26 research outputs found

    Giant Alcohol: A Worthy Opponent for the Children of the Band of Hope

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    From its foundation in 1847, the temperance organisation the Band of Hope addressed its young members as consumers, victims, and agents. In the first two roles they encountered the effects of drink of necessity, but in the third role they were encouraged to seek it out, attempting to influence individuals and wider society against 'Giant Alcohol'. With an estimated membership of half the school-age population by the early twentieth century, well over three million, the Band of Hope also acted more directly to influence policy, and encouraged young people to consider issues of policy and politics. With its wide range of activities and material to educate, entertain and empower millions of children, and its radical view of the place of the child, the Band of Hope not only mobilised its child members to lobby for legal change, including prohibition, but took an active part in pointing out the cost of alcohol to society, particularly during the 14-18 war. The organisation began to decline post 1918, and this paper focuses on the address made to children by the Band of Hope in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, at a time when its innovative view of children as able to understand and influence policy decisions reflected developments in the construction of childhood. This article draws on the archive of the British National Temperance League, over 50,000 items located in the Livesey Collection, University of Central Lancashire

    Sporting embodiment: sports studies and the (continuing) promise of phenomenology

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    Whilst in recent years sports studies have addressed the calls ‘to bring the body back in’ to theorisations of sport and physical activity, the ‘promise of phenomenology’ remains largely under-realised with regard to sporting embodiment. Relatively few accounts are grounded in the ‘flesh’ of the lived sporting body, and phenomenology offers a powerful framework for such analysis. A wide-ranging, multi-stranded, and interpretatively contested perspective, phenomenology in general has been taken up and utilised in very different ways within different disciplinary fields. The purpose of this article is to consider some selected phenomenological threads, key qualities of the phenomenological method, and the potential for existentialist phenomenology in particular to contribute fresh perspectives to the sociological study of embodiment in sport and exercise. It offers one way to convey the ‘essences’, corporeal immediacy and textured sensuosity of the lived sporting body. The use of Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) is also critically addressed. Key words: phenomenology; existentialist phenomenology; interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA); sporting embodiment; the lived-body; Merleau-Pont

    A scoping review establishes need for consensus guidance on reporting health equity in observational studies.

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    To evaluate the support from the available guidance on reporting of health equity in research for our candidate items and to identify additional items for the Strengthening Reporting of Observational studies in Epidemiology-Equity extension. We conducted a scoping review by searching Embase, MEDLINE, CINAHL, Cochrane Methodology Register, LILACS, and Caribbean Center on Health Sciences Information up to January 2022. We also searched reference lists and gray literature for additional resources. We included guidance and assessments (hereafter termed "resources") related to conduct and/or reporting for any type of health research with or about people experiencing health inequity. We included 34 resources, which supported one or more candidate items or contributed to new items about health equity reporting in observational research. Each candidate item was supported by a median of six (range: 1-15) resources. In addition, 12 resources suggested 13 new items, such as "report the background of investigators". Existing resources for reporting health equity in observational studies aligned with our interim checklist of candidate items. We also identified additional items that will be considered in the development of a consensus-based and evidence-based guideline for reporting health equity in observational studies

    Borrelioses, agentes e vetores

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    Historic evolution of a marsh island: Bloodsworth Island, Maryland

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    High rates of relative sea-level rise in the Chesapeake Bay of about 0.3 m/century has caused rapid land loss of the Bay islands. This study is the first quantitative analysis of both perimeter and interior land loss for one of the large marsh islands?Bloodsworth Island. A geographical information system (GIS) was used for the analysis at a resolution of about 16 meters. From 1849 to 1992, the area of Bloodsworth Island declined by 579 ha, or 26% of the land area in 1849. The land loss can be divided into four geomorphic types: perimeter land loss, channel widening, channel ponding, and non- channel ponding. Perimeter land loss is largest at 3.0 ha/yr from 1942 to 1992, but the three interior land loss types are also significant, totalling 1.6 ha/yr from 1942 to 1992. Channel ponding and widening were responsible for nearly all interior land loss prior to 1942. The initial formation of non- channel ponds is attributed to a short-term acceleration in sea-level rise (to 7 mm/yr from 1930 to 1948). Subsequently, non-channel ponding has been significant, particularly in the southeastern quadrant of the island. Compared to the mainland marshes, interior land loss has occurred at much slower rates; this is probably due to the low thickness of the marsh deposits on Bloodsworth. To date, bombing appears to have only had a secondary impact on land loss at the scale of this study. In the future, the island appears increasingly vulnerable to interior break- up, particularly given another short-term acceleration of sea-level rise

    Resource Advantage Theory and Fair Trade Social Enterprises

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    This paper will investigate the competitive position of both fair trade (FT) social enterprises Divine Chocolate Ltd (Divine) and CafĂ©direct in their respective UK markets, namely chocolate confectionery and hot beverages. Using Eisenhardt’s (1989, 1991, and 2007) approach to building theory from multiple case studies, this four-year PhD study aims to identify the resources that enable FT social enterprises to compete. This research draws on recent developments in competition theory such as resource advantage theory (R-A theory), termed a general theory of competition. The paper will critically analyse if the social and ethical elements of these firm’s product offerings really constitute meaningful differentiators (i.e. comparative advantage) as required by R-A theory (Hunt and Morgan 1995, Hunt 2001). Hunt and Derozier (2004) argue that R-A theory can ground theories of business and marketing strategy and therefore identifying the competitive resources of FT social enterprises will have important strategic implications. The research findings show that both Divine and CafĂ©direct have established a mainstream competitive position in specific product segments and distribution channels. Thus illustrating intra-industry demand to be heterogeneous. In addition, both companies have been a catalyst for change by influencing the strategies and policies of both branded manufactures and retailers such as Cooperative Food (CF). The key theoretical contribution validates ‘social resources’ and its three inter-related components: ethical and social commitments, connections with partners and consistency of behaviour as a resource to extend R-A theory. These ‘social resources’ in combination with both relational resources and threshold capabilities (e.g. product quality) result in a competitive position for both case organisations. The ethical and social commitments of ‘social resources’ also appears to provide an example of an ethical underpinning to Relationship Marketing. The identification of ‘social resources’ has important wider implications for both other social enterprises and those companies who are aiming to achieve a competitive position based on social commitments
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