32 research outputs found
A vidéki táj használatában bekövetkezett változások társadalmi reakciók tükrében
Kutatásunk alapvetĹ‘ cĂ©lja a hazai vidĂ©ki táj használatában bekövetkezett változások vizsgálata, valamint az ezzel kapcsolatos társadalmi reakciĂłk feltárása. Ennek során azt kĂvánjuk elsĹ‘sorban megvizsgálni a Kiskunsági Nemzeti Park pĂ©ldáján, hogy a táj kezelĂ©se során milyen mĂłdon Ă©s eszközökkel törekedtek a korábbi mezĹ‘gazdasági művelĂ©s terĂĽleteinek művelĂ©si ág váltására, Ă©s a termĂ©szetközeli állapotok visszaállĂtására, illetve e folyamatban milyen eredmĂ©nyeket Ă©rtek el. A tĂ©ma idĹ‘szerűsĂ©gĂ©t az is jelzi, hogy az elmĂşlt Ă©v vĂ©gĂ©n a vĂ©dett terĂĽletek kb. 20 %-át a Nemzeti Földalap kezelĂ©sĂ©be adta az állam, tehát sorsuk a termĂ©szetvĂ©delem szempontjábĂłl Ăşjra bizonytalanná válhat
The responsibility principle. Contradictions of priority-setting in Swedish healthcare
Integrated Product Service Offerings for rail infrastructure – benefits and challenges regarding knowledge transfer and cultural change in a Swedish case
Impact of Integrated Care on the Rate of Hospitalization for Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions among Older Adults in Stockholm County: An Interrupted Time Series Analysis
Geographical variations in the relation between final course grades and results on the national tests in social sciences, 2015-2017
Committed to Integration : Local Media Representations of Refugee Integration Work in Northern Sweden
The overall aim of this article is to explore the ways in which refugee reception and integration work is storied in the local newspapers of two rural municipalities in northern Sweden. Our results show that the strong emphasis on integration through employment present in national policy regimes is not readily visible in local media portrayals of integration. Instead, integration work is framed as a matter of commitment of individual refugees, volunteers and government administrative staff and, thus, as work with a high level of social support. We argue that the frame of commitment itself needs to be viewed in relation to the growing public support for limiting the resources available for this kind of work, as well as for the limitations for refugees to enter Sweden in the first place