a centroid-centroid distance of 3.5913 (8) angstrom. Aweak C-H center dot center dot center dot pi contact is also observed between molecules.
Resumo:
In the title molecule, C21H15ClN4S, the triazoloisoquinoline ring system is approximately planar, with an r.m.s. deviation of 0.054 (2) angstrom and a maximum deviation of 0.098 (2) angstrom from the mean plane for the triazole ring C atom that is bonded to the thiazole ring. The thiazole and benzene rings are twisted by 66.36 (7) and 56.32 (7)degrees respectively, with respect to the mean plane of the triazoloisoquinoline ring system. In the crystal structure, molecules are linked by intermolecular C-H center dot center dot center dot N interactions along the a axis. The molecular conformation is stabilized by a weak intramolecular pi-pi interaction involving the thiazole and benzene rings, with a centroid-centroid distance of 3.6546 (11) angstrom . In addition, two other intermolecular pi-pi stacking interactions are observed, between the triazole and benzene rings and between the dihydropyridine and benzene rings [centroid-centroid distances = 3.6489 (11) and 3.5967 (10) angstrom, respectively].
Resumo:
An algorithm to improve the computation time of packing calculations for macromolecules is presented. This is achieved by reducing the three-dimensional search to a small set of two-dimensional searches.