2,051 research outputs found
Voices from immigrant youth: Perceptions of their involvement with the Canadian justice system. A qualitative study
The development of the thesis project “Voices from Immigrant Youth: Perceptions of their Involvement with the Canadian Justice System. A Qualitative Study” satisfies two purposes. First, it fulfills an academic requirement that I have to meet in order to obtain the Masters of Arts in Community Psychology, and, second, it explores an issue that was identifies as a social concern by members of the Latin American community in Kitchener-Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. The study explores the issues faced by Latin American immigrant youth in their process of adapting to Canadian society, and highlights their experiences and perceptions regarding their involvement with the Canadian justice system as well as their need for support and services. The study also offers recommendations geared to improve the well-being of immigrant youth. Methodologically, a qualitative method of inquiry guided the study. It focused on obtaining in-depth and detailed information about this social phenomenon that concerned some members and parents of the Latin American community in Kitchener-Waterloo. The participatory-action research approach allowed community members to participate in the study through their involvement with the Community Support Group. This group supported the study by guiding and providing feedback to the research, reaching participants, and validating and checking my perceptions regarding the Latin American community. Data, rich in content, were collected from members of the Community Support Group and in-depth individual interviews with the nine Latin American youth, two parents, and two service providers. Theories such as the phenomenological paradigm of inquiry, the ecological paradigm, and the promotion-prevention-protection continuum were used in the interpretation and analysis of the information. The findings show that for the participants, immigration to Canada and the acculturation process was a highly demanding period in their lives. It brought pressures and challenges for them, in a time in which they were also facing the developmental tasks of adolescence. The findings show that participants and their families were experiencing risk factors associated with socio-economic and environmental circumstances such as poverty, lack of social support networks, lack of awareness of service providers of their needs as immigrants, and discrimination and prejudice. In my perception, the socio-economic conditions plus the family and personal issues with which participants were living generated by the stresses and challenges of the migration process more likely created the conditions for their involvement with the Canadian Justice System. Participants voiced their perception of the Canadian Justice System and the impact that their involvement with the system had on their young lives. The perception of being harassed or discriminated against as well as the lack of information on how the legal system works and the need for information in their own language was also mentioned. A review of the needs for support brought forward the need for support at different levels, not only for immigrant families in general, but specifically for youth already in contact with the Canadian Justice System. From my perspective, the study provides background on an issue that was a concern for some members of the Latin American community in Kitchener-Waterloo, but that may also affect other immigrant youth in the same situation. It confirms what has been reported in other studies regarding the migration process. In my view, the study also offers evidence that socio-economic determinants have a strong effect on how a disadvantaged population, immigrants in this case, access services and make choices. It also shows that in the case of the immigrant youth of the study institutional responses to their needs were not present or were insufficient. Based on the participants’ perceptions, a set of recommendations is also presented
Biomedical and Human Factors Requirements for a Manned Earth Orbiting Station
This report is the result of a study conducted by Republic Aviation Corporation in conjunction with Spacelabs, Inc.,in a team effort in which Republic Aviation Corporation was prime contractor. In order to determine the realistic engineering design requirements associated with the medical and human factors problems of a manned space station, an interdisciplinary team of personnel from the Research and Space Divisions was organized. This team included engineers, physicians, physiologists, psychologists, and physicists. Recognizing that the value of the study is dependent upon medical judgments as well as more quantifiable factors (such as design parameters) a group of highly qualified medical consultants participated in working sessions to determine which medical measurements are required to meet the objectives of the study. In addition, various Life Sciences personnel from NASA (Headquarters, Langley, MSC) participated in monthly review sessions. The organization, team members, consultants, and some of the part-time contributors are shown in Figure 1. This final report embodies contributions from all of these participants
A note on the off-diagonal Muckenhoupt-Wheeden conjecture
We obtain the off-diagonal Muckenhoupt-Wheeden conjecture for Calderón-Zygmund operators. Namely, given and a pair of weights , if the Hardy-Littlewood maximal function satisfies the following two
weight inequalities:
M:L^p(v) \to L^q(u) \quad \mbox{and} \quad M: L^{q'} (u^{1-q'}) \to (v^{1-p'} );
then any Calderón-Zygmund operator and its associated truncated maximal
operator are bounded from to . Additionally, assuming only the
second estimate for then and map continuously to
We also consider the case of generalized Haar shift operators and show that
their off-diagonal two weight estimates are governed by the corresponding
estimates for the dyadic Hardy-Littlewood maximal function
Properties of the phi meson at high temperatures and densities
We calculate the spectral density of the phi meson in a hot bath of nucleons
and pions using a general formalism relating self-energy to the forward
scattering amplitude (FSA). In order to describe the low energy FSA, we use
experimental data along with a background term. For the high energy FSA, a
Regge parameterization is employed. We verify the resulting FSA using
dispersion techniques. We find that the position of the peak of the spectral
density is slightly shifted from its vacuum position and that its width is
considerably increased. The width of the spectral density at a temperature of
150 MeV and at normal nuclear density is more than 90 MeV.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, Poster presented at Quark Matter 200
Bjerrum pairing correlations at charged interfaces
Electrostatic correlations play a fundamental role in aqueous solutions. In
this letter, we identify transverse and lateral correlations as two mutually
exclusive regimes. We show that the transverse regime leads to binding by
generalization of Bjerrum pair formation theory, yielding binding constants
from first-principle statistical-mechanical calculations. We compare our
theoretical predictions with experiments on charged membranes and Langmuir
monolayers and find good agreement. We contrast our approach with existing
theories in the strong-coupling limit and on charged modulated interfaces, and
discuss different scenarios that lead to charge reversal and equal-sign
attraction by macro-ions.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
A study of factors related to primary grade spelling: correlations of factors studied.
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
Lepto-mesons, Leptoquarkonium and the QCD Potential
We consider bound states of heavy leptoquark-antiquark pairs (lepto-mesons)
as well as leptoquark-antileptoquark pairs (leptoquarkonium). Unlike the
situation for top quarks, leptoquarks (if they exist) may live long enough for
these hadrons to form. We study the spectra and decay widths of these states in
the context of a nonrelativistic potential model which matches the recently
calculated two-loop QCD potential at short distances to a successful
phenomenological quarkonium potential at intermediate distances. We also
compute the expected number of events for these states at future colliders.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, 3 tables, plain TeX, requires harvmac. References
updated and minor clarifications made. To appear in Physics Letters
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Brief behavioural activation for adolescent depression: working with complexity and risk
Given the long-term negative outcomes associated with depression in adolescence, there is a pressing need to develop brief, evidence based treatments that are accessible to more young people experiencing low mood. Behavioural Activation (BA) is an effective treatment for adult depression, however little research has focused on the use of BA with depressed adolescents, particularly with briefer forms of BA. In this article we outline an adaptation of brief Behavioral Activation Treatment of Depression (BATD) designed for adolescents and delivered in eight sessions (Brief BA). This case example illustrates how a structured, brief intervention was useful for a depressed young person with a number of complicating and risk factors
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