28 research outputs found

    Hymen reconstruction as pragmatic empowerment? Results of a qualitative study from Tunisia

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    Hymen reconstruction surgery (HR), while ethically controversial, is now available in many countries. Little clinical evidence and hardly any surgical standards support the intervention. Nearly as scarce is social science research exploring women's motivations for the intervention, and health care professionals' justifications for its provision. In order to better understand decision-making processes, we conducted semi-structured interviews in metropolitan Tunis, in 2009, with six women seeking the procedure, four friends who supported such women, four physicians who perform the operation, and one midwife. Health care professionals and patient companions expressed moral ambivalence about HR: although they could comprehend the individual situation of the women, they expressed concern that availability of the procedure might further entrench the patriarchal norms that compel the motivation for seeking HR in the first place. Some women seeking HR shared this concern, but felt it was not outweighed by their personal aims, which were to marry and become mothers, or to overcome past violent sexual experiences. The women felt HR to be uniquely helpful in achieving these aims; all made pragmatic decisions about their bodies in a social environment dominated by patriarchal norms. The link between HR and pervasive gender injustice, including the credible threat of serious social and physical harm to women perceived to have failed to uphold the norm of virginity before marriage, raises questions about health care professionals' responsibility while facing requests for HR. Meaningful regulatory guidance must acknowledge that these genuine harms are at stake; it must do so, however, without resorting to moral double standards. We recommend a reframing of HR as a temporary resource for some women making pragmatic choices in a context of structural gender injustice. We reconfirm the importance of factual sexual and reproductive education, most importantly to counter distorted beliefs that conflate an “intact hymen” with virginity

    Zestig jaar terug in de tijd : een wandeling met Marga van Moorst (Grietje)

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    Een wandeling langs de bewoners van de Wakkerendijk in Eemnes zestig jaar gelede

    The Vietnam Moratorium : protest and resistance

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    Schaalvoordeel en skills bijten elkaar

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    WFM en de kwaliteit van data

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    An expert-based taxonomy of ERP implementation activities

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    ERP implementation projects are complex and expensive projects. Generally, the complexity is managed by splitting the project into phases. However, splitting the project into phases seems not to enhance the understanding of the underlying processes sufficiently. Therefore, this research aims at enhancing the understanding of these underlying processes through an expert-based taxonomy of implementation activities, independent of time and phasing. This taxonomy has been developed by retrieval of 205 ERP implementation activities from literature, a grouping of these activities by 11 ERP implementation experts, and a comparison with a previous similar study. The method used for grouping was Delphi card sorting that was supported by Websort (https://www.optimalworkshop.com/optimalsort) as a web-based card sorting tool. The proposed taxonomy provides a structured list of 205 identified activities and can serve as a base for further research into ERP implementation projects and can support the planning and resource allocation of ERP projects
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