32 research outputs found
Migrantsâ decision-process shaping work destination choice: the case of long-term care work in the United Kingdom and Norway
Escalating demands for formal long-term care (LTC) result in the reliance on migrant workers in many developed countries. Within Europe, this is currently framed by progressive European immigration policies favouring inter-European mobility. Using the UK and Norway as case studies, this article has two main aims: (1) to document changes in the contribution of European Union (EU) migrants to the LTC sectors in Western Europe, and (2) to gain further understanding of migrantsâ decision-processes relating to destination and work choices. The UK and Norway provide examples of two European countries with different immigration histories, welfare regimes, labour market characteristics and cultural values, offering a rich comparison platform. The analysis utilizes national workforce datasets and data obtained from migrants working in the LTC sector in the UK and Norway (n = 248) and other stakeholders (n = 136). The analysis establishes a significant increase in the contribution of EU migrants (particularly from Eastern Europe) to the LTC sector in both the UK and Norway despite their different welfare regimes. The findings also highlight how migrant care workers develop rational decision-processes influenced by subjective perspectives of investments and returns within a context of wider structural migration barriers. The latter includes welfare and social care policies framing the conditions for migrantsâ individual actions
The âFierce Urgency of Nowâ: Geriatrics Professionals Speaking up for Older Adult Care in the United States
Behavioral Response Of Reef Fish And Green Sea Turtles To Midfrequency Sonar
There is growing concern over the potential effects of high-intensity sonar on wild fish populations and commercial fisheries. Acoustic telemetry was employed to measure the movements of free-ranging reef fish and sea turtles in Port Canaveral, FL, in response to routine submarine sonar testing. Twenty-five sheepshead (Archosargus probatocephalus), 28 gray snapper (Lutjanus griseus), and 29 green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas) were tagged, with movements monitored for a period of up to 4 months using an array of passive acoustic receivers. Baseline residency was examined for fish and sea turtles before, during, and after the test event. No mortality of tagged fish or sea turtles was evident from the sonar test event. There was a significant increase in the daily residency index for both sheepshead and gray snapper at the testing wharf subsequent to the event. No broad-scale movement from the study site was observed during or immediately after the test
Older adult and family member perspectives of the decision-making process involved in moving to assisted living
Prevalence and Correlates of Gray Market Use for Aging and Dementia Long-Term Care in the U.S
Effects of Transitions to Family Caregiving on WellâBeing: A Longitudinal PopulationâBased Study
Couples coping with cancer together: Successful implementation of a caregiver program as standard of care
âOut thereâ: British travel journalism and the negotiation of cultural difference
This chapter examines how British travel journalism provides its readership with cultural frames of reference for a specific touristic experience: safari holidays in Africa. It will focus on a selection of articles from British broadsheet newspapers, from The Sunday Times, and The Sunday Telegraph. The intention is to address two principal concerns. What representational strategies are deployed in travel journalism on this region and how are they constitutive of broader British imaginings of Africa? Secondly, it is important that these representational concerns are considered in terms of the commercial context in which they are produced. In addressing these concerns the intention is also to explore how this is indicative of the broader, cultural frames of reference through which travel journalism views its âothersâ