1,034,515 research outputs found

    Best Practice for Providing Social Care and Support to People Living with Concurrent Sight Loss and Dementia: Professional Perspectives

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    Purpose-Approximately 100,000 people in the UK aged 75 and over have concurrent dementia and sight loss, but current understanding of their experiences, needs and preferences is limited. The purpose of this paper is to report on a research project that explored the provision of social care and support for older people with both conditions. Design/methodology/approach-The project was a collaboration between the universities of York, Worcester, Bournemouth and Cambridge, supported by the Thomas Pocklington Trust and the Housing and Dementia Research Consortium. Data for this paper were drawn from focus groups held in 2013 involving 47 professionals across the dementia, sight loss and housing sectors. Findings-Thematic analysis identified five main barriers to providing high-quality, cost-effective social care and support: time constraints; financial limitations; insufficient professional knowledge; a lack of joint working; and inconsistency of services. The requirements of dementia and sight loss often conflict, which can limit the usefulness of equipment, aids and adaptations. Support and information needs to address individual needs and preferences. Research limitations/implications-Unless professionals consider dementia and sight loss together, they are unlikely to think about the impact of both conditions and the potential of their own services to provide effective support for individuals and their informal carers. Failing to consider both conditions together can also limit the availability and accessibility of social care and support services. This paper is based on input from a small sample of self-selecting professionals across three geographical regions of England. More research is needed in this area. Practical implications-There are growing numbers of people living with concurrent dementia and sight loss, many of whom wish to remain living in their own homes. There is limited awareness of the experiences and needs of this group and limited provision of appropriate services aids/adaptations. A range of measures should be implemented in order to support independence and well-being for people living with both conditions and their family carers. These include increased awareness, improved assessment, more training and greater joint working. Social implications-People living with dementia or sight loss are at high risk of social isolation, increasingly so for those with both conditions. Services that take an inclusive approach to both conditions can provide crucial opportunities for social interaction. Extra care housing has the potential to provide a supportive, community-based environment that can help residents to maintain social contact. Originality/value-This paper adds much-needed evidence to the limited existing literature, and reflects the views of diverse professionals across housing, health and social car

    Situation of Policies Accessing Basic Social Services in Ethnic Minirity Area in Lai Chau Province

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    Lai Chau is a border province, which is a large beneficiary of social security policies compared to others in Vietnam. There are 20 ethnic groups living together, including four ethnic groups with very few people (Gong, Mang, La Hu, Si La) and ethnic minorities account for over 85% population. Besides that, their life has been facing many difficulties such as harsh natural conditions, rugged terrain, underdeveloped socio-economic conditions. It can be admitted that the poverty rate is high, and the implementation of the ethnic minority policy is limited. Moreover, the situation of free migration and the activities of criminals in ethnic minority areas, especially the Hmong ethnic minority areas are still complicated...For these reasons, the implementation of support policies for accessing basic social services(BSS) on health, education, housing, clean water have received attention, direction, and active implementation from Party committees and local authorities at all levels. Hence, many ethnic minority households can have opportunities to access these BSS, even though the implementation process has certain limitations

    Ant Tribe

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    Ant Tribe describes the post-80s generation university graduates who live together in poor conditions without Social security in communities around China\u27s major metropolises. They dream of a better life in big cities but struggle with low-paying jobs. These struggling elites have become the fourth weak Social group, after peasants, migrant workers and unemployed people. The reason why these college graduates are compared to ants is that they are like ants: clever, hardworking, politically weak and living in groups. The real world is always different from the ideal world of the Ant Tribe in China. They often lose their purposes in a complex society. It is more important for them to recognize the distance between the real and imaginary in order to rethink whether it is a right choice to stay in a big city and try to realize their dreams. The intention of the Ant Tribe installation is to explore the process and concept of changing between the real and fantasy. In the installation, I hope to portray the Ant Tribe phenomenon widely and deeply from an artist\u27s perspective. The most important thing for me is using my artistic practice to investigate the power of the media over the contemporary subject in order to activate the viewers to question some Social issues regarding humanity consciousness. My artwork should be thought - provoking for them. I would like to use my visual language to convey specific Social issues to inquire how far the viewers are from their dreams. I hope they think about themselves in their complex society physically and psychologically when they go through my work

    Scheduled caste organizations and their development: an experience from Karnataka (India)

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    The scheduled castes residing in various parts of India and more particularly in the state of Karnataka fail to avail all the facilities of the constitution. And scheduled castes are subjected to many kinds of ill-treatment, inhuman treatment, harassment, humiliation, and atrocities which are the order of the day. Scheduled castes organizations have emerged throughout the country. Organizations of scheduled castes attempted to improve their educational level, social conditions, religious conditions, economic conditions, cultural conditions and political by forming caste organizations in society. Rudolph and Rudolph observe that the caste organizations are par communities or pressure groups to enable members of caste to pursue social mobility, political power, and economic advantage. Caste organizations are necessary in order to bring some structural and cultural changes among the scheduled castes. It was also essential to narrow down the social distance between the castes among the scheduled castes by coming together and living an thoughts and values to the masses. This process of socialization was obviously possible through organizations. In Karnataka the development of these sections are being done particularly through the various welfare measures. Thus, the present paper is going to suggest the strategies for the development of low status castes in Sri Lanka based on the experiences of Karnataka

    The effects of social network position on the survival of wild Barbary macaques, Macaca sylvanus

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    It has long been shown that the social environment of individuals can have strong effects on health, well-being, and longevity in a wide range of species. Several recent studies found that an individual’s number of affiliative partners positively relates to its probability of survival. Here, we build on these previous results to test how both affiliation and aggression networks predict Barbary macaque (Macaca sylvanus) survival in a “natural experiment.” Thirty out of 47 wild Barbary macaques, living in 2 groups, died during an exceptionally cold winter in the Middle Atlas Mountains, Morocco. We analyzed the affiliation and aggression networks of both groups in the 6 months before the occurrences of these deaths, to assess which aspects of their social relationships enhanced individual survivorship. Using only the affiliation network, we found that network clustering was highly predictive of individual survival probability. Using only the aggression network, we found that individual survival probability increased with a higher number of aggression partners and lower clustering coefficient. Interestingly, when both affiliation and aggression networks were considered together, only parameters from the aggression network were included into the best model predicting individual survival. Aggressive relationships might serve to stabilize affiliative social relationships, thereby positively impacting on individual survival during times of extreme weather conditions. Overall, our findings support the view that aggressive social interactions are extremely important for individual well-being and fitness

    Social Professionals in the Face of the Health Crisis

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    Due to the crisis generated by COVID-19 at a global level, many professionals are working under harsh conditions, and the Basque Country is no exception. On 14 March 2020, the head of the government decreed a state of alarm at the state level, which forced us all to be confined to our homes. This situation directly affected the profession of social educator. In fact, these professionals work with the most vulnerable groups, so working on the front line is mandated, even if this results in a significant risk. The situation of the groups in residential resources cannot be easy due to the stress produced by living together and being locked up, and this directly affects the educators who necessarily work in it. However, the over-exertion that all of this requires, which is a risk, has not been detected nor recognized at the social level. For this reason, the objective of this investigation is to measure the stress of social educators of advanced age who work in residential resources in different zones of the Basque Country (northern Spain). Sixty-seven social educators participated in the case study. Qualitative and quantitative methods were combined for data collection. This questionnaire was conducted through the Google Forms platform. The quantitative data collected through the questionnaire were analyzed by descriptive analysis and frequency contrasts were performed through the SPSS V25 program. We can conclude that it is necessary to take into account the difficulties of this sector and the professionals both at the governmental and social levels. Future research should include responses from both groups and workers in order to guarantee adequate inclusion

    Explaining cooperative groups via social niche construction

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    Cooperative behaviours can be defined as those that benefit others at an apparent cost to self. How these kinds of behaviours evolve has been a topic of great interest in evolutionary biology, as the Darwinian paradigm seems to suggest that nature will be “red in tooth and claw” and that we would not expect one organism to evolve to help another. The evolution-of-cooperation literature has therefore generally been about showing how the altruism involved in these cases is only apparent (see Bergstrom 2002 for an excellent review). Consider kin selection, in which interactions are more likely to occur between related individuals. The cost of altruism to the individual is real but, having identified the correct score-keeping level as the genetic one, it turns out that the cooperative act is not costly but profitable. More generally, successful explanations for cooperation rely on the presence of a population structure that clusters cooperators together, such that they enjoy the benefits of each others' actions. However, the question that has been left largely unaddressed is how does this structure itself evolve? If we want to really explain why organisms cooperate, then we need to explain not just their adaptation to their social environment, but how they came to live in that environment. Recent work by Powers (2010) and Powers et al. (in press) has addressed this question. They show that social behaviour can exert indirect selection pressure on population structure-modifying traits, causing individuals to adaptively modify their population structure to support greater cooperation. Moreover, they argue that any component of selection on structure-modifying traits that is due to social behaviour must be in the direction of increased cooperation; that component of selection cannot be in favour of the conditions for greater selfishness. Powers et al. then examine the conditions under which this component of selection on population structure exists. They argue that not only can population structure drive the evolution of cooperation, as in classical models, but that the benefits of greater cooperation can in turn drive the evolution of population structure: a positive feedback process that they refer to as social niche construction (after Odling-Smee et al. 2003). Maynard Smith and Szathmary (1995) note that most of the big unanswered questions in biology are not about how a particular behaviour is selected for at one level of organization but about the emergence of whole new levels of organization, e.g., the transition from single- to multi-celled organisms, or from solitary insects to eusocial colonies. Any satisfactory account of these transitions must explain how the individuals came to live in a population structure that supported high degrees of cooperation, as well as showing that cooperation is individually advantageous given that structure. The social niche construction process identified by Powers et al. can explain some of the major transitions, by showing how a new selective level can begin through evolution of individual characters, such as group size preference or dispersal tendency. The potential emergence of reliable cooperation via the co-evolution of individual cooperative and population-structuring behaviours demonstrates that groups of cooperating agents can create an environment in which they become so “locked in” to their group identity that the group warrants redescription as an individual in its own right. Consider the move from independent protozoans, to an intermediate cooperative stage as in slime moulds, to fully multi-cellular animals. Such creation of population structures that support cooperation parallels negotiation of a social contract. What are the philosophical implications of this perspective for understanding and explaining human social behaviour? On the one hand, it gives respectability and unique explanatory value to group-selectionist accounts. Explaining the origin of within-group cooperation and the origin of the groups themselves become part of the same project, which in turn means that we cannot understand social and cooperative behaviour in humans without understanding human population-structuring traits, e.g., living in family groups, group fission-fusion behaviours, migratory behaviours, etc. What will the explanations we seek look like? de Pinedo and Noble (2008) have argued that the description of evolved behaviour cannot be exclusively in mechanistic terms: we need both explanations that focus on an agent’s interaction with its environment, and explanations that focus on the physical or computational enabling conditions of such an interaction. In a context in which what counts as an agent is taken for granted, de Pinedo and Noble argue that both agent and sub-agent level explanations will be required. The perspective being outlined here forces an expansion of that position and reminds us that agency is not to be taken for granted; that it emerges from a lower level of organization after a history of selection brings simpler entities together in a coherent cooperative whole. The implication is that truly multi-level explanations will be necessary in the area of social behaviour. We explain the origin of the multi-cellular organism as the result of a cooperative merger of single-celled organisms, and we explain the origin of a super-organism such as an ant colony in a similar way. At each transition, the autonomous agents of the previous level become component mechanisms in the next, but no explanatory level can be entirely done away with. A human being is an example of a multi-cellular organism with a highly developed social aspect, occupying an intermediate point between radical individual independence and total group cohesion. To fully explain human behaviour, we need to know about the cellular machinery that enables personal-level agency. But we also need to know how human machinery fits together into families, communities and nations that will, at least partially, have their own emergent goals and purposes: “partially” because we are not yet a super-organism, of course. In conclusion, the perspective we outline suggests a view of the social contract as not at all unique to Hobbesian rational agents who have become tired of an insecure and violent lifestyle. Instead the ongoing negotiation of the social contract amongst ourselves can be seen as echoing earlier, now-successfully-concluded negotiations between the entities that became our genes and then our cells

    How smart is the Italian domestic environment? A quantitative study

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    The market for smart home products in Italy appears to be growing quicker than in other European countries. Continuous technological advances have lowered the price for entry products, allowing more families to acquire smart solutions. Meanwhile, after the Covid-19 pandemic, the importance of the domestic environment as a hybrid space where to conduct different activities that require smart and connected appliances has significantly grown. Ultimately, economic and social instability has produced a higher awareness of energy consumption, bringing many users to question their lifestyle choices and look for smarter and greener solutions. The evolution of living conditions through the growth of smart technology in houses and apartments must be explored by interaction designers, to provide effective user experiences of smart artifacts, that need to seamlessly connect with one another and function together, within a complex, multimodal environment. Considering this, the paper presents the results of a quantitative study carried out at the end of 2021, through an online survey that was completed by 135 respondents. Data are analysed by grouping the respondents in 3 categories: single tenants, couples or roommates (unrelated to each other), and families (at least one parent with their offspring). Different visualizations highlight which rooms are "smarter"-although Italian households appear to be less technological than expected. The main findings concern the relationship between wider technological ecosystems and larger groups of tenants living together, and how the ownership of a smart product leads to the acquisition of other products-thus building a complex network of non-human players

    Urban Way of Family Life and Juvenile Delinquency

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    Social processes important for the development of the so called capitalist industrial, that is the consumer city now, can be considered social factors of delinquent behavior among the minors. Primary forms of social life, together with the characteristics of a personality that are being adopted during the socialization, depend upon these processes, causing criminal factors. Showing that under the influence of these processes there is an important increase of underage delinquency in Jugoslavia as well, the author emphasizes characteristics of the processes concerning our development. The author has paid special attention to the economization of social consciousness with primary forms of social life falling to pieces; to the developing of aspirations for material standard by means of socialization; to destroying of the traditional system of social values and moral with dominating utilitarian orientations; to privacy; to nuclearization and break down of family; to the lack of positive social control, as well as to the other characteristics of urban way of living, considered by the author to be connected with the delinquent behavior of the minors. Conscious, independent and purposeful social intervention aiming at the conditions of living and work of individuals and groups, with principals of solidarity and mutuality applied, should, according to the author, help to actuate those social processes and movements that would influence conditions and causes of delinquent behavior among the minors

    Human Rights of Vulnerable Minority Groups in India: An Overview

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    Human rights are the conditions of life that allow us to fully develop and use our human qualities of intelligence and conscience, and to satisfy our spiritual needs. We cannot develop our personality in the absence of rights. Certain groups in society often encounter discriminatory treatment and need special attention to avoid potential exploitation. This population constitutes what is referred to as vulnerable groups. The vulnerable groups are discriminated against on the grounds of being economically weaker sections of society. In the case of women and children, it is much greater since society treats them as biologically weak. The tendency to take undue advantage of the weaker sections of society results in exploitation, which in turn leads to anti-social behavior. India is a multilingual and multi-religious country. Indian society is pluralistic in character from religious and other points of view. For a long time, people belonging to various religious communities have been living together in this country. However, there are some problems that minorities normally face where we can say that the rights of minorities are being violated. These problems include the preservation of their distinct social and cultural life, where several customs and cultures are under scrutiny at times and lead to controversies of all types, giving opportunities to aggravate the problems of minorities; the need for security and protection, which is very often felt by minorities, especially in times of communal violence, caste conflicts, and observance of festivals and religious functions on a mass scale; and communal tensions and riots, which threaten minority interests whenever they take place for whatever reason, leading to widespread fears and anxieties
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