369,000 research outputs found
Strategies and Resources for Integrated Community Sustainability Planning in St. Paul’s, NL
Under the Federal Gas Tax Agreement, Canadian municipalities are required to
complete an Integrated Community Sustainability Plan (ICSP) by March, 2010.
Integration and sustainability are two key concepts that have become the
foundation of recent models for community planning. The purpose of such planning
is to provide a broad, long‐term plan for a community that will help it maximize
economic and social benefits, without depleting the environmental resources upon
which community members depend.
Like many coastal communities in Newfoundland and Labrador, St. Paul’s is
currently facing many challenges to future sustainability. The town also has
opportunities to develop linkages between its many assets in order to build a
stronger community. This document discusses some of these challenges and
opportunities in the context of integrated community sustainability planning. The
document also includes strategies and resources that St. Paul’s, and other, similar
coastal communities can use to develop linkages between community assets
Linking Disability and Intercultural Studies: the adaptation journey of the visually impaired migrant in Ireland
This study focuses on the lived experiences of the visually impaired migrant in Ireland and this is the first study to document the lives of these members of Irish society. It examines how visually impaired migrants are simultaneously adapting to their disability and a new cultural environment while living in Ireland. In so doing this study aims to link the two academic fields of Intercultural Studies and Disability Studies and theoretical underpinnings for this study are drawn and woven together from both fields. As such this study draws from the development of theories relating to disability as well as the intercultural aspects of migration.
Qualitative in-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted with 22 participants living in the larger Dublin region, which comprised of two groups; migrant users and providers of services for the visually impaired. Data analysis was assisted through the software package Atlas.ti. A grounded theory approach to collecting and analysing data was adopted as this facilitates the flow from raw data to codes to concepts. Purposive sampling was employed and the typical method of grounded theory of constant comparison was not used, rather interviews were analysed individually once they were all completed then compared. Research findings indicate that the cultural perceptions of disability may help or hinder the individual’s adaptation process both to their visual impairment and to living and integrating into a new culture in Ireland. Findings cluster around the three areas of cultural perceptions of disability, support networks and cultural barriers to adaptation. Synergising theoretical concepts and data steered the development of a new integrative model which identifies the inhibitors and facilitators for the process of adaptation to visual impairment for a migrant in Ireland
The development of the strategic state and the performance management of local authorities in England
Pragmatic Administrative Law and Tax Exceptionalism
This Essay responds to the 2014 Duke Law Journal Administrative Law Symposium. Its principal contention is that courts and other commentators should give due weight to the history and virtues of the evolution of administrative law in the United States—and consider embracing the pragmatism and flexibility that it enables—in applying general principles of administrative law in the tax context
The origins of SOE in France
This article explores the official motivation behind the authorization in 1960 of research into the activities of the Special Operations Executive (SOE) during the Second World War by M. R. D. Foot, leading to the publication of SOE in France in 1966. The work has traditionally been viewed as the official response to critical investigative works on SOE published during the 1950s, combined with the vocal campaign of Dame Irene Ward, who made several calls in the House of Commons for an official account of SOE to be published. Material now available at the Public Record Office reveals that these were not the sole considerations in official minds, nor the most significant, concerning the possibility of publishing such a work. The foreign office was particularly concerned that Britain's contribution to wartime resistance in Europe, exemplified by SOE, was being overshadowed by both soviet propoganda, emphasizing the communist contribution to resistance, and the publicity being given to SOE's American counterpart, the Office of Strategic Services (OSS). The ‘campaign’ of Dame Irene Ward, supported by the negative slant given to SOE in the books of Jean Overton Fuller and Elizabeth Nicholas, unknowingly gave support to a frame of mind that was already in existence in favour of an unofficial account of SOE activity, albeit for different reasons
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