16 research outputs found

    2016 - 2017 University Catalog

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    This is a one-year Catalog, effective beginning Summer Quarter 2016. Volume 105, Number 1, July 2016https://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/univcatalog/1000/thumbnail.jp

    2012-2013 Catalog

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    Graduate School catalog regarding admissions, curriculum and policies

    2013-2014 Catalog

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    Graduate School catalog regarding admissions, curriculum and policies

    2021-2022 University of Nebraska at Omaha Catalog

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    Located in one of America’s best cities to live, work and learn, the University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO) is Nebraska’s premier metropolitan university. With more than 15,000 students enrolled in 200-plus programs of study, UNO is recognized nationally for its online education, graduate education, military friendliness, and community engagement efforts. Founded in 1908, UNO has served learners of all backgrounds for more than 100 years and is dedicated to another century of excellence both in the classroom and in the communit

    The impact of multidisciplinary mobilities on the effectiveness of global health and international development projects

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    The mobility of healthcare professionals from high-income countries (HICs) to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) has been growing rapidly over recent decades. The ‘international elective placement’, which was once a preserve of medical student curricula, has now become increasingly common amongst nursing, midwifery and allied health professional students. International volunteering for healthcare professionals has shifted from being mainly missionary or altruistically driven to being a critically important component of clinical experience, professional development and subsequent career progression. Furthermore, there has been a large growth in international aid expenditure since the end of the Second World War and a more recent increase in the desire and ability of populations to travel internationally. These have acted as stimuli for the implementation of a multitude of international development projects designed to build the capacity of healthcare workers in LMICs in order to strengthen local health systems.However, despite the above, there is a distinct lack of research into the real benefits, costs and potential negative effects or externalities associated with such mobilities, or their ability to ethically and sustainably strengthen health systems in LMICs. Most existing literature is written by development actors themselves who often focus on the short-term and have a conflict of interest in proving that their interventions are positive and beneficial in order to justify current and future funding. This portfolio of six published works and eight supporting publications serves to bridge this gap in research and knowledge. Based on the author’s 10+ years of action research experience in the fields of global health, professional volunteering and international development, it suggests that the desired outcomes can be achieved in an ethical and sustainable way but only if certain policies and procedures are adopted and implemented.Combined, the publications generate a unique contribution to knowledge by offering tested, practical ways of enhancing the efficacy of international aid and professional and student voluntarism. For this reason, each publication is directed at key stakeholders and policy makers, providing clear conclusions and recommendations based on in-depth experience and concrete research findings

    Science handbook

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    2004 handbook for the faculty of Scienc

    Genetic information, life assurance, and the UK policy and regulatory framework

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    This thesis provides the first extensive sociological analysis of the genetics and life assurance debate in the UK. It uses data from original qualitative interviews, as well as various policy documents and reports, to investigate the likely implications of genetic information for life assurance provision, reveal the narrative strategies used by key stakeholders as they account for their concerns on the issue, and evaluate the efficacy of the policy and regulatory framework. It also attempts to evaluate the suitability of the citizens’ jury model as an alternative to existing decision-making procedures. The thesis begins by revealing the most likely social, commercial, legal, and ethical implications of allowing insurers to access new kinds of genetic information. A history of insurance, risk and probability is used as a starting point to challenge many of the pervasive fears and anxieties. This part of the thesis critically analyses the social and philosophical basis of such contested notions as ’discrimination’, 'social exclusion’, 'genetic information', and ‘social justice’, and begins to reveal some of the key strategies of stakeholders in the debate. The thesis then analyses stakeholder accounts of their concerns, and begins to reveal the ways in which they draw on a broad narrative repertoire to give their beliefs a degree of moral legitimacy/coherency. The impact this may have on the quality of debate is also investigated. Following from the analysis of stakeholder accounts, the thesis proceeds to investigate the nature of the policymaking and regulatory framework. Through a sociological analysis of the work of various advisory committees, which led to the implementation of a moratorium on insurers' use of genetic information, the thesis investigates how fair and equitable the overall political process has been, particularly in terms of the treatment of stakeholder evidence. It also assesses the role of the public and media in shaping the political response to this issue. The thesis concludes by assessing the citizens’ jury as suitable procedures for resolving the conflicts around genetic information and life assurance. Both the potential advantages and persistent problems with the model are critically evaluated

    Influencing innovation structures and processes in agro-industries dominated by subsistence producers: an analysis of the rural poultry industry in Tanzania

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    This thesis examines innovation structures and processes in rural poultry industry in Tanzania. In 2005, FAO categorised the rural poultry production system in Tanzania under the lowest sector IV with very minimal biosecurity measures and with no commercial orientation. By 2012, a DFID-funded Research into Use (RIU) programme transformed the industry to Sector III which represents a significant commercial orientation and relatively higher bio-security measures. This thesis explains how RIU achieved that. This analysis is presented from three perspectives. First, the path dependence framework is used to present the observed dominance of the traditional poultry production system as a ‘lock-in’. The study makes it clear that before RIU, mental frames, resource allocations and how dominant powers behaved reinforced low innovation tendencies. Second, using the agricultural innovation system (AIS) framework and the concepts of ‘organisational thinness’ and ‘fragmentation’ (also from path dependency theory), it explains that by making rural producers feel self-sufficient in inputs and knowledge, practices in the traditional system disconnect producers from engaging with other actors. Third, the concepts of ‘innovation broker’ and of ‘exogenous shock’ are used to present RIU as an external force or facilitator which instigated a transformation process. RIU facilitated a large number of rural producers to produce for the market, and which was sufficient enough to create a significant demand for inputs and services. This demand triggered new investment and re-organisation in the supply chains. Then, RIU supported actors to solve capacity problems that emerged from the shock. RIU is therefore presented as a flexible ‘innovation broker’ who played different roles and allocated resources based on circumstances on the ground. The thesis makes several contributions. It presents a case of how a public action can promote innovation in industries dominated by subsistence producers by playing the role of an innovation broker to support a significant number of producers to change routines and interact with other actors. It also shows that rural growth can be achieved through linking rural enterprises with those in the urban instead of supporting rural actors in isolation. It basically makes it clear that African agriculture needs re-organization, so that technological changes can follow as a consequence

    Communicating Science

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    Modern science communication has emerged in the twentieth century as a field of study, a body of practice and a profession—and it is a practice with deep historical roots. We have seen the birth of interactive science centres, the first university actions in teaching and conducting research, and a sharp growth in employment of science communicators. This collection charts the emergence of modern science communication across the world. This is the first volume to map investment around the globe in science centres, university courses and research, publications and conferences as well as tell the national stories of science communication. How did it all begin? How has development varied from one country to another? What motivated governments, institutions and people to see science communication as an answer to questions of the social place of science? Communicating Science describes the pathways followed by 39 different countries. All continents and many cultures are represented. For some countries, this is the first time that their science communication story has been told
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