56 research outputs found
Tradicionalni proizvodi - osnove za održivi razvoj proizvoda životinjskog porekla u Srbiji
Research results on the diversity of traditional products of animal origin from certain areas of the Republic of Serbia, provides an opportunity to become part of the sustainable quality development, which would be based on their promotion and protection of local resources. Traditional products of animal origin are different and inseparable from the local identity, typical for nation and its food culture. Through confidence-building, and protection from oblivion, the value of domestic products, had preserved trough centuries-old tradition. Nowadays, each domestic product has its own recognisable taste, representing climate of the Republic of Serbia, from which it comes. Universally accepted model of rural institutional structure does not exist. Instead it accommodates and develops in accordance to needs, possibilities and area specific characteristics. By the efficient protection rural models becomes an investment incentives and contribute to general economic and industrial prosperity of the society.Rezultati mnogobrojnih istraživanja o raznovrsnosti tradicionalnih proizvoda životinjskog porekla sa određenih područja Republike Srbije, pružaju mogućnost da postanu deo održivog razvoja kvaliteta, koji bi bio zasnovan na njihovoj promociji i zaštiti lokalnih resursa. Tradicionalni proizvodi životinjskog porekla, međusobno se razlikuju, neodvojivi su deo lokalnog identiteta, tipični za narod i njihovu kulturu u pripremanju hrane. Polazeći od činjenice da je Republika Srbija bogata raznovrsnošću ovih proizvoda, uočavamo njihove prednosti i specifičnosti, koje donose prednost izbora domaćem i stranom potrošaču. Kroz sticanje poverenja, ali i zaštitu od zaborava, vrednost domaćih proizvoda, sačuvala je vekovnu tradiciju, prepoznatljiv ukus i podneblje Srbije iz kojeg dolazi. Univerzalno prihvaćeni modeli ruralnih institucionalnih struktura ne postoje, već se prilagođavaju i razvijaju prema potrebama, mogućnostima i specifičnostima određenog područja. Efikasnom zaštitom, postaju podsticaj za investiranje i doprinos ukupnom ekonomskom i privrednom napretku društva
Recommended from our members
Giving something back? Sentiments of privilege and social responsibility among elite graduates from Britain and France
This article explores the complex relationship between transnational elites and civil society through examining the contrasting orientations of two cohorts of ‘elite graduates’ from Paris and Oxford. Both cohorts believe their privileged status has been earned through hard work and ability. But they are also aware that they have benefited from advantages not available to all. Perhaps because of this, they express the need to ‘give something back’. However, the means through which they seek to discharge their social responsibilities are very different. While the Oxford graduates seek to ‘give something back’ through volunteering and third sector engagement, the Paris graduates will ‘give something back’ through public service. The article discusses how the contrasting relationship between the state, civil society and the education system in these two countries may shape dispositions, and speculates on the extent to which these elite recruits’ commitment to ‘give something back’ will make a difference
Debateable Marriages: Marriage and child marriage in Saudi Arabia
This article examines marriage and the constitution of familial relationships in Saudi Arabia, with a specific focus on one form of marriage that has recently become an issue of public, political, and religious discussion, that of “child marriage.” The situation within Saudi Arabia is compared with gendered relationships in other countries, most notably those in Western Europe, with specific attention given to the United Kingdom. It is argued that policy developments in Saudi Arabia need to be seen in the context of wider Saudi culture, Sharia law, and religious interpretations of the Koran
Perimenstrual symptoms and it's management - Assessment with Menstrual Distress Questionnaire -
月経周期の変化に伴う多様で複雑な月経周辺期の症状を,出来るだけ単純で基本的に共通した変化として捉え,症状に適した対応を検討することを目的として本研究を行った。月経を有する22~45歳の女性34名に対し,Menstrual Distress Questionnaireの即時的回答法を用いて月経周辺期を[痛み],[集中力],[行動変化],[自律神経反応],[水分貯留],[負の感情]から構成された35症状6領域で縦断的に追究し,以下の結果を得た。 1.月経周辺期の症状を縦断的に比較検討した結果,Moosのデータと近似した日本人のデータを示した。 2.月経周辺期における領域の推移では,身体的症状で構成される[痛み領域],[水分貯留領域]の2領域が精神的症状で構成される他の領域に比べ,常に上位を占めていた。以上の事より,月経周辺期の生理的変化に伴う精神的愁訴は,身体的変化によって誘発されている可能性が示唆された。Each of 34 women rated their experience of 46 symptoms on a six-point scale separately for the premenstrual, menstrual, and intermenstrual phases of her most recent menstrual cycle. The 46 symptoms were intercorrelated and factor analyzed separately for each phase. These symptoms were divided into six clusters of symptoms, such as pain, concentration, behavioral change, autonomic reaction, water
retention, and negative affect. Pain and water retention were composed of physical symptoms, were always at higher position than three clusters of menstrual symptoms in perimenstrual change. Thus, mental symptoms in perimenstrual physiological changes were might be induced by physical changes
Comics Telling Refugee Stories
This chapter begins with an indicative survey of comics responding to the current ‘refugee crisis’. The comics in question adopt one of two distinct and established approaches. The first is reportage, usually featuring the author/creator as a central device, while the second re-works and renders testimony in visual form. In their different ways, both contribute to a wider repertoire of positive and sympathetic representations of refugees, offering a counter-point to hostile media and political discourse, often by a focus on the stories of individuals. Mobilizing compassion and moral responses through personal stories of hardship, trauma, tenacity, and survival has long been a tactic of reformist agendas and humanitarian advocacy. By their qualitative difference from dominant forms of factual discourse, comics offer certain advantages. They may also circumvent certain problems associated with photographic representations of suffering. Such comics can nevertheless run the risk of re-producing established victim tropes, and just as with other forms of representation, human-interest angles carry the potential to obscure political dimensions. In an attempt to consider and situate these concerns, the analysis considers the various positions and relations that constitute ‘refugee comics’: subjects, readers, creators, (im)materiality, and circulation
From statehood to childhood A study of self-determination and conflict resolution in Yugoslavia and the post-Yugoslav States
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN042116 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
- …