Endorsement of Money Ethic and Protestant Work Ethic among Three Groups of Welfare Recipients.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Tang, Thomas Li-Ping; Smith-Brandon, Vancie L.; Tang, Theresa Li-Na
Endorsement of the money ethic and the Protestant work ethic among past and present welfare recipients was examined in a study of three groups: 164 current recipients of Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC); 159 individuals receiving AFDC while enrolled in various training programs; and 158 past AFDC recipients who are now employed. The…
American College Students and Protestant Work Ethic.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Wentworth, Diane Keyser; Chell, Robert M.
1997-01-01
Hypothesizes that older, graduate, and non-U.S. students would express a greater belief in Max Weber's "Protestant work ethic" (PWE), that posits hard work and delayed gratification as bases for achievement. Finds that younger students, male students, and foreign students have the strongest beliefs in the PWE. Explains the findings. (DSK)
Protestant Ethic Endorsement, Personality, and General Intelligence
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Christopher, Andrew N.; Furnham, Adrian; Batey, Mark; Martin, G. Neil; Koenig, Cynthia S.; Doty, Kristin
2010-01-01
To learn if Protestant ethic endorsement predicted intelligence controlling for the big five personality factors, 364 college students from England and the United States completed a 65-item multifaceted work ethic endorsement measure, the 50-item Wonderlic Personnel Test, and a 60-item measure of the big five personality factors. A hierarchical…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Tang, Thomas Li-Ping
Goal-setting literature has suggested that specific, difficult goals will produce higher performance levels than easy goals. A difficult task or one with negative performance feedback may increase an individual's perceived challenge of the task which may in turn enhance his motivation. Effects of the Protestant work ethic and perceived challenge…
Was Weber Wrong? A Human Capital Theory of Protestant Economic History. PEPG/07-04
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Becker, Sascha O.; Wohmann, Ludger
2007-01-01
Max Weber attributed the higher economic prosperity of Protestant regions to a Protestant work ethic. We provide an alternative theory, where Protestant economies prospered because instruction in reading the Bible generated the human capital crucial to economic prosperity. County-level data from late 19th-century Prussia reveal that Protestantism…
Campus Governance - The Next Decade.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hodgkinson, Harold L.
In our society, the majority of the population is under 25, and the value orientation of this group is replacing the old one of the Protestant Ethic. Work is deemphasized and fulfillment stressed; joy is substituted for guilt. The campus has, however, not moved an iota toward this new ethic, and much of student protest revolves around that. During…
Factors Affecting Intrinsic Motivation among University Students in Taiwan.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Tang, Li-Ping Thomas
1990-01-01
Studies the effects of the Protestant work ethic and performance feedback on intrinsic motivation in a sample of Taiwanese university students. Divides subjects into three groups according to work ethic measurement: high, intermediate, and low. Suggests students with a low work ethic exert more effort when challenged. (NL)
Birkhäuser, Martin
2013-11-01
Protestantism is not a centralized religion. It is composed by many independent Churches having different moral and ethical standards. This review concentrates on the ethical principles prevalent in most modern European Reformed Churches. It does not intend to discuss the ethical principles of many other Protestant Churches present mainly in the USA. The common foundations of Protestant theology are the "five sola ("Sola scriptura", Sola fide", "Sola gratia", Solus Christus or Solo Christo", "Soli deo gloria"). In opposition to the Catholic Church, no intermediary is needed between the Bible and the believer. As a consequence, Protestant Churches have no Magisterium, such as the Catholic Church. Therefore Protestant Churches cannot declare a certain position to be the "official position". Each Christian is personally responsible for all his acts, including his ethical behaviour. There is no complete unanimity among all Protestants on ethics or on any other issue. Human dignity, personal rights and self-determination have to be respected in each ethical consideration. The supersession of the Old Mosaic Covenant (including traditional Jewish law or Halakhah, maintained in Catholicism) by the New Covenant and by Christian Theology has an important impact on Protestant ethics in reproductive medicine. In the New Covenant, the Protestants Churches did not maintain the mandatory obligation from the old Mosaic Covenant to be fruitful and to multiply: there is no divine obligation by God to procreate. As a consequence, contraception is not a sin and not unethical. The status of the embryo is the key for the ethical consideration of all methods used in reproductive medicine. Most representatives of modern Protestant theology and bioethics defend the opinion that the embryo is not an independent human being as is the newborn child. For most Protestant bio-ethicists, as long as an embryo has no nervous system, no organs and no pain receptors, it cannot be seen as a human being sensu strictiori: the zygote is not yet a "human being". The ethical right to be protected prenatally increases gradually with the age and the development of the embryo. Following this so-called gradualist interpretation, the early stages of an embryo merit ethically a special status: although they have already "human life", they are not yet a "human being". All ethical considerations in modern reproductive medicine discussed in this review are based on this concept of the status of the embryo. It depends largely on the acceptance or rejection of this special status of the embryo, if a Protestant considers a certain method in reproductive medicine to be ethical or unethical.
Fundamental(ist) attribution error: Protestants are dispositionally focused.
Li, Yexin Jessica; Johnson, Kathryn A; Cohen, Adam B; Williams, Melissa J; Knowles, Eric D; Chen, Zhansheng
2012-02-01
Attribution theory has long enjoyed a prominent role in social psychological research, yet religious influences on attribution have not been well studied. We theorized and tested the hypothesis that Protestants would endorse internal attributions to a greater extent than would Catholics, because Protestantism focuses on the inward condition of the soul. In Study 1, Protestants made more internal, but not external, attributions than did Catholics. This effect survived controlling for Protestant work ethic, need for structure, and intrinsic and extrinsic religiosity. Study 2 showed that the Protestant-Catholic difference in internal attributions was significantly mediated by Protestants' greater belief in a soul. In Study 3, priming religion increased belief in a soul for Protestants but not for Catholics. Finally, Study 4 found that experimentally strengthening belief in a soul increased dispositional attributions among Protestants but did not change situational attributions. These studies expand the understanding of cultural differences in attributions by demonstrating a distinct effect of religion on dispositional attributions.
Conservative Ideology and Ambivalent Sexism
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Christopher, Andrew N.; Mull, Melinda S.
2006-01-01
To assess the relationship between different facets of conservative ideology and ambivalent sexism, 246 residents of two towns in southern Michigan completed a social dominance orientation scale (SDO), a right-wing authoritarianism scale (RWA), a Protestant work ethic scale (PWE), and the Glick and Fiske (1996) Ambivalent Sexism Inventory via a…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Huffstutter, Sandra; Smith, Stuart C.
Chapter 14 of a revised volume on school leadership, this chapter offers many practical suggestions for managing time and reducing stress. The primary challenge is to unblock the route to effective time/stress management by recognizing unproductive values and attitudes (such as overreliance on the Protestant work ethic or the appearance of…
Aciksoz, Salih Can
2016-06-01
During the 2013 Gezi protests in Turkey, volunteering health professionals provided on-site medical assistance to protesters faced with police violence characterized by the extensive use of riot control agents. This led to a government crackdown on the medical community and the criminalization of "unauthorized" first aid amidst international criticisms over violations of medical neutrality. Drawing from ethnographic observations, in-depth interviews with health care professionals, and archival research, this article ethnographically analyzes the polarized encounter between the Turkish government and medical professionals aligned with social protest. I demonstrate how the context of "atmospheric violence"-the extensive use of riot control agents like tear gas-brings about new politico-ethical spaces and dilemmas for healthcare professionals. I then analyze how Turkish health professionals framed their provision of health services to protestors in the language of medical humanitarianism, and how the state dismissed their claims to humanitarian neutrality by criminalizing emergency care. Exploring the vexed role that health workers and medical organizations played in the Gezi protests and the consequent political contestations over doctors' ethical, professional, and political responsibilities, this article examines challenges to medical humanitarianism and neutrality at times of social protest in and beyond the Middle East.
[Hunger striking in prisons: ethics and the ethical and legal aspects].
García-Guerrero, J
2013-01-01
Hunger strike is a common form of protest in prisons and is a potential cause of many types of problems, both for the prison administration and the doctors who care for prisoners who participate in one. Issues of conflict of rights and obligations involved, and how to treat people who are subject to the Administration, which in this case takes the position of guarantor, have created major controversies over doctrine. Conscientious objection and the conflict of dual loyalty of doctors working in prisons are also issues closely linked to a prison hunger strike. In this paper we review the solution given to the problem of treatment of a prison hunger strike from three perspectives: ethics, ethical and legal.
Protest of doctors: a basic human right or an ethical dilemma
2014-01-01
Background Peaceful protests and strikes are a basic human right as stated in the United Nations’ universal declaration on human rights. But for doctors, their proximity to life and death and the social contract between a doctor and a patient are stated as the reasons why doctors are valued more than the ordinary beings. In Pakistan, strikes by doctors were carried out to protest against lack of service structure, security and low pay. This paper discusses the moral and ethical concerns pertaining to the strikes by medical doctors in the context of Pakistan. The author has carefully tried to balance the discussion about moral repercussions of strikes on patients versus the circumstances of doctors working in public sector hospitals of a developing country that may lead to strikes. Discussion Doctors are envisaged as highly respectable due to their direct link with human lives. Under Hippocrates oath, care of the patient is a contractual obligation for the doctors and is superior to all other responsibilities. From utilitarian perspective, doctors’ strikes are justifiable only if there is evidence of long term benefits to the doctors, patients and an improvement in service delivery. Despite that, it is hard to justify such benefits against the risks to the patients. Harms that may incur to the patients include: prolongation of sufferings, irreversible damage to health, delay in treatment, death, loss of work and waste of financial resources. In a system of socialized medicine, government owing to greater control over resources and important managerial decisions should assume greater responsibility and do justice to all stakeholders including doctors as well as patients. If a doctor is underpaid, has limited options for career growth and is forced to work excessively, then not only quality of medical care and ability to act in the best interests of patients is adversely affected, it may also lead to brain drain. Summary There is no single best answer against or in favor of doctors’ industrial action. The author calls for the debate and discussion to revitalize the understanding of the ethical predicaments of doctors’ strikes with patient care as the priority. PMID:24612947
Protest of doctors: a basic human right or an ethical dilemma.
Abbasi, Imran Naeem
2014-03-10
Peaceful protests and strikes are a basic human right as stated in the United Nations' universal declaration on human rights. But for doctors, their proximity to life and death and the social contract between a doctor and a patient are stated as the reasons why doctors are valued more than the ordinary beings. In Pakistan, strikes by doctors were carried out to protest against lack of service structure, security and low pay. This paper discusses the moral and ethical concerns pertaining to the strikes by medical doctors in the context of Pakistan. The author has carefully tried to balance the discussion about moral repercussions of strikes on patients versus the circumstances of doctors working in public sector hospitals of a developing country that may lead to strikes. Doctors are envisaged as highly respectable due to their direct link with human lives. Under Hippocrates oath, care of the patient is a contractual obligation for the doctors and is superior to all other responsibilities. From utilitarian perspective, doctors' strikes are justifiable only if there is evidence of long term benefits to the doctors, patients and an improvement in service delivery. Despite that, it is hard to justify such benefits against the risks to the patients. Harms that may incur to the patients include: prolongation of sufferings, irreversible damage to health, delay in treatment, death, loss of work and waste of financial resources.In a system of socialized medicine, government owing to greater control over resources and important managerial decisions should assume greater responsibility and do justice to all stakeholders including doctors as well as patients. If a doctor is underpaid, has limited options for career growth and is forced to work excessively, then not only quality of medical care and ability to act in the best interests of patients is adversely affected, it may also lead to brain drain. There is no single best answer against or in favor of doctors' industrial action. The author calls for the debate and discussion to revitalize the understanding of the ethical predicaments of doctors' strikes with patient care as the priority.
Indulging anxiety: human enhancement from a Protestant perspective.
Hanson, Mark J
1999-08-01
At the heart of any ethics of human enhancement must be some normative assumptions about human nature. The purpose of this essay is to draw on themes from a Protestant theological anthropology to provide a basis for understanding and evaluating the tension between maintaining our humanity and enhancing it. Drawing primarily on the work of theologian Reinhold Niebuhr, I interpret enhancement as proceeding from the anxiety that characterizes human experience at the juncture of freedom and finiteness. Religious and moral dimensions of human sinfulness are considered in relation to cultural values that motivate human enhancement generally. I employ these dimensions in a series of benchmarks to suggest a background of theological, anthropological, and moral considerations against which enhancement is not to be condemmed but rather critically evaluated.
Testing the Protestant Ethic Thesis with Quantitative Historical Data: A Research Note
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Sanderson, Stephen K.; Abrutyn, Seth B.; Proctor, Kristopher R.
2011-01-01
We provide a test of the thesis that Protestantism influenced the development of modern capitalism by using quantitative data from 1500 through 1870. Results show that during this period the percentage of a country's population that is Protestant is unrelated to both its level of per capita GDP and the average rate of its annual growth in per…
How Christian ethics became medical ethics: the case of Paul Ramsey.
Hauerwas, Stanley
1995-03-01
Over the last century Christian ethics has moved from an attempt to Christianize the social order to a quandary over whether being Christian unduly biases how medical ethics is done. This movement can be viewed as the internal development of protestant liberalism to its logical conclusion, and Paul Ramsey can be taken as one of the last great representatives of that tradition. By reducing the Christian message to the 'ethical upshot' of neighbour love, Ramsey did not have the resources to show how Christian practice might make a difference for understanding or forming the practice of medicine. Instead, medicine became the practice that exemplified the moral commitments of Christian civilization, and the goal of the ethicist was to identify the values that were constitutive of medicine. Ramsey thus prepared the way for the Christian ethicist to become a medical ethicist with a difference, and the difference simply involved vague theological presumptions that do no serious intellectual work other than explaining, perhaps, the motivations of the ethicist.
Ethics and Nuclear Arms: European and American Perspectives.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
English, Raymond, Ed.
In these 10 essays, 5 European and 5 American political and religious leaders examine the ethics of possessing and using nuclear weapons. They appraise the policy of nuclear deterrence. Protestant and Catholic viewpoints are represented. There are disagreements on details and differences in emphasis on positions and policies. There is general…
Speaking to the World: Four Protestant Perspectives. Ethics and Public Policy Essay 50.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Neuhaus, Richard John
This volume contains an address by Richard John Neuhaus entitled "Let the Church Be the Church" in which it is asserted that the crisis in Christian social ethics today is a crisis of faith which calls for spiritual, theological, and ethical renewal. The address is a retrospective look at the Vietnam-era debate between Neuhaus and Paul Ramsey,…
The Adulthood of Buddhahood: Buddhism, Lifelong Learning and the Education of Desire.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
MacPherson, Sonia
1996-01-01
Buddhism as a philosophy of education is examined through discussion of the three trainings: ethics, meditative stabilization, and special wisdom. Tantric Buddhism and Protestant Christianity are compared. (SK)
Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (JLTV): Background and Issues for Congress
2016-02-18
file a protest with GAO. A formal protest was later filed with GAO on September 10, 2015, and on that day the Army issued a stop- work order to Oshkosh...5 Lockheed Martin Files Protest with the Government Accountability Office (GAO)................ 5 Army Stops Work on the JLTV...6 United States Court of Federal Claims Denies Lockheed Martin’s Stop- Work Request .......... 6 Lockheed Martin Withdraws JLTV Protest from
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Paterson, John G.; And Others
These 4 papers were presented at the Canadian Guidance and Counselling Convention, 1971. (1) Hughes used a questionnaire to show that marihuana users were more likely to subscribe to the "hang-loose ethic," i.e., a personal and social ethic antagonistic to the ideas of the Protestant ethic, as manifested in their behaviors; self-concepts;…
Animal Rights Groups Target High School Dissection.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Trotter, Andrew
1992-01-01
Two groups leading the charge against dissection are People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and the Student Action Corps for Animals (SACA). Protests by student and community members remain the movement's strongest weapon. (MLF)
Ethical Issues in Neuromarketing: "I Consume, Therefore I am!".
Ulman, Yesim Isil; Cakar, Tuna; Yildiz, Gokcen
2015-10-01
Neuromarketing is a recent interdisciplinary field which crosses traditional boundaries between neuroscience, neuroeconomics and marketing research. Since this nascent field is primarily concerned with improving marketing strategies and promoting sales, there has been an increasing public aversion and protest against it. These protests can be exemplified by the reactions observed lately in Baylor School of Medicine and Emory University in the United States. The most recent attempt to stop ongoing neuromarketing research in France is also remarkable. The pertaining ethical issues have been continuously attracting much attention, especially since the number of neuromarketing companies has exceeded 300 world-wide. This paper begins with a brief introduction to the field of neurotechnology by presenting its current capabilities and limitations. Then, it will focus on the ethical issues and debates most related with the recent applications of this technology. The French Parliament's revision of rules on bioethics in 2004 has an exemplary role in our discussion. The proposal by Murphy et al. (2008) has attracted attention to the necessity of ethical codes structuring this field. A code has recently been declared by the Neuromarketing Science and Business Association. In this paper, it is argued that these technologies should be sufficiently discussed in public spheres and its use on humans should be fully carried out according to the ethical principles and legal regulations designed in line with human rights and human dignity. There is an urgent need in the interdisciplinary scientific bodies like ethics committees monitoring the research regarding the scientific and ethical values of nonmaleficence, beneficence, autonomy, confidentiality, right to privacy and protection of vulnerable groups.
Vanden Heede, Fred; Pelican, Suzanne; Holmes, Betty; Moore, Sylvia A; Buchanan, David
This article explores how people's values shape their experiences and emotions with respect to physical activity, eating, and body image. It describes the results of a grounded theory analysis of individual and focus group interviews conducted as part of a community-based health improvement project, Wellness IN the Rockies (WIN the Rockies). The analysis links core theoretical constructs, including habitus, sedimentation, and natural attitude, to larger socio-cultural and historical trends embodied in the Protestant ethic and the rise of consumerism, illuminating how these values shape people's everyday understanding of their experiences. Key analytic frameworks focus on the socialization processes involved in inculcating values, identity formation, and moralization as they relate to health attitudes and behaviors. Major implications of the results are discussed, especially the need to enhance self-understanding about social values in health education.
When Active Citizenship Becomes "Mob Rule."
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Thompson, Jane
2000-01-01
Recent protests and vigilante actions in Britain related to pedophiles raise issues for adult educators. Educators must be prepared to struggle along with learners in the creation of knowledge based on reason and emotion and shaped by ethical and political considerations. (SK)
"Sweatshop" Protests Raise Ethical and Practical Issues.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
van der Werf, Martin
1999-01-01
Student activists have put pressure on colleges and universities to toughen licensing codes aimed at eliminating sweatshop labor for college apparel made in other countries, and have had some success. However, oversight of the codes among contractors in developing countries is logistically and economically problematic. (MSE)
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Edwards, Jack E.; Waters, L. K.
1980-01-01
A job involvement measure adapted to reflect course involvement was unrelated to age, sex, class rank, and tested verbal ability. However, it was significantly and positively related to achievement motivation, locus of control, Protestant ethic attitudes, academic satisfaction, and performance. (Author/CP)
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Keniston, Kenneth
Student activists in the US attend the best colleges and universities, approximate the intellectual and ethical ideals of their professors, and have experienced the affluence and security provided by post-industrial society. Their current moralistic protest concentrates on the Vietnam war and racism in the US. They are most dissatisfied with…
Complicating decisions: The work ethic heuristic and the construction of effortful decisions.
Schrift, Rom Y; Kivetz, Ran; Netzer, Oded
2016-07-01
The notion that effort and hard work yield desired outcomes is ingrained in many cultures and affects our thinking and behavior. However, could valuing effort complicate our lives? In the present article, the authors demonstrate that individuals with a stronger tendency to link effort with positive outcomes end up complicating what should be easy decisions. People distort their preferences and the information they search and recall in a manner that intensifies the choice conflict and decisional effort they experience before finalizing their choice. Six experiments identify the effort-outcome link as the underlying mechanism for such conflict-increasing behavior. Individuals with a stronger tendency to link effort with positive outcomes (e.g., individuals who subscribe to a Protestant Work Ethic) are shown to complicate decisions by: (a) distorting evaluations of alternatives (Study 1); (b) distorting information recalled about the alternatives (Studies 2a and 2b); and (3) distorting interpretations of information about the alternatives (Study 3). Further, individuals conduct a superfluous search for information and spend more time than needed on what should have been an easy decision (Studies 4a and 4b). (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).
The Specific Challenges of Globalization for Teaching and Vice Versa.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Smith, David Geoffrey
2000-01-01
Contemporary globalization is a continuation of European colonialism, shaped by the Protestant capitalist ethic and technology. The changing mandates of teaching and education under the influence of globalization are identified. Possibilities for teaching in the age of globalization are explored under three themes: recovery of personal truth,…
Have We Reached the End of History?
1989-02-01
is precisely this kind of individual and his pursuit of material incentives that is posited as the basis for economic life as such in economics ... textbooks . 7 One small example will illustrate the problematic character of such materialist views. Max Weber begins his famous book The Protestant Ethic and
Religion, Repulsion, and Reaction Formation: Transforming Repellent Attractions and Repulsions.
Cohen, Dov; Kim, Emily; Hudson, Nathan W
2017-06-12
Protestants were more likely than non-Protestants to demonstrate phenomena consistent with the use of reaction formation. Lab experiments showed that when manipulations were designed to produce taboo attractions (to unconventional sexual practices), Protestants instead showed greater repulsion. When implicitly conditioned to produce taboo repulsions (to African Americans), Protestants instead showed greater attraction. Supportive evidence from other studies came from clinicians' judgments, defense mechanism inventories, and a survey of respondent attitudes. Other work showed that Protestants who diminished and displaced threatening affect were more likely to sublimate this affect into creative activities; the present work showed that Protestants who do not or cannot diminish or displace such threatening affect instead reverse it. Traditional individual difference variables showed little ability to predict reaction formation, suggesting that the observed processes go beyond what we normally study when we talk about self-control. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).
Gender and attitudes toward work.
Maurer, A; Oszustowicz, B; Stocki, R
1994-01-01
This study examines gender differences in attitudes towards work in Poland and Germany and considers the implications of these findings for counseling. The study opens with a review of the following theories dealing with the relationship between psychological attitude and economic growth: Weber on the Protestant work ethic, Schumpeter on competitiveness, McClelland on achievement motivation, and Wiener on low valuation of business (the status of different occupations as an important factor affecting economic growth). This study, part of a larger research project, involved administering questionnaires to 300 Polish students (150 male) and 306 German students. Data were collected on work ethic, achievement motivation, mastery (a concern for excellence), competitiveness, achievement via conformity, money beliefs, attitude towards saving, and occupational preferences. Results were tabulated for men in each country, for women in each country, and for gender differences in each country. National differences were found in work ethic, achievement motivation, competitiveness, and achievement via conformity with results higher for Poland than Germany (with the exception that women in Poland were less interested in saving money). German men and women preferred the occupations of doctor and social worker, German women preferred being a country landowner and farmer. Polish men preferred being a small business owner and Polish women preferred being a teacher. The men generally had higher scores than the women for most occupations. Consideration of these results in light of the economic achievements of both countries would challenge theories of attitude and economic growth. This discrepancy may be a function of the different political systems in each country at the time of the survey. Counselors, therefore, should be sensitive to national and regional environments as well as to the importance of counseling parents to create a supportive environment to foster appropriate attitudes towards work in children.
Training Subversives: The Ethics of Leadership Preparation
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Buskey, Frederick C.; Pitts, Eric M.
2009-01-01
School leaders have traditionally learned to "do no harm." But they must also develop the necessary skills to "do good." That can require "artistic subordination," a theory of action inspired by nonviolent protests. School leaders can learn five steps to that will help guide their actions in sticky situations. Strategies for action are framed in…
Student Affairs: Helping Move from Controversy and Confrontation to Collaboration
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Roper, Larry D.
2004-01-01
This article describes the author's experience dealing with animal rights protests. It describes a group convened to address the issue of animal care and use in education, comprised of faculty from veterinary medicine, veterinary students, members of the Vegetarian Resources Network, the director of Oregon State's Program for Ethics, Science, and…
Globalizing Globalization: The Neo-Institutional Concept of a World Culture
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Trohler, Daniel
2009-01-01
In this paper, the author focuses on how globalization and education are addressed in research. More precisely, he concentrates on only one dominant approach to analyzing globalization and its effects on education and also the educational role within globalization. His thesis is that, with the background of Max Weber's Protestant ethic thesis,…
Westerink, Herman
2011-01-01
In his seminar on ethics Jacques Lacan suggests there exists a "filiation or cultural paternity" between Freudian psychoanalysis and a "new direction of thought" that starts with Luther's conceptualization of God's eternal hate of man, and is then futher continued in Calvinism. In this article this thesis is explored. The author argues that there is not only a familiarity between the Protestant doctrines of predestination and Freud's reconstruction of prehistoric events and primal scenes, but also that Lacan's views on conscience formation and his elaborations of the complexity of moral decisions resembles Calvinist thought on civil and spiritual conscience, and the longing for restoration of a lost image of God.
Steinberg, Holger
2004-09-01
Throughout his work Johann Christian August Heinroth regarded sin to be the cause of mental illness. The present two-part paper investigates what exactly Heinroth understood by sin. Based on a thorough analysis of his own texts, this study shows that on the one hand Heinroth referred to sin in a Christian-Protestant sense. On the other, however, a moral-ethical code of conduct was also involved. Thus, Heinroth did not regard sin as a singular event, but rather as a life conducted in a wrong way for years or even decades, by which he meant a steady striving towards earthly, bodily satisfaction.
Modelling the distance impedance of protest attendance
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Traag, V. A.; Quax, R.; Sloot, P. M. A.
2017-02-01
Protesters are usually young, relatively well educated, middle class people that are politically engaged. But where do protesters come from? We here show, based on mobile phone data, that distance is an important impedance to protest attendance. Most protesters come from nearby regions, suggesting distance forms an obstacle to participation. Although this effect can be partly explained by social network effects, which show similar spatial dependencies, an effect of distance remains. This suggests distance still acts as an obstacle to participation, although it may also be that long-range contacts are less effective for recruitment. Face-to-face contacts seem more important in spreading protests through earlier participants, whereas central recruitment works better by telephone. Our results are important for understanding processes of recruitment.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... status determinations in considering an SDB protest? 124.1013 Section 124.1013 Business Credit and... § 124.1013 How does SBA make disadvantaged status determinations in considering an SDB protest? (a... the contract until: (i) The SBA has made an SDB determination, or (ii) 15 working days have expired...
Australian Liberalism, the Middle Class and Public Education from Henry Parkes to John Howard
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Sherington, Geoffrey; Campbell, Craig
2004-01-01
In a recent study Judith Brett has raised the "problematic" of the middle class in Australia and its support for a liberal tradition where the prime focus is on the individual citizen rather than the state. She suggests that Australian liberalism was drawn from the heritage of British Protestant dissent with its ethic of independently…
Bartmann, Peter
2003-01-01
In this essay I shall describe and analyse the current debate on physician assisted suicide in contemporary German Protestant church and theology. It will be shown that the Protestant (mainly Lutheran) Church in Germany together with her Roman Catholic sister church has a specific and influential position in the public discussion: The two churches counting the majority of the population in Germany among their members tend to "organize" a social and political consensus on end-of-life questions. This cooperation is until now very successful: Speaking with one voice on end-of-life questions, the two churches function as the guardians of a moral consensus which is appreciated even by many non-believers. Behind this joint service to society the lines of the theological debate have to be ree-discovered. First it will be argued that a Protestant reading of the joint memoranda has to be based on the concept of individual conscience. The crucial questions are then: Whose conscience has the authority to decide? and: Can the physician assisted suicide be desired faithfully? Prominent in the current debate are Ulrich Eibach as a strict defender of the sanctity of life, and on the other side Walter Jens and Hans Kung, who argue for a right to physician assisted suicide under extreme conditions. I shall argue that it will be necessary to go beyond this actual controversy to the works of Gerhard Ebeling and Karl Barth for a clear and instructive account of conscience and a theological analysis of the concepts of life and suicide. On the basis of their considerations, a conscience-related approach to physician assisted suicide is developed.
The use of narrative in Jewish medical ethics.
Jotkowitz, Alan
2013-09-01
Anne Jones has pointed out that over the last three decades, stories have been important to medical ethics in at least three ways: (1). Stories as cases for teaching principle-based medical ethics (2). Narratives for moral guides on what is considered living a good life (3). Stories as testimonials written by both patients and physicians. A pioneer in this effort, particularly in regard to using narratives as moral guides, has been the ethicist and philosopher Stanley Hauerwas. Heavily influenced by virtue ethics, Hauerwas believes that it is a person's particular narrative tradition that provides one with convictions that form the basis of one's morality. Befitting a Protestant theologian, he is particularly concerned with the Christian narrative. From a Jewish perspective, there has been much less written on the use of narrative in medical ethics. However, it is a mistake to think that narrative has little, if any, role in Rabbinic ethical decision making. The purpose of this article is to demonstrate the centrality of narrative in the thought of Orthodox Jewish decisors and the problems inherent in this methodology.
Steinberg, Holger
2004-12-01
Throughout his work Johann Christian August Heinroth regarded sin to be the cause of mental illness. The present two-part paper investigates what exactly Heinroth understood by sin. Based on a thorough analysis of his own texts, this study shows that on the one hand Heinroth referred to sin in a Christian-Protestant sense. On the other, however, a moral-ethical code of conduct was also involved. Thus, Heinroth did not regard sin as a singular event, but rather as a life conducted in a wrong way for years or even decades, by which he meant a steady striving towards earthly, bodily satisfaction.
48 CFR 2933.104 - Protests to GAO.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... accordance with FAR 33.104(g) must be provided to the Senior Procurement Executive within (two) working days... the signed written notice to the GAO must be provided to the Senior Procurement Executive within two (2) working days after they are sent to the GAO. (c) Protests after award. The authority of the HCA...
Fritz Jahr's 1927 concept of bioethics.
Sass, Hans-Martin
2007-12-01
In 1927, Fritz Jahr, a Protestant pastor, philosopher, and educator in Halle an der Saale, published an article entitled "Bio-Ethics: A Review of the Ethical Relationships of Humans to Animals and Plants" and proposed a "Bioethical Imperative," extending Kant's moral imperative to all forms of life. Reviewing new physiological knowledge of his times and moral challenges associated with the development of secular and pluralistic societies, Jahr redefines moral obligations towards human and nonhuman forms of life, outlining the concept of bioethics as an academic discipline, principle, and virtue. Although he had no immediate long-lasting influence during politically and morally turbulent times, his argument that new science and technology requires new ethical and philosophical reflection and resolve may contribute toward clarification of terminology and of normative and practical visions of bioethics, including understanding of the geoethical dimensions of bioethics.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hayhoe, Simon
2016-01-01
This article examines how the process of constructing knowledge on impairment has affected the institutional construction of an ethic of disability. Its primary finding is that the process of creating knowledge in a number of historical contexts was influenced by traditions and the biases of philosophers and educators. This process was in order to…
The Impact Of Middle Class Consumption On Democratization In Northeast Asia
2016-03-01
middle-class Koreans. This consumption disparity caused the structurally disadvantaged working-class Koreans to join national protests that ultimately...inequality and a mobility-restraining household registration system. There exists a key political tension around structurally disadvantaged Chinese migrant...lower middle-class Koreans. This consumption disparity caused the structurally disadvantaged working-class Koreans to join national protests that
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Azelvandre, John Paul
Through an examination of the life and work of Liberty Hyde Bailey, this study examines the possibility of an alternate ontological and epistemological foundation for environmental ethics and education that can adequately address the twin concerns of the status of the individual and of the social or biological whole of which the individual is a part. The thesis presented in this study is that a holistic approach that is conceived in terms of monistic idealism will not serve as well as a pluralistic approach that recognizes distinct individuals causally interconnected to form an ecological whole. The term "spirituality" is proposed as indicative of the mode of connection between individuals and wholes conceived in a pluralistic rather than monistic sense. Beginning with a critique of modern environmental philosophy as primarily oriented toward a holistic or monistic ontology, the study proceeds to an intellectual biography of Liberty Hyde Bailey (1858--1954), an important early thinker in environmental ethics and environmental education. The analysis of Bailey's life and work reveals his indebtedness both to Darwinian science, to certain strands of eighteenth century thought passed on through the agency of Freemasonry and to the liberal Protestant Christianity of the late 19th century. His mature philosophy was strongly individualistic, empirical and spiritual, where the "spiritual" is the mode of connection between self and other. Positive connections are drawn between Bailey's contemporaries John Dewey and Alfred North Whitehead, bolstering claims that the distinctly American philosophy exhibited by all three thinkers has important ramifications for environmental philosophy today. Recommendations for environmental ethics and environmental education for the twenty-first century conclude the study.
Teaching Baltimore Together: Building Thematic Cooperation between Classes
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Collins, Samuel Gerald; Durington, Matthew; Fabricant, Nicole
2017-01-01
One year ago, Baltimore citizens took to the streets to protest not only the death of Freddie Grey, but the structural inequalities and structural violence that systematically limit the opportunities for working-class African Americans in Baltimore. The protests, though, were not just confined to Baltimore City. Borne on sophisticated…
1983-12-01
8217 by business concerns. Every handicraft, all human dealings, are constantly in that danger. (Heidegger, 1954) Emile Durkheim addressed the problem... Durkheim , 1893) Weber, in his controversial study, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalization, also noted this "multiplicity of perspectives and...196n....... • Durkheim , E., The Division of Labor in Society, Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., 1933. Eddy, W.B., "From Training to Organization Change
Essential Ingredients to Working with Campus Protests and Demonstrations
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Olson, Dustin
2012-01-01
Recent months have provided many campus law enforcement and security administrators with an added challenge in providing for the safety and welfare of their campus communities. The "Occupy Wall Street" (OWS) movement, which began on September 17, 2011 in New York City, was numerous protests against economic inequality, record rates of…
Sabucedo, José-Manuel; Dono, Marcos; Alzate, Mónica; Seoane, Gloria
2018-01-01
Collective action and protest have become a normalized political behavior that in many cases defines the political agenda. The reasons why people take to the streets constitute a central subject within the study of social psychology. In the literature, three precedents of protest that have been established as central to the study of this phenomenon are: injustice, efficacy, and identity. But political action is also deeply related to moral values. This explains why in recent years some moral constructs have also been pointed out as predictors of collective action. Moral variables have been introduced into the literature with little consideration to how they relate to each other. Thus, work in this direction is needed. The general aim of this research is to differentiate moral obligation from moral norms and moral conviction, as well as to compare their ability to predict collective action. In order to do so, the research objectives are: (a) conceptualize and operationalize moral obligation (Study 1, N = 171); (b) test its predictive power for intention to participate in protests (Study 2, N = 622); and (c) test moral obligation in a real context (Study 3, N = 407). Results are encouraging, showing not only that moral obligation is different to moral conviction and moral norm, but also that it is a more effective predictor working both for intention and real participation. This work therefore presents moral obligation as a key precedent of protest participation, prompting its future use as a variable that can enhance existing predictive models of collective action. Results regarding other variables are also discussed.
The Culture War, Modern Economics, and Environmental Education in The United States.
Hargrove, Eugene C
2016-01-01
Teaching ethics in public schools in the United States has been made almost impossible because of the Culture War and Modern Economics. When Catholics began to migrate to the United States in the early nineteenth century, they found that Protestant religion and ethics were taught in public schools and they created their own parochial schools. This controversy has continued for two hundred years. To encourage the Catholics to send their children to the public schools, by 1860 religion and ethics had been removed from the public schools. Concern about the teaching of ethics spread to other religious and non-religious groups. These groups attack the teaching of ethics as the indoctrination of the personal values of teachers, and when teachers include alternative ethical views to avoid indoctrination they are accused of relativism. According to Modern Economics, value terms are meaningless unless they have been translated into economic terms based on willingness to pay. This approach overlooks the social values that make up the cultural heritage of a society. Although children acquire these social values tacitly, since they are not taught these values as a common heritage, they come to believe that they invented them ahistorically and that they are just how they feel (ethical emotivism). By teaching children social values as a common heritage, the charges of indoctrination and relativism and the replacement of these values with economic terms can be avoided, later permitting a more objective role for ethics in public affairs among adults.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Baker, Scott
2011-01-01
Background/Context: Although the dominant narrative of the civil rights movement marginalizes the role of black educators, revisionist scholars have shown that a significant number of black teachers encouraged student protest and activism. There has, however, been little analysis of the work of black teachers inside segregated schools in the…
James Baldwin's "Everybody's Protest Novel": Educating Our Responses to Racism
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Frank, Jeff
2014-01-01
The aim of this article is to establish--and explore--James Baldwin's significance for educational theory. Through a close reading of "Everybody's Protest Novel", I show that Baldwin's thinking is an important (if unrecognized) precursor to the work of Stanley Cavell and Cora Diamond, and is relevant to a number of…
Xenotransplantation from the perspective of moral theology.
Sautermeister, Jochen
2015-01-01
Current medical research in the area of xenotransplantation is driven by the aim to save human lives and to improve the quality of life of those suffering from organ insufficiencies. This study reflects the therapeutic intent of xenotransplantation from a theological-ethical perspective. Regarding statements of Christian communities, the analysis focuses mainly on catholic documents. This study takes into account the document on Prospects for Xenotransplantation by the Pontifical Academy for Life as well as a position paper on xenotransplantation released as a collaboration between the German Bishops Conference (Catholic) and the Evangelical Church in Germany (Protestant). Documents of other Christian denominations will be discussed in a separate paper. Aspects concerning the areas of medicine, social ethics and animal ethics are considered as well as biographical, psychosocial, culture-bound and ideological preconditions of acceptability. These aspects also include consequences for the construction of personal identity. With regard to an anthropocentrism that is based theologically and relationally, xenotransplantation--in general--can be viewed as a permissible form of therapy, given that the principles of biomedical ethics will be observed and that animals are treated with respect. © 2015 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
[Werner Leibbrand as psychiatric opponent of National Socialism].
Seidel, R
2013-09-01
The psychiatrist and medical historian Werner Leibbrand resigned from the Berlin Medical Association after the seizure of power in protest against the exclusion of Jewish colleagues and lost both the license to practice as well as his professional position in the public health service. After the end of the war the American military authorities appointed him as expert witness for the prosecution in the Nürnberg Doctors Trial. In addition to a biographical review, Leibbrand's resolute although still undisputed attitude as ethical expert in the trials will be roughly outlined.
Wage Inequality and Violent Protests in Oil/Gas Producing Countries
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nuraliyev, Nurlan
This work examines contrasting claims made by academic scholars on the relationship between income inequality and political discontent. Does income inequality directly cause social unrest or is this relationship conditional on the level of democratic development? Using the data from 55 oil/gas producing countries between 2010-2013, the author finds: 1) income disparity between an average income per capita of local population and an average income of foreign labor employed in the oil/gas industry results in higher number of violent protests in more democratic oil/gas producing societies; 2) wage disparity between local and foreign labor in the oil/gas industry is associated with higher number of protests in this industry in more democratic oil/gas producing states.
76 FR 2573 - Technical Corrections: Matters Subject to Protest and Various Protest Time Limits
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-01-14
... 174 [CBP Dec. 11-02] Technical Corrections: Matters Subject to Protest and Various Protest Time Limits..., in pertinent part, the types of matters subject to protest, the time required for allowing or denying an application for further review of a protest, and various other protest time limits. This document...
Schwadel, Philip
2017-02-01
Although the association between evangelical Protestant and Republican affiliations is now a fundamental aspect of American politics, this was not the case as recently as the early 1980s. Following work on secular political realignment and the issue evolution model of partisan change, I use four decades of repeated cross-sectional survey data to examine the dynamic correlates of evangelical Protestant and Republican affiliations, and how these factors promote changes in partisanship. Results show that evangelical Protestants have become relatively more likely to attend religious services and to oppose homosexuality, abortion, and welfare spending. Period-specific mediation models show that opposition to abortion, homosexuality, and welfare spending have become more robust predictors of Republican affiliation. By the twenty-first century, differences in Republican affiliation between evangelical Protestants and other religious affiliates are fully mediated by views of homosexuality, abortion, and welfare spending; and differences in Republican affiliation between evangelicals and the religiously unaffiliated are substantially mediated by views of homosexuality, abortion, welfare spending, and military spending. These results further understanding of rapid changes in politico-religious alignments and the increasing importance of moral and cultural issues in American politics, which supports a culture wars depiction of the contemporary political landscape. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Sabucedo, José-Manuel; Dono, Marcos; Alzate, Mónica; Seoane, Gloria
2018-01-01
Collective action and protest have become a normalized political behavior that in many cases defines the political agenda. The reasons why people take to the streets constitute a central subject within the study of social psychology. In the literature, three precedents of protest that have been established as central to the study of this phenomenon are: injustice, efficacy, and identity. But political action is also deeply related to moral values. This explains why in recent years some moral constructs have also been pointed out as predictors of collective action. Moral variables have been introduced into the literature with little consideration to how they relate to each other. Thus, work in this direction is needed. The general aim of this research is to differentiate moral obligation from moral norms and moral conviction, as well as to compare their ability to predict collective action. In order to do so, the research objectives are: (a) conceptualize and operationalize moral obligation (Study 1, N = 171); (b) test its predictive power for intention to participate in protests (Study 2, N = 622); and (c) test moral obligation in a real context (Study 3, N = 407). Results are encouraging, showing not only that moral obligation is different to moral conviction and moral norm, but also that it is a more effective predictor working both for intention and real participation. This work therefore presents moral obligation as a key precedent of protest participation, prompting its future use as a variable that can enhance existing predictive models of collective action. Results regarding other variables are also discussed. PMID:29636720
19 CFR 174.21 - Time for review of protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Time for review of protests. 174.21 Section 174.21... TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Review and Disposition of Protests § 174.21 Time for review of protests. (a.... Any protest filed pursuant to this paragraph shall clearly so state on its face. Any protest filed...
19 CFR 174.23 - Further review of protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Further review of protests. 174.23 Section 174.23... TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Review and Disposition of Protests § 174.23 Further review of protests. A protesting party may seek further review of a protest in lieu of review by the port director by filing, on...
19 CFR 174.11 - Matters subject to protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2013-04-01 2013-04-01 false Matters subject to protest. 174.11 Section 174.11... TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Protests § 174.11 Matters subject to protest. The following decisions of CBP... administrative decisions involving the following subject matters are subject to protest: (1) The appraised value...
19 CFR 174.11 - Matters subject to protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2014-04-01 2014-04-01 false Matters subject to protest. 174.11 Section 174.11... TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Protests § 174.11 Matters subject to protest. The following decisions of CBP... administrative decisions involving the following subject matters are subject to protest: (1) The appraised value...
19 CFR 174.11 - Matters subject to protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2011-04-01 2011-04-01 false Matters subject to protest. 174.11 Section 174.11... TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Protests § 174.11 Matters subject to protest. The following decisions of CBP... administrative decisions involving the following subject matters are subject to protest: (1) The appraised value...
19 CFR 174.11 - Matters subject to protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2012-04-01 2012-04-01 false Matters subject to protest. 174.11 Section 174.11... TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Protests § 174.11 Matters subject to protest. The following decisions of CBP... administrative decisions involving the following subject matters are subject to protest: (1) The appraised value...
48 CFR 3433.103 - Protests to the agency.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... REGULATION GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 3433.103 Protests to the agency. (a)(1) Protests to ED based on alleged improprieties in any type of solicitation that are...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gleń, Piotr; Jarocka-Mikrut, Aleksandra
2015-12-01
Small towns in the Lublin Province are abundant with buildings possessed of outstanding historical and architectural values, representing the culture of past generations. Piaski, about 30 km east of Lublin, also boasts some of the remarkable characteristic of small towns. Not only does it feature post-Jewish tenements, but also a palace and complexes of religious buildings situated on its outskirts. This article focuses on the Kościelec - an unused, dilapidated former Protestant church. Now, works are being carried out that have inspired the Piaski town authorities to try to find a best-use scenario for the former church, in order to preserve its architectural values for future generations. The authors of this article aim to prove the necessity of research and analysis in finding the best new functions for properties whose function has already been imposed. The example of successfully completed revitalisation works at the palace and park complex in Gardzienice, located not far from the baroque Protestant church in Piaski, illustrates the advantages of some of the adaptation processes that can be employed in such buildings.
13 CFR 125.25 - How does one file a service disabled veteran-owned status protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... disabled veteran-owned status protest? 125.25 Section 125.25 Business Credit and Assistance SMALL BUSINESS... disabled veteran-owned status protest? (a) General. The protest procedures described in this part are... service-disabled veteran. The protest does not state any basis for this assertion. The protest allegation...
13 CFR 125.25 - How does one file a service disabled veteran-owned status protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... disabled veteran-owned status protest? 125.25 Section 125.25 Business Credit and Assistance SMALL BUSINESS... disabled veteran-owned status protest? (a) General. The protest procedures described in this part are... service-disabled veteran. The protest does not state any basis for this assertion. The protest allegation...
13 CFR 125.25 - How does one file a service disabled veteran-owned status protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... disabled veteran-owned status protest? 125.25 Section 125.25 Business Credit and Assistance SMALL BUSINESS... disabled veteran-owned status protest? (a) General. The protest procedures described in this part are... service-disabled veteran. The protest does not state any basis for this assertion. The protest allegation...
A Calvinist account of nursing ethics.
Cusveller, Bart
2013-11-01
A relatively small but intellectually robust strand in the Christian religion is the Reformed tradition. Especially, its Calvinist sensibilities inform this Protestant stance towards human culture in general and vocations in particular. Correspondingly, there are some small but robust contributions to academic discourse in nursing ethics. So far there has been no attempt to bring those together as a distinct approach. This article suggests such a Reformed Christian, especially Calvinist, account of nursing ethics. Central to the Reformed perspective is the notion that God is sovereign over all of creation and culture and hence that there can be no religiously or morally neutral area in human life. Consequently, nursing is not seen as professional to the extent it is based on research evidence or theoretical models, but to the extent it serves the ultimate purpose of the practice of care. In the Reformed view, this purpose is fostering the well-being of human beings in need as intrinsically valuable. Nurses are professionals who accept this responsibility, that is, the whole of expectations holding for personal qualities, conduct and outcomes, required to serve the purpose of care. As this is a moral purpose, succeeding or failing to live up to these expectations is the source of moral issues in nursing.
48 CFR 333.104 - Protests to GAO.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... a stop work order has been issued.) (I) A copy of any mutual agreement to suspend work on a no-cost... determination. (N) The acquisition plan, source selection plan, and the source selection decision document. (O...
48 CFR 333.104 - Protests to GAO.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... a stop work order has been issued.) (I) A copy of any mutual agreement to suspend work on a no-cost... determination. (N) The acquisition plan, source selection plan, and the source selection decision document. (O...
13 CFR 125.27 - How will SBA process an SDVO protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... send the contracting officer and the protester a notice of dismissal, citing the reason(s) for the dismissal. The dismissal notice must also advise the protester of his/her right to appeal the dismissal to... protestable allegations, SBA will: (1) Notify the protested concern of the protest and of its right to submit...
Effect of abortion protesters on women's emotional response to abortion.
Foster, Diana Greene; Kimport, Katrina; Gould, Heather; Roberts, Sarah C M; Weitz, Tracy A
2013-01-01
Little is known about women's experiences with and reactions to protesters and how protesters affect women's emotional responses to abortion. We interviewed 956 women seeking abortion between 2008 and 2010 at 30 U.S. abortion care facilities and informants from 27 of these facilities. Most facilities reported a regular protester presence; one third identified protesters as aggressive towards patients. Nearly half (46%) of women interviewed saw protesters; of those, 25% reported being "a little" upset, and 16% reported being "quite a lot" or "extremely" upset. Women who had difficulty deciding to abort had higher odds of reporting being upset by protesters. In multivariable models, exposure to protesters was not associated with differences in emotions 1 week after the abortion. Protesters do upset some women seeking abortion services. However, exposure to protesters does not seem to have an effect on women's emotions about the abortion 1 week later. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Wolenberg, Kelly M; Yoon, John D; Rasinski, Kenneth A; Curlin, Farr A
2013-12-01
This study surveyed 1,156 practicing US physicians to examine the relationship between physicians' religious characteristics and their approaches to artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH). Forty percent of physicians believed that unless a patient is imminently dying, the patient should always receive nutrition and fluids; 75 % believed that it is ethically permissible for doctors to withdraw ANH. The least religious physicians were less likely to oppose withholding or withdrawing ANH. Compared to non-evangelical Protestant physicians, Jews and Muslims were significantly more likely to oppose withholding ANH, and Muslims were significantly more likely to oppose withdrawing ANH.
Somma, Nicolás M
2010-01-01
Prior research shows that members of voluntary organizations are more likely to protest than nonmembers. But why, among members, do some protest while others do not? I explore whether organizational involvement-the extent in which members engage in the "life" of their organizations-affects protest. I identify four dimensions of involvement-time and money contributions, participation in activities, psychological attachment, and embeddedness in interpersonal communication networks. Only the first dimension has robust effects on protest, and they are nonlinear: intermediate contributors have the highest protest rates. The three other dimensions substantially increase protest only under specific "involvement profiles."
Medical Ethics in Plastic Surgery: A Mini Review
Nejadsarvari, Nasrin; Ebrahimi, Ali; Ebrahimi, Azin; Hashem-Zade, Haleh
2016-01-01
Currently, cosmetic surgery is spread around the world. Several factors are involved in this rapidly evolving field such as socio-economic development, changes in cultural norms, globalization and the effects of Western culture, advertising, media, and mental disorders. Nowadays the cosmetic surgery is becoming a profitable business, which deals exclusively with human appearance and less from the perspective of beauty based on physical protests and considering factors such as sex, age, and race. The morality of plastic surgery subspecialty has undergone many moral dilemmas in the past few years. The role of the patient regardless of his unrealistic dreams has questionable ethical dimension. The problem is the loss of human values and replacing them with false values, of pride and glory to a charismatic person of higher status, that may underlie some of the posed ethical dilemmas. Cosmetic surgery has huge difference with the general principle of legal liability in professional orientation, because the objective for cosmetic surgeries is different from common therapeutic purposes. To observe excellence in the medical profession, we should always keep in mind that these service providers, often as a therapist (healer) must maintain a commitment and priority for patient safety and prior to any action, a real apply for this service recipient should be present. Also, patient–physician confidentiality is the cornerstone of medical ethics. In this review, we study the issues addressed and the ways that they can be resolved. PMID:27853683
Medical Ethics in Plastic Surgery: A Mini Review.
Nejadsarvari, Nasrin; Ebrahimi, Ali; Ebrahimi, Azin; Hashem-Zade, Haleh
2016-09-01
Currently, cosmetic surgery is spread around the world. Several factors are involved in this rapidly evolving field such as socio-economic development, changes in cultural norms, globalization and the effects of Western culture, advertising, media, and mental disorders. Nowadays the cosmetic surgery is becoming a profitable business, which deals exclusively with human appearance and less from the perspective of beauty based on physical protests and considering factors such as sex, age, and race. The morality of plastic surgery subspecialty has undergone many moral dilemmas in the past few years. The role of the patient regardless of his unrealistic dreams has questionable ethical dimension. The problem is the loss of human values and replacing them with false values, of pride and glory to a charismatic person of higher status, that may underlie some of the posed ethical dilemmas. Cosmetic surgery has huge difference with the general principle of legal liability in professional orientation, because the objective for cosmetic surgeries is different from common therapeutic purposes. To observe excellence in the medical profession, we should always keep in mind that these service providers, often as a therapist (healer) must maintain a commitment and priority for patient safety and prior to any action, a real apply for this service recipient should be present. Also, patient-physician confidentiality is the cornerstone of medical ethics. In this review, we study the issues addressed and the ways that they can be resolved.
48 CFR 733.103-71 - Filing of protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
...-71 Section 733.103-71 Federal Acquisition Regulations System AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 733.103-71 Filing of protest. (a) Protests must be in writing and addressed to the Contracting Officer for consideration by the M/OAA...
48 CFR 733.103-71 - Filing of protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
...-71 Section 733.103-71 Federal Acquisition Regulations System AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 733.103-71 Filing of protest. (a) Protests must be in writing and addressed to the Contracting Officer for consideration by the M/OAA...
48 CFR 1433.104 - Protests to GAO.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... protester shall furnish a copy of its complete protest simultaneously to the CO and the Assistant Solicitor... protest, the SOL shall inform the appropriate contracting activity which shall immediately notify the CO... appropriate bureau Information Resources Management contact and GSA official. The CO shall prepare the protest...
48 CFR 1433.104 - Protests to GAO.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... protester shall furnish a copy of its complete protest simultaneously to the CO and the Assistant Solicitor... protest, the SOL shall inform the appropriate contracting activity which shall immediately notify the CO... appropriate bureau Information Resources Management contact and GSA official. The CO shall prepare the protest...
31 CFR 240.7 - Declination protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... STATES TREASURY General Provisions § 240.7 Declination protest. (a) Who may protest. Only a presenting... presented for payment and a Federal Reserve Bank has reversed its provisional credit to the presenting bank, the presenting bank may file a protest challenging the factual basis for such declination. Protests...
48 CFR 733.103-70 - Protests to the agency.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Protests to the agency. 733.103-70 Section 733.103-70 Federal Acquisition Regulations System AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 733.103-70 Protests to...
48 CFR 733.103-70 - Protests to the agency.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Protests to the agency. 733.103-70 Section 733.103-70 Federal Acquisition Regulations System AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 733.103-70 Protests to...
43 CFR 3872.1 - Protest against mineral applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Protest against mineral applications. 3872... LAND MANAGEMENT, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR MINERALS MANAGEMENT (3000) ADVERSE CLAIMS, PROTESTS AND CONFLICTS Protests, Contests and Conflicts § 3872.1 Protest against mineral applications. (a) At any time...
43 CFR 3872.1 - Protest against mineral applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2014-10-01 2014-10-01 false Protest against mineral applications. 3872... LAND MANAGEMENT, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR MINERALS MANAGEMENT (3000) ADVERSE CLAIMS, PROTESTS AND CONFLICTS Protests, Contests and Conflicts § 3872.1 Protest against mineral applications. (a) At any time...
43 CFR 3872.1 - Protest against mineral applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false Protest against mineral applications. 3872... LAND MANAGEMENT, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR MINERALS MANAGEMENT (3000) ADVERSE CLAIMS, PROTESTS AND CONFLICTS Protests, Contests and Conflicts § 3872.1 Protest against mineral applications. (a) At any time...
43 CFR 3872.1 - Protest against mineral applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false Protest against mineral applications. 3872... LAND MANAGEMENT, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR MINERALS MANAGEMENT (3000) ADVERSE CLAIMS, PROTESTS AND CONFLICTS Protests, Contests and Conflicts § 3872.1 Protest against mineral applications. (a) At any time...
[Man and his fellow-creatures under ethical aspects].
Teutsch, Gotthard M
2005-01-01
It is for reasons of age I will have to terminate my work at the Literary Review in the form developed since 1995. The report is being reduced to a concentration of ethically relevant reviews as exemplified in the fourth-quarter issue of ALTEX. This is to ascertain that essential developments in this field will not be overlooked. Insofar, the Literary Review will be continued under the heading "New literature concerning topics of animal ethics". The more central topics of animal ethics are being "used up" the more new questions are being formulated. Thus it was that during the last few years the plant-world, long neglected, was rediscovered and received attention through the publication of important works. Another recent discovery concerns itself with "cognitive ethology" which developed out of the critique of behaviourism and which is dealt with in a separate chapter in this issue. But there is also a "classic" of ethics who has been reviewed and interpreted anew repeatedly. In her book "Albert Schweitzer, a prophet of medical ethics", Heike Baranzke describes Schweitzer's ethics as not sentimental or nostalgic but rather as a radically modern stance, committed to the enlightenment. Manuel Schneider, also, conveys a comprehensive view of Albert Schweitzer's ethics in "Life in the middle of life - the relevance of the ethics of Albert Schweitzer", a book edited by Altner, Frambach, Gottwald and himself in 2005. For this, in particular, he derives a possibility of a physiocentric ethics. By contrast, Beate Weinzierl approaches Schweitzer on a complete personal and human level in "Yearning for nature - access to inner and outer nature with Albert Schweitzer". Wolfgang Senz is undertaking a critical appreciation of Albert Schweitzer's concept of "life" and this, foremost, in the light of Schweitzer's rejection of the Cartesian "I am". In the end, Jean Claude Wolf cannot manage without citing Schweitzer either, referring to him in his not accepting the (western) world's excessive meat consumption as a "cruel necessity". Klaus Peter Joern also enters into Schweitzer's fundamental argumentation in his "A good bye to the disparagement of our fellow creatures". Quotation: "It just cannot go on that Christianity lets the validity of the commandment of love end at the behaviour towards humans, simply because that is the tradition. We rather have to, in this instance, deny the authority of the Bible it's due respect, as this has deemed Schweitzer already inevitable." The killing of animals, irrespective of the motives, remains a critical issue in the understanding (or the lack thereof) with regard to the dignity of all creation. Manuela Linnemann, Charles Patterson, Evelyn Ofensberger and the German Veterinary Association for the Protection of Animals have dealt with this issue extensively. As always, more space is taken up by publications dealing with legal questions and developments. In particular, the conference report of the Protestant Academy at Bad Boll should be mentioned "Animal protection on good constitution". Contributions to this report, edited by the academy, include Hans Georg Kluge's "The governmental aim 'animal protection' and it's implementation in jurisdiction" and Johannes Caspar's "effects of the governmental goal 'animal protection' in the protected area of unconditional fundamental rights". Regarding animal experiments, the last two position papers commissioned by the Foundation for animal-free research (FFVFF), dealing with perspectives of 3R research, have been published within the period of time covered by this report. Alternatives in basic research (with once again rising numbers of experimental animals) and in biomedical education are the themes dealt with by Franz P. Gruber and his co-authors Thomas Hartung and David Dewhurst.
Protesting on Twitter: Citizenship and Empowerment from Public Education
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Saura, Geo; Muñoz-Moreno, José-Luis; Luengo-Navas, Julián; Martos, José-Manuel
2017-01-01
The use of social networks for protest purposes has been an essential element in recent global protests against the economic measures of privatization of public services. Social networks are changing political communication, mobilization and organization of collective protests. Taking into account the relationship between collective protests and…
19 CFR 174.11 - Matters subject to protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Matters subject to protest. 174.11 Section 174.11 Customs Duties U.S. CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY; DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Protests § 174.11 Matters subject to protest. The following decisions of the...
19 CFR 181.115 - Intervention in importer's protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2012-04-01 2012-04-01 false Intervention in importer's protest. 181.115... Marking Decisions § 181.115 Intervention in importer's protest. (a) Conditional right to intervene. An...'s protest. Such intervention shall not affect any time limits applicable to the protest or delay...
19 CFR 181.115 - Intervention in importer's protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2014-04-01 2014-04-01 false Intervention in importer's protest. 181.115... Marking Decisions § 181.115 Intervention in importer's protest. (a) Conditional right to intervene. An...'s protest. Such intervention shall not affect any time limits applicable to the protest or delay...
19 CFR 181.115 - Intervention in importer's protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Intervention in importer's protest. 181.115... Marking Decisions § 181.115 Intervention in importer's protest. (a) Conditional right to intervene. An...'s protest. Such intervention shall not affect any time limits applicable to the protest or delay...
19 CFR 181.115 - Intervention in importer's protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2011-04-01 2011-04-01 false Intervention in importer's protest. 181.115... Marking Decisions § 181.115 Intervention in importer's protest. (a) Conditional right to intervene. An...'s protest. Such intervention shall not affect any time limits applicable to the protest or delay...
19 CFR 181.115 - Intervention in importer's protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2013-04-01 2013-04-01 false Intervention in importer's protest. 181.115... Marking Decisions § 181.115 Intervention in importer's protest. (a) Conditional right to intervene. An...'s protest. Such intervention shall not affect any time limits applicable to the protest or delay...
Pricing a Protest: Forecasting the Dynamics of Civil Unrest Activity in Social Media.
Goode, Brian J; Krishnan, Siddharth; Roan, Michael; Ramakrishnan, Naren
2015-01-01
Online social media activity can often be a precursor to disruptive events such as protests, strikes, and "occupy" movements. We have observed that such civil unrest can galvanize supporters through social networks and help recruit activists to their cause. Understanding the dynamics of social network cascades and extrapolating their future growth will enable an analyst to detect or forecast major societal events. Existing work has primarily used structural and temporal properties of cascades to predict their future behavior. But factors like societal pressure, alignment of individual interests with broader causes, and perception of expected benefits also affect protest participation in social media. Here we develop an analysis framework using a differential game theoretic approach to characterize the cost of participating in a cascade, and demonstrate how we can combine such cost features with classical properties to forecast the future behavior of cascades. Using data from Twitter, we illustrate the effectiveness of our models on the "Brazilian Spring" and Venezuelan protests that occurred in June 2013 and November 2013, respectively. We demonstrate how our framework captures both qualitative and quantitative aspects of how these uprisings manifest through the lens of tweet volume on Twitter social media.
Gambling on the Protestants: the Pathfinder Fund and birth control in Peru, 1958-1965.
López, L Necochea
2014-01-01
Among the agencies involved in population control activities in the mid-twentieth century, none scored as many early victories in Latin America as did the Pathfinder Fund, founded by Procter & Gamble scion Clarence Gamble. This article analyzes a style in the delivery of family planning assistance in the developing world through the work of the Pathfinder Fund in Peru, the organization's hub in South America, and shows how Pathfinder personnel collaborated with local Protestant institutions. Its Protestant allies helped Pathfinder set up and manage rapid interventions such as the production of pamphlets, the smuggling of contraceptives, and the enrollment of physicians as advocates of the use of intrauterine devices. Although these rapid interventions helped quickly disseminate information and certain technologies among a fortunate few, they also weakened legitimate state agencies, neglected the monitoring of the safety of the drugs supplied, and alienated allies with their high-handed boldness.
48 CFR 2933.103 - Protests to the agency.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... frames in FAR 33.103(e) apply to agency protests. An agency protest is filed when the protest complaint... effect until the protest is decided, dismissed, or withdrawn. (j) The deciding official must make a best... suspension to remain in effect pending the resolution of any GAO proceeding. (n) Proceedings on an agency...
48 CFR 933.103 - Protests to the agency.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... Executive (for protests at the Headquarters level or those specific HCA protests cited in paragraph (i) of this section) or an HCA (for protests at the contracting activity level) will render a decision on a... Headquarters level shall state whether the protester is willing to utilize ADR techniques such as mediation or...
48 CFR 933.103 - Protests to the agency.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... Executive (for protests at the Headquarters level or those specific HCA protests cited in paragraph (i) of this section) or an HCA (for protests at the contracting activity level) will render a decision on a... Headquarters level shall state whether the protester is willing to utilize ADR techniques such as mediation or...
48 CFR 1852.233-70 - Protests to NASA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 6 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false Protests to NASA. 1852.233... 1852.233-70 Protests to NASA. As prescribed in 1833.106-70, insert the following provision: Protests to NASA (OCT 2002) Potential bidders or offerors may submit a protest under 48 CFR part 33 (FAR part 33...
48 CFR 1852.233-70 - Protests to NASA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 6 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Protests to NASA. 1852.233... 1852.233-70 Protests to NASA. As prescribed in 1833.106-70, insert the following provision: Protests to NASA (OCT 2002) Potential bidders or offerors may submit a protest under 48 CFR part 33 (FAR part 33...
48 CFR 1852.233-70 - Protests to NASA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 6 2014-10-01 2014-10-01 false Protests to NASA. 1852.233... 1852.233-70 Protests to NASA. As prescribed in 1833.106-70, insert the following provision: Protests to NASA (OCT 2002) Potential bidders or offerors may submit a protest under 48 CFR part 33 (FAR part 33...
48 CFR 1852.233-70 - Protests to NASA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 6 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false Protests to NASA. 1852.233... 1852.233-70 Protests to NASA. As prescribed in 1833.106-70, insert the following provision: Protests to NASA (OCT 2002) Potential bidders or offerors may submit a protest under 48 CFR part 33 (FAR part 33...
48 CFR 1852.233-70 - Protests to NASA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 6 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 true Protests to NASA. 1852.233... 1852.233-70 Protests to NASA. As prescribed in 1833.106-70, insert the following provision: Protests to NASA (OCT 2002) Potential bidders or offerors may submit a protest under 48 CFR part 33 (FAR part 33...
4 CFR 21.1 - Filing a protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... 4 Accounts 1 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Filing a protest. 21.1 Section 21.1 Accounts GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE GENERAL PROCEDURES BID PROTEST REGULATIONS § 21.1 Filing a protest. (a) An interested party... 20548, Attention: Procurement Law Control Group. (c) A protest filed with GAO shall: (1) Include the...
13 CFR 127.605 - What are the procedures for appealing an EDWOSB or WOSB status protest decision?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... appealing an EDWOSB or WOSB status protest decision? 127.605 Section 127.605 Business Credit and Assistance SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION WOMEN-OWNED SMALL BUSINESS FEDERAL CONTRACT ASSISTANCE PROCEDURES Protests § 127.605 What are the procedures for appealing an EDWOSB or WOSB status protest decision? The protested...
Tax policy and tax protest in 20 rich democracies, 1980-2010.
William Martin, Isaac; Gabay, Nadav
2017-08-12
Why are some policies protested more than others? New data on protest against eight categories of taxation in twenty rich democracies from 1980 to 2010 reveal that economically and socially concentrated taxes are protested most, whereas taxes that confer entitlement to benefits are protested least. Other features of policy design often thought to affect the salience or visibility of costs are unimportant for explaining the frequency of protest. These findings overturn a folk theory that political sociology has inherited from classical political economy; clarify the conditions under which policy threats provoke protest; and shed light on how welfare states persist. © London School of Economics and Political Science 2017.
48 CFR 2833.103 - Protests to the agency.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... filing time frames in FAR 33.103(e) apply. An agency protest is filed when the protest complaint is... award or suspension of performance remains in effect until the protest is decided, dismissed, or...
19 CFR 174.13 - Contents of protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... category, payment, claim, decision, or refusal; (7) The date of receipt and protest number of any protest.../consignee in care of ” (Name and Address of Agent) may be appended to the protest. This designation...
19 CFR 174.13 - Contents of protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... number of the protestant. If the protestant is represented by an agent having power of attorney, the... the best of the protestant's knowledge, as to whether the entry is the subject of drawback, or whether...
[Retraction of papers in bioethics: proposal for a paradigmatic case].
Herranz Rodríguez, Gonzalo
2011-01-01
The phenomenon of ethically deficient publication in the field of bioethics is practically unknown. In contrast to the numerous articles and regulations on the ethics of biomedical publications, there is a practical absence of articles devoted to consider the nature, types and prevalence of ethically defective publications in the bioethical literature. No regulatory framework for misbehavior in this field has been proposed until now. Certainly, this is a difficult subject. On one side, it is not easy to draw the ethical limits of the freedoms of thought and expression in bioethics, a discipline that flourishes in the open debate of principles, norms, cases, and imaginary scenarios, where the boundaries between rhetoric and misrepresentation are frequently blurred. After showing some examples of minor violations taken from the literature, the author deals with the moral duty to retract fraudulent bioethical articles, especially when they include deliberate distortions of the data or conclusions from published biomedical research. A detailed analysis of a fraudulent article is made (Haring B. ″New Dimensions of Responsible Parenthood. ″ Theological Studies 37, (1976), 120-132), in which an almost systematic distortion of data and opinions of the cited literature has been made. The article, published in a time of intense and critical protest against the encyclical Humanae vitae, pretends to condemn the methods of natural family planning, the only acceptable means to the Pope, on the allegation that those methods were harmful for the embryo and fetus. According to the author, the retraction of Haring's article is necessary.
Recent Writings in Social History.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Cross, Michael S.
1979-01-01
Reviews current writings relevant to teaching the social history of Canada. Subjects addressed are social protest and conflict, labor history, working class history, women, the city, intellectual history, and regional studies. (KC)
48 CFR 733.103-73 - Protests excluded from consideration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... consideration. 733.103-73 Section 733.103-73 Federal Acquisition Regulations System AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 733.103-73 Protests excluded from consideration. (a) Contract administration. Disputes between a contractor and USAID are...
48 CFR 733.103-73 - Protests excluded from consideration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... consideration. 733.103-73 Section 733.103-73 Federal Acquisition Regulations System AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 733.103-73 Protests excluded from consideration. (a) Contract administration. Disputes between a contractor and USAID are...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Williams, Leon F.
1987-01-01
Entertains the thesis that social work has a stake in the technological-humanistic debate and should greet the recent and spectacular technological failures with protest and alarm. Discusses relationship of nuclear issue and social work, effects of nuclear issue on children, and Chernobyl. Advocates pacifism, activism, and a coherent conception of…
Killing the bill online? Pathways to young people's protest engagement via social media.
Macafee, Timothy; De Simone, J J
2012-11-01
In spring 2011, thousands of Wisconsin residents protested a controversial bill spearheaded by Governor Scott Walker. Protest engagement via social media was popular, especially among young people. The current study examines the relationship between young people's informational and expressive uses of four social media-Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and Blogs-and their offline protest engagement. Survey results reveal that although college students used these social media to obtain information about the budget repair bill protests, only expressive uses related to offline protest engagement. We move research forward by examining the implications of multiple uses of political social media surrounding a compelling case study.
40 CFR 35.936-5 - Grantee responsibility.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... ASSISTANCE STATE AND LOCAL ASSISTANCE Grants for Construction of Treatment Works-Clean Water Act § 35.936-5..., selection of contractors, award of contracts, protests of award, claims, disputes, and other related...
48 CFR 833.103 - Protests to VA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... review by filing a protest with the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Acquisition and Materiel Management... Management. A protest filed with the DAS for A&MM or the Director, Office of Construction and Facilities Management, will not be considered if the interested party has a protest on the same or similar issues...
18 CFR 154.210 - Protests, interventions, and comments.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 1 2013-04-01 2013-04-01 false Protests, interventions... Procedures for Changing Tariffs § 154.210 Protests, interventions, and comments. (a) Unless the notice issued by the Commission provides otherwise, any protest, intervention or comment to a tariff filing made...
18 CFR 154.210 - Protests, interventions, and comments.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 1 2011-04-01 2011-04-01 false Protests, interventions... Procedures for Changing Tariffs § 154.210 Protests, interventions, and comments. (a) Unless the notice issued by the Commission provides otherwise, any protest, intervention or comment to a tariff filing made...
18 CFR 154.210 - Protests, interventions, and comments.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 1 2014-04-01 2014-04-01 false Protests, interventions... Procedures for Changing Tariffs § 154.210 Protests, interventions, and comments. (a) Unless the notice issued by the Commission provides otherwise, any protest, intervention or comment to a tariff filing made...
18 CFR 154.210 - Protests, interventions, and comments.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 1 2012-04-01 2012-04-01 false Protests, interventions... Procedures for Changing Tariffs § 154.210 Protests, interventions, and comments. (a) Unless the notice issued by the Commission provides otherwise, any protest, intervention or comment to a tariff filing made...
18 CFR 154.210 - Protests, interventions, and comments.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 1 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Protests, interventions... Procedures for Changing Tariffs § 154.210 Protests, interventions, and comments. (a) Unless the notice issued by the Commission provides otherwise, any protest, intervention or comment to a tariff filing made...
Social Work with Religious Volunteers: Activating and Sustaining Community Involvement
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Garland, Diana R.; Myers, Dennis M.; Wolfer, Terry A.
2008-01-01
Social workers in diverse community practice settings recruit and work with volunteers from religious congregations. This article reports findings from two surveys: 7,405 congregants in 35 Protestant congregations, including 2,570 who were actively volunteering, and a follow-up survey of 946 volunteers. It compares characteristics of congregation…
48 CFR 52.233-3 - Protest After Award.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... resume work. The Contracting Officer shall make an equitable adjustment in the delivery schedule or... between the Contractor and the Government. (End of clause) Alternate I (JUN 1985). As prescribed in 33.106...
48 CFR 52.233-3 - Protest After Award.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... resume work. The Contracting Officer shall make an equitable adjustment in the delivery schedule or... between the Contractor and the Government. (End of clause) Alternate I (JUN 1985). As prescribed in 33.106...
48 CFR 52.233-3 - Protest After Award.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... resume work. The Contracting Officer shall make an equitable adjustment in the delivery schedule or... between the Contractor and the Government. (End of clause) Alternate I (JUN 1985). As prescribed in 33.106...
48 CFR 52.233-3 - Protest After Award.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... resume work. The Contracting Officer shall make an equitable adjustment in the delivery schedule or... between the Contractor and the Government. (End of clause) Alterate I (JUN 1985). As prescribed in 33.106...
48 CFR 52.233-3 - Protest After Award.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... resume work. The Contracting Officer shall make an equitable adjustment in the delivery schedule or... between the Contractor and the Government. (End of clause) Alternate I (JUN 1985). As prescribed in 33.106...
48 CFR 33.103 - Protests to the agency.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... must be filed within 10 days of knowledge of initial adverse agency action (4 CFR 21.2(a)(3)). (e... acquisition system, may consider the merits of any protest which is not timely filed. (f) Action upon receipt... well-reasoned, and explain the agency position. The protest decision shall be provided to the protester...
48 CFR 1352.233-70 - Agency protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... protests. As prescribed in 48 CFR 1333.103(a), insert the following provision: Agency Protests (APR 2010) (a) An agency protest may be filed with either: (1) The contracting officer, or (2) at a level above... served upon the Contract Law Division of the Office of the General Counsel within one day of filing a...
49 CFR 365.205 - Contents of the protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
.... (d) Protests must respond directly to the statutory standards for FMCSA review of the application. As... 49 Transportation 5 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false Contents of the protest. 365.205 Section 365.205... APPLICATIONS FOR OPERATING AUTHORITY How To Oppose Requests for Authority § 365.205 Contents of the protest. (a...
Are white evangelical Protestants lower class? A partial test of church-sect theory.
Schwadel, Philip
2014-07-01
Testing hypotheses derived from church-sect theory and contemporary research about changes in evangelical Protestants' social status, I use repeated cross-sectional survey data spanning almost four decades to examine changes in the social-class hierarchy of American religious traditions. While there is little change in the social-class position of white evangelical Protestants from the early 1970s to 2010, there is considerable change across birth cohorts. Results from hierarchical age-period-cohort models show: (1) robust, across-cohort declines in social-class differences between white evangelical Protestants and liberal Protestants, affiliates of "other" religions, and the unaffiliated, (2) stability in social-class differences between white evangelical Protestants and moderate, Pentecostal, and nondenominational Protestants, (3) moderate across-cohort growth in social-class differences between white evangelical Protestants and Catholics, and (4) these patterns vary across indicators of social class. The findings in this article provide partial support for church-sect theory as well as other theories of social change that emphasize the pivotal role of generations. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Bioethics for clinicians: 28. Protestant bioethics
Pauls, Merril; Hutchinson, Roger C.
2002-01-01
“PROTESTANT” IS A TERM APPLIED TO MANY DIFFERENT Christian denominations, with a wide range of beliefs, who trace their common origin to the Reformation of the 16th century. Protestant ideas have profoundly influenced modern bioethics, and most Protestants would see mainstream bioethics as compatible with their personal beliefs. This makes it difficult to define a uniquely Protestant approach to bioethics. In this article we provide an overview of common Protestant beliefs and highlight concepts that have emerged from Protestant denominations that are particularly relevant to bioethics. These include the sovereignty of God, the value of autonomy and the idea of medicine as a calling as well as a profession. Most Canadian physicians will find that they share certain values and beliefs with the majority of their Protestant patients. Physicians should be particularly sensitive to their Protestant patients' beliefs when dealing with end-of-life issues, concerns about consent and refusal of care, and beginning-of-life issues such as abortion, genetic testing and the use of assisted reproductive technologies. Physicians should also recognize that members of certain Protestant groups and denominations may have unique wishes concerning treatment. Understanding how to elicit these wishes and respond appropriately will allow physicians to enhance patient care and minimize conflict. PMID:11868645
Divergent discourse between protests and counter-protests: #BlackLivesMatter and #AllLivesMatter.
Gallagher, Ryan J; Reagan, Andrew J; Danforth, Christopher M; Dodds, Peter Sheridan
2018-01-01
Since the shooting of Black teenager Michael Brown by White police officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri, the protest hashtag #BlackLivesMatter has amplified critiques of extrajudicial killings of Black Americans. In response to #BlackLivesMatter, other Twitter users have adopted #AllLivesMatter, a counter-protest hashtag whose content argues that equal attention should be given to all lives regardless of race. Through a multi-level analysis of over 860,000 tweets, we study how these protests and counter-protests diverge by quantifying aspects of their discourse. We find that #AllLivesMatter facilitates opposition between #BlackLivesMatter and hashtags such as #PoliceLivesMatter and #BlueLivesMatter in such a way that historically echoes the tension between Black protesters and law enforcement. In addition, we show that a significant portion of #AllLivesMatter use stems from hijacking by #BlackLivesMatter advocates. Beyond simply injecting #AllLivesMatter with #BlackLivesMatter content, these hijackers use the hashtag to directly confront the counter-protest notion of "All lives matter." Our findings suggest that Black Lives Matter movement was able to grow, exhibit diverse conversations, and avoid derailment on social media by making discussion of counter-protest opinions a central topic of #AllLivesMatter, rather than the movement itself.
13 CFR 125.25 - How does one file a service disabled veteran-owned status protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... deliver their protests in person, by facsimile, by express delivery service, or by U.S. mail (postmarked..., unless it is from SBA or the CO. (4) Any protest received prior to bid opening or notification of... Status Protest. The CO's referral letter must include information pertaining to the solicitation that may...
13 CFR 125.25 - How does one file a service disabled veteran-owned status protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... deliver their protests in person, by facsimile, by express delivery service, or by U.S. mail (postmarked..., unless it is from SBA or the CO. (4) Any protest received prior to bid opening or notification of... Status Protest. The CO's referral letter must include information pertaining to the solicitation that may...
13 CFR 124.1008 - When will SBA not decide an SDB protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false When will SBA not decide an SDB... SDB protest? (a) SBA will not decide a protest as to disadvantaged status of any concern other than... protested concern's circumstances have materially changed since SBA certified it as an SDB, or that the...
13 CFR 124.1012 - What will SBA do when it receives an SDB protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2014-01-01 2014-01-01 false What will SBA do when it receives an SDB protest? 124.1012 Section 124.1012 Business Credit and Assistance SMALL BUSINESS... do when it receives an SDB protest? (a) Upon receipt of a protest challenging the disadvantaged...
13 CFR 124.1008 - When will SBA not decide an SDB protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2014-01-01 2014-01-01 false When will SBA not decide an SDB... SDB protest? (a) SBA will not decide a protest as to disadvantaged status of any concern other than... protested concern's circumstances have materially changed since SBA certified it as an SDB, or that the...
13 CFR 124.1008 - When will SBA not decide an SDB protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false When will SBA not decide an SDB... SDB protest? (a) SBA will not decide a protest as to disadvantaged status of any concern other than... protested concern's circumstances have materially changed since SBA certified it as an SDB, or that the...
13 CFR 124.1008 - When will SBA not decide an SDB protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2012-01-01 2012-01-01 false When will SBA not decide an SDB... SDB protest? (a) SBA will not decide a protest as to disadvantaged status of any concern other than... protested concern's circumstances have materially changed since SBA certified it as an SDB, or that the...
13 CFR 124.1008 - When will SBA not decide an SDB protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false When will SBA not decide an SDB... SDB protest? (a) SBA will not decide a protest as to disadvantaged status of any concern other than... protested concern's circumstances have materially changed since SBA certified it as an SDB, or that the...
13 CFR 124.1012 - What will SBA do when it receives an SDB protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2012-01-01 2012-01-01 false What will SBA do when it receives an SDB protest? 124.1012 Section 124.1012 Business Credit and Assistance SMALL BUSINESS... do when it receives an SDB protest? (a) Upon receipt of a protest challenging the disadvantaged...
13 CFR 124.1012 - What will SBA do when it receives an SDB protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false What will SBA do when it receives an SDB protest? 124.1012 Section 124.1012 Business Credit and Assistance SMALL BUSINESS... do when it receives an SDB protest? (a) Upon receipt of a protest challenging the disadvantaged...
13 CFR 124.1012 - What will SBA do when it receives an SDB protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false What will SBA do when it receives an SDB protest? 124.1012 Section 124.1012 Business Credit and Assistance SMALL BUSINESS... do when it receives an SDB protest? (a) Upon receipt of a protest challenging the disadvantaged...
13 CFR 124.1012 - What will SBA do when it receives an SDB protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false What will SBA do when it receives an SDB protest? 124.1012 Section 124.1012 Business Credit and Assistance SMALL BUSINESS... do when it receives an SDB protest? (a) Upon receipt of a protest challenging the disadvantaged...
Divergent discourse between protests and counter-protests: #BlackLivesMatter and #AllLivesMatter
Reagan, Andrew J.; Danforth, Christopher M.; Dodds, Peter Sheridan
2018-01-01
Since the shooting of Black teenager Michael Brown by White police officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri, the protest hashtag #BlackLivesMatter has amplified critiques of extrajudicial killings of Black Americans. In response to #BlackLivesMatter, other Twitter users have adopted #AllLivesMatter, a counter-protest hashtag whose content argues that equal attention should be given to all lives regardless of race. Through a multi-level analysis of over 860,000 tweets, we study how these protests and counter-protests diverge by quantifying aspects of their discourse. We find that #AllLivesMatter facilitates opposition between #BlackLivesMatter and hashtags such as #PoliceLivesMatter and #BlueLivesMatter in such a way that historically echoes the tension between Black protesters and law enforcement. In addition, we show that a significant portion of #AllLivesMatter use stems from hijacking by #BlackLivesMatter advocates. Beyond simply injecting #AllLivesMatter with #BlackLivesMatter content, these hijackers use the hashtag to directly confront the counter-protest notion of “All lives matter.” Our findings suggest that Black Lives Matter movement was able to grow, exhibit diverse conversations, and avoid derailment on social media by making discussion of counter-protest opinions a central topic of #AllLivesMatter, rather than the movement itself. PMID:29668754
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Walgrave, Stefaan; Verhulst, Joris
2009-01-01
This study tackles the question to what extent the composition of protest events is determined by the stance of governments. Established contextual theories do not formulate propositions on how context affects individual protesters. The article engages in empirically testing whether the macro-context affects the internal diversity of the crowds…
Chayinska, Maria; Minescu, Anca; McGarty, Craig
2017-01-01
This paper explores the expression of multiple social identities through coordinated collective action. We propose that perceived compatibility between potentially contrasting identities and perceived legitimacy of protest serve as catalysts for collective action. The present paper maps the context of the “Euromaidan” anti-regime protests in Ukraine and reports data (N = 996) collected through an online survey following legislation to ban protests (March–May, 2014). We measured participants’ identification with three different groups (the Ukrainian nation, the online protest community, and the street movement), perception of compatibility between online protest and the street movement, perception of the legitimacy of protest, and intentions to take persuasive and confrontational collective action. We found evidence that the more social groups people “stood for,” the more they “fought” for their cause and that identifications predicted both forms of collective action to the degree that people saw the protest and the online movement as compatible with each other and believed protest to be legitimate. Collective action can be interpreted as the congruent expression of multiple identities that are rendered ideologically compatible both in online settings and on the street. PMID:28491046
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
..., and basis does SBA require to consider an SDB protest? 124.1011 Section 124.1011 Business Credit and... § 124.1011 What format, degree of specificity, and basis does SBA require to consider an SDB protest? (a) Format. An SDB protest need not be in any specific format in order for SBA to consider it. (b...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
..., and basis does SBA require to consider an SDB protest? 124.1011 Section 124.1011 Business Credit and... § 124.1011 What format, degree of specificity, and basis does SBA require to consider an SDB protest? (a) Format. An SDB protest need not be in any specific format in order for SBA to consider it. (b...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
..., and basis does SBA require to consider an SDB protest? 124.1011 Section 124.1011 Business Credit and... § 124.1011 What format, degree of specificity, and basis does SBA require to consider an SDB protest? (a) Format. An SDB protest need not be in any specific format in order for SBA to consider it. (b...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
..., and basis does SBA require to consider an SDB protest? 124.1011 Section 124.1011 Business Credit and... § 124.1011 What format, degree of specificity, and basis does SBA require to consider an SDB protest? (a) Format. An SDB protest need not be in any specific format in order for SBA to consider it. (b...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
..., and basis does SBA require to consider an SDB protest? 124.1011 Section 124.1011 Business Credit and... § 124.1011 What format, degree of specificity, and basis does SBA require to consider an SDB protest? (a) Format. An SDB protest need not be in any specific format in order for SBA to consider it. (b...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Haycock, John
2015-01-01
Since the 1960's, the transformative power of protest music has been shrouded in mythology. Sown by musical activists like Pete Seeger, who declared that protest music could "help to save the planet", the seeds of this myth have since taken deep root in the popular imagination. While the mythology surrounding the relationship between…
Poikkeus, Tarja; Suhonen, Riitta; Katajisto, Jouko; Leino-Kilpi, Helena
2018-03-12
Organizations and nurse leaders do not always effectively support nurses' ethical competence. More information is needed about nurses' perceptions of this support and relevant factors to improve it. The aim of the study was to examine relationships between nurses' perceived organizational and individual support, ethical competence, ethical safety, and work satisfaction. A cross-sectional questionnaire survey was conducted. Questionnaires were distributed to nurses (n = 298) working in specialized, primary, or private health care in Finland. Descriptive statistics, multifactor analysis of variance, and linear regression analysis were used to test the relationships. The nurses reported low organizational and individual support for their ethical competence, whereas perceptions of their ethical competence, ethical safety, and work satisfaction were moderate. There were statistically significant positive correlations between both perceived individual and organizational support, and ethical competence, nurses' work satisfaction, and nurses' ethical safety. Organizational and individual support for nurses' ethical competence should be strengthened, at least in Finland, by providing more ethics education and addressing ethical problems in multiprofessional discussions. Findings confirm that organizational level support for ethical competence improves nurses' work satisfaction. They also show that individual level support improves nurses' sense of ethical safety, and both organizational and individual support strengthen nurses' ethical competence. These findings should assist nurse leaders to implement effective support practices to strengthen nurses' ethical competence, ethical safety, and work satisfaction.
Weber, Shannon
2015-01-01
I analyze three case studies of marriage equality activism and marriage equality-based groups after the passage of Proposition 8 in California. Evaluating the JoinTheImpact protests of 2008, the LGBTQ rights group GetEQUAL, and the group One Struggle One Fight, I argue that these groups revise queer theoretical arguments about marriage equality activism as by definition assimilationist, homonormative, and single-issue. In contrast to such claims, the cases studied here provide a snapshot of heterogeneous, intersectional, and coalition-based social justice work in which creative methods of protest, including direct action and flash mobs, are deployed in militant ways for marriage rights and beyond.
[The Medical Movement in Mexico 1964-1965: What's happening half a century later?].
Gutiérrez-Samperio, César
2016-01-01
We reviewed the literature covering the medical movement in 1964-1965, which began on November 26, 1964 with the ISSSTE November 20 Hospital scholarship protest and the emergence of the Mexican Resident Interns Physicians Association (Asociación Mexicana de Médicos Residentes e Internos, AMMRI) and the Mexican Medical Alliance (Alianza de Médicos Mexicanos, AMM). We describe four work stoppages, two protest marches, the takeover of hospitals by the police, four interviews with Licenciado Gustavo Diaz Ordaz and his first presidential report. After that, attacks in the press, harassment, and repression provoked the weakening of the movement that ended in the AMM assembly on January 18, 1966.
The path to corporate responsibility.
Zadek, Simon
2004-12-01
Nike's tagline,"Just do it," is an inspirational call to action for the millions who wear the company's athletic gear. But in terms of corporate responsibility, Nike didn't always follow its own advice. In the 1990s, protesters railed against sweatshop conditions at some of its overseas suppliers and made Nike the global poster child for corporate ethical fecklessness. The intense pressure that activists exerted on the athletic apparel giant forced it to take a long, hard look at corporate responsibility--sooner than it might have otherwise. In this article, Simon Zadek, CEO of the UK-based institute AccountAbility, describes the bumpy route Nike has traveled to get to a better ethical place, one that cultivates and champions responsible business practices. Organizations learn in unique ways, Zadek contends, but they inevitably pass through five stages of corporate responsibility, from defensive ("It's not our fault") to compliance ("We'll do only what we have to") to managerial ("It's the business") to strategic ("It gives us a competitive edge") and, finally, to civil ("We need to make sure everybody does it"). He details Nike's arduous trek through these stages-from the company's initial defensive stance, when accusations about working conditions arose, all the way to its engagement today in the international debate about business's role in society and in public policy. As he outlines this evolution, Zadek offers valuable insights to executives grappling with the challenge of managing responsible business practices. Beyond just getting their own houses in order, the author argues, companies need to stay abreast of the public's evolving ideas about corporate roles and responsibilities. Organizations that do both will engage in what he calls"civil learning".
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Sonnentag, Sabine; Kuttler, Iris; Fritz, Charlotte
2010-01-01
This paper examines psychological detachment (i.e., mentally "switching off") from work during non-work time as a partial mediator between job stressors and low work-home boundaries on the one hand and strain reactions (emotional exhaustion, need for recovery) on the other hand. Survey data were collected from a sample of protestant pastors (N =…
Identification of Behavioral Indicators in Political Protest Music
2015-12-01
to ways to influence that behavior. Political protest songs are one such source. Protest music is goal-oriented, and lyrics often parallel movement ... music is goal-oriented, and lyrics often parallel movement goals of potential TAs. This thesis examines how political protest music can help identify... movement theory in order to bridge the MISO doctrine with music theories and understand what influences people to change their behavior and act or
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... 4 Accounts 1 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Notice of protest, submission of agency report, and time for filing of comments on report. 21.3 Section 21.3 Accounts GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE GENERAL PROCEDURES BID PROTEST REGULATIONS § 21.3 Notice of protest, submission of agency report, and time for filing of comments on report. (a) GAO shall...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... 4 Accounts 1 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Notice of protest, submission of agency report, and time for filing of comments on report. 21.3 Section 21.3 Accounts GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE GENERAL PROCEDURES BID PROTEST REGULATIONS § 21.3 Notice of protest, submission of agency report, and time for filing of comments on report. (a) GAO shall...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... 4 Accounts 1 2014-01-01 2013-01-01 true Notice of protest, submission of agency report, and time for filing of comments on report. 21.3 Section 21.3 Accounts GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE GENERAL PROCEDURES BID PROTEST REGULATIONS § 21.3 Notice of protest, submission of agency report, and time for filing of comments on report. (a) GAO shall...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... 4 Accounts 1 2012-01-01 2012-01-01 false Notice of protest, submission of agency report, and time for filing of comments on report. 21.3 Section 21.3 Accounts GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE GENERAL PROCEDURES BID PROTEST REGULATIONS § 21.3 Notice of protest, submission of agency report, and time for filing of comments on report. (a) GAO shall...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... 4 Accounts 1 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Notice of protest, submission of agency report, and time for filing of comments on report. 21.3 Section 21.3 Accounts GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE GENERAL PROCEDURES BID PROTEST REGULATIONS § 21.3 Notice of protest, submission of agency report, and time for filing of comments on report. (a) GAO shall...
4 CFR 21.13 - Nonstatutory protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
...) GAO will consider protests concerning awards of subcontracts by or for a Federal agency, sales by a... suspension of contract performance, 31 U.S.C. 3553(c) and (d), also does not apply to nonstatutory protests. ...
4 CFR 21.13 - Nonstatutory protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
...) GAO will consider protests concerning awards of subcontracts by or for a Federal agency, sales by a... suspension of contract performance, 31 U.S.C. 3553(c) and (d), also does not apply to nonstatutory protests. ...
48 CFR 833.103 - Protests to VA.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... encouraged to use alternative dispute resolution (ADR) procedures to resolve protests at any stage in the protest process. If ADR is used, VA will not furnish any documentation in an ADR proceeding beyond what is...
Separation Protest in Guatemalan Infants: Cross-Cultural and Cognitive Findings
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
And Others; Lester, Barry M.
1974-01-01
The onset and development of separation protest of 9 to 24-month-old infants was studied in a non-Western culture. Relationships between separation protest and object permanence were also explored. (ST)
13 CFR 124.1014 - Appeals of disadvantaged status determinations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... AA/GC&BD by the protested concern, the protestor, or the contracting officer. (b) Timeliness of appeal. An appeal must be in writing and must be received by the AA/GC&BD no later than 5 working days... the AA/GC&BD, within 5 working days of its receipt, if practicable. (g) The appeal decision will be...
13 CFR 124.1014 - Appeals of disadvantaged status determinations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... AA/GC&BD by the protested concern, the protestor, or the contracting officer. (b) Timeliness of appeal. An appeal must be in writing and must be received by the AA/GC&BD no later than 5 working days... disadvantaged. (g) The appeal will be decided by the AA/GC&BD, within 5 working days of its receipt, if...
13 CFR 124.1014 - Appeals of disadvantaged status determinations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... AA/GC&BD by the protested concern, the protestor, or the contracting officer. (b) Timeliness of appeal. An appeal must be in writing and must be received by the AA/GC&BD no later than 5 working days... the AA/GC&BD, within 5 working days of its receipt, if practicable. (g) The appeal decision will be...
13 CFR 124.1014 - Appeals of disadvantaged status determinations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... AA/GC&BD by the protested concern, the protestor, or the contracting officer. (b) Timeliness of appeal. An appeal must be in writing and must be received by the AA/GC&BD no later than 5 working days... the AA/GC&BD, within 5 working days of its receipt, if practicable. (g) The appeal decision will be...
13 CFR 124.1014 - Appeals of disadvantaged status determinations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... AA/GC&BD by the protested concern, the protestor, or the contracting officer. (b) Timeliness of appeal. An appeal must be in writing and must be received by the AA/GC&BD no later than 5 working days... disadvantaged. (g) The appeal will be decided by the AA/GC&BD, within 5 working days of its receipt, if...
13 CFR 127.603 - What are the requirements for filing an EDWOSB or WOSB protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... ADMINISTRATION WOMEN-OWNED SMALL BUSINESS FEDERAL CONTRACT ASSISTANCE PROCEDURES Protests § 127.603 What are the... (202) 205-6390, Attn: Women-Owned Small Business Status Protest. The contracting officer's referral...
19 CFR 174.14 - Amendment of protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... Protest” at the top of the form. Schedules or other attachments (other than samples or similar exhibits....12(c) as being acceptable on a protest will be acceptable on an amendment to a protest. (e) Place and...
13 CFR 121.1004 - What time limits apply to size protests?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
..., Sundays, and legal holidays, after bid or proposal opening. (2) Negotiated procurement. A protest must be... paragraph (e), for purposes of the SBIR program the contracting officer and SBA may file a protest in...
13 CFR 121.1004 - What time limits apply to size protests?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
..., Sundays, and legal holidays, after bid or proposal opening. (2) Negotiated procurement. A protest must be... paragraph (e), for purposes of the SBIR program the contracting officer and SBA may file a protest in...
13 CFR 121.1004 - What time limits apply to size protests?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
..., Sundays, and legal holidays, after bid or proposal opening. (2) Negotiated procurement. A protest must be... paragraph (e), for purposes of the SBIR program the contracting officer and SBA may file a protest in...
Zimbabwe: Internally or Externally Driven Meltdown
2010-06-01
front of parliament” were removed by “riot police us[ing] dogs , batons and tear gas.”202 Though the civil society strikes and protests in this period...Mugabe recognized ZAPU’s unwillingness to be muzzled in their opposition of his policies. He then moved to marginalize ZAPU, even in its own home...similar response to other protests, with police breaking up any protests using dogs , batons, or clubs as necessary to disperse protesters whether they
Conservative Protestantism and attitudes toward corporal punishment, 1986-2014.
Hoffmann, John P; Ellison, Christopher G; Bartkowski, John P
2017-03-01
Research indicates that conservative Protestants are highly supportive of corporal punishment. Yet, Americans' support for this practice has waned during the past several decades. This study aggregates repeated cross-sectional data from the General Social Surveys (GSS) to consider three models that address whether attitudes toward spanking among conservative Protestants shifted relative to those of other Americans from 1986 to 2014. Although initial results reveal a growing gap between conservative Protestants and the broader American public, we find that average levels of support have remained most robust among less educated conservative Protestants, with some erosion among more highly educated conservative Protestants. Moreover, trends in variability suggest that conservative Protestants exhibit more cohesive support for this practice than do others. These results provide a window into the cultural contours of religious change and the social factors that facilitate such change. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
The sensory power of cameras and noise meters for protest surveillance in South Korea.
Kim, Eun-Sung
2016-06-01
This article analyzes sensory aspects of material politics in social movements, focusing on two police tools: evidence-collecting cameras and noise meters for protest surveillance. Through interviews with Korean political activists, this article examines the relationship between power and the senses in the material culture of Korean protests and asks why cameras and noise meters appeared in order to control contemporary peaceful protests in the 2000s. The use of cameras and noise meters in contemporary peaceful protests evidences the exercise of what Michel Foucault calls 'micro-power'. Building on material culture studies, this article also compares the visual power of cameras with the sonic power of noise meters, in terms of a wide variety of issues: the control of things versus words, impacts on protest size, differential effects on organizers and participants, and differences in timing regarding surveillance and punishment.
The Effect of Self-Directed Work Teams on Work Ethic
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Petty, Gregory C.; Lim, Doo Hun; Yoon, Seung Won; Fontan, Johnny
2008-01-01
This study examined the work ethic of manufacturing machine operators between self-directed work teams and traditional work groups using four work ethic subscales: dependable, considerate, ambitious, and cooperative (Dawson, [1999]; Petty, [1991]). Differences in measured work ethic scores were also compared across six demographic variables: age,…
The Critical Periphery in the Growth of Social Protests.
Barberá, Pablo; Wang, Ning; Bonneau, Richard; Jost, John T; Nagler, Jonathan; Tucker, Joshua; González-Bailón, Sandra
2015-01-01
Social media have provided instrumental means of communication in many recent political protests. The efficiency of online networks in disseminating timely information has been praised by many commentators; at the same time, users are often derided as "slacktivists" because of the shallow commitment involved in clicking a forwarding button. Here we consider the role of these peripheral online participants, the immense majority of users who surround the small epicenter of protests, representing layers of diminishing online activity around the committed minority. We analyze three datasets tracking protest communication in different languages and political contexts through the social media platform Twitter and employ a network decomposition technique to examine their hierarchical structure. We provide consistent evidence that peripheral participants are critical in increasing the reach of protest messages and generating online content at levels that are comparable to core participants. Although committed minorities may constitute the heart of protest movements, our results suggest that their success in maximizing the number of online citizens exposed to protest messages depends, at least in part, on activating the critical periphery. Peripheral users are less active on a per capita basis, but their power lies in their numbers: their aggregate contribution to the spread of protest messages is comparable in magnitude to that of core participants. An analysis of two other datasets unrelated to mass protests strengthens our interpretation that core-periphery dynamics are characteristically important in the context of collective action events. Theoretical models of diffusion in social networks would benefit from increased attention to the role of peripheral nodes in the propagation of information and behavior.
Transmission of Work Ethic in African-American Families and Its Links with Adolescent Adjustment.
Lee, Bora; Padilla, Jenny; McHale, Susan M
2016-11-01
A strong work ethic generally has positive implications for achievements in work and school settings, but we know little about how it develops. This study aimed to describe the intra-familial transmission of work ethic and the associations between work ethic and adjustment in African American youth. Mothers, fathers, and two adolescent siblings (M age = 14.1 years) in 158 families were interviewed on two occasions. Path models revealed that fathers' work ethic was positively linked with older siblings' work ethic, which in turn was linked with more positive youth adjustment in the domains of school functioning and externalizing and internalizing problems. Moreover, the results indicated that the work ethics of older siblings, but not parents, was linked to those of younger siblings. The discussion focuses on the importance of African American fathers and siblings in youth adjustment and how work ethic may promote positive development.
Transmission of Work Ethic in African-American Families and its Links with Adolescent Adjustment
Padilla, Jenny; McHale, Susan M.
2015-01-01
A strong work ethic generally has positive implications for achievements in work and school settings, but we know little about how it develops. This study aimed to describe the intra-familial transmission of work ethic and the associations between work ethic and adjustment in African American youth. Mothers, fathers, and two adolescent siblings (Mage = 14.1 years) in 158 families were interviewed on two occasions. Path models revealed that fathers' work ethic was positively linked with older siblings' work ethic, which in turn was linked with more positive youth adjustment in the domains of school functioning and externalizing and internalizing problems. Moreover, the results indicated that the work ethics of older siblings, but not parents, was linked to those of younger siblings. The discussion focuses on the importance of African American fathers and siblings in youth adjustment and how work ethic may promote positive development. PMID:26608056
Work Ethic Characteristics: Perceived Work Ethics of Supervisors and Workers
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Petty, Gregory C.; Hill, Roger B.
2005-01-01
The purpose of this study was to compare the work ethics of supervisors with that of the employees they manage. The study investigated the occupational work ethics of both workers and their supervisors in a variety of businesses and industries to determine if there was a significant difference in the work ethics of these two groups as measured by…
48 CFR 733.103-72 - Responsibilities.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
...-72 Section 733.103-72 Federal Acquisition Regulations System AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 733.103-72 Responsibilities. (a... presented in the protest itself and in any documentation provided by the contracting officer, and after...
48 CFR 733.103-72 - Responsibilities.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
...-72 Section 733.103-72 Federal Acquisition Regulations System AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 733.103-72 Responsibilities. (a... presented in the protest itself and in any documentation provided by the contracting officer, and after...
Work engagement in nursing practice: a relational ethics perspective.
Keyko, Kacey
2014-12-01
The concept of work engagement has existed in business and psychology literature for some time. There is a significant body of research that positively correlates work engagement with organizational outcomes. To date, the interest in the work engagement of nurses has primarily been related to these organizational outcomes. However, the value of work engagement in nursing practice is not only an issue of organizational interest, but of ethical interest. The dialogue on work engagement in nursing must expand to include the ethical importance of engagement. The relational nature of work engagement and the multiple levels of influence on nurses' work engagement make a relational ethics approach to work engagement in nursing appropriate and necessary. Within a relational ethics perspective, it is evident that work engagement enables nurses to have meaningful relationships in their work and subsequently deliver ethical care. In this article, I argue that work engagement is essential for ethical nursing practice. If engagement is essential for ethical nursing practice, the environmental and organizational factors that influence work engagement must be closely examined to pursue the creation of moral communities within healthcare environments. © The Author(s) 2014.
Educating American Protestant Religious Educators
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Foster, Charles R.
2015-01-01
The voluntarism in Protestant theologies and practices has significantly shaped the education of lay and professional Protestant religious educators in networks of voluntary and academic training programs that through the years have emphasized the interdependence of pedagogical, religious/theological, and social science theories and practices.…
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false General. 1433.102 Section 1433.102 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 1433.102 General. For protests filed with GAO, the SOL...
48 CFR 19.302 - Protesting a small business representation or rerepresentation.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business Programs 19.302 Protesting a small business representation or rerepresentation. (a) An offeror, the SBA, or another interested party may protest the small business...
48 CFR 19.302 - Protesting a small business representation or rerepresentation.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business Programs 19.302 Protesting a small business representation or rerepresentation. (a) An offeror, the SBA, or another interested party may protest the small business...
48 CFR 19.302 - Protesting a small business representation or rerepresentation.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business Programs 19.302 Protesting a small business representation or rerepresentation. (a) An offeror, the SBA, or another interested party may protest the small business...
Post-Crisis, Post-Ford and Post-Gender? Youth Identities in an Era of Austerity
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
McDowell, Linda
2012-01-01
In this review I explore the connections between debates about the transformation of work in a service-dominated economy and those about classed and gendered identities. I suggest they might usefully be connected in analyses of disadvantage and exclusion among working-class young people. Youth involvement in protest and unrest in English cities,…
The Effect of Self-Directed Work Teams on Work Ethic
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Lim, Doo Hun; Petty, Gregory; Fontan, Johnny; Yoon, Seung Won
2008-01-01
The purpose of this study was to compare work ethic of manufacturing machine operators between a self-directed work team and a traditional work team based on four work ethic subscales and identify differences in work ethic based on six demographic factors. The major findings from the study indicated there were significant differences in the work…
Examining regional variability in work ethic within Mexico: Individual difference or shared value.
Arciniega, Luis M; Woehr, David J; Del Rincón, Germán A
2018-02-19
Despite the acceptance of work ethic as an important individual difference, little research has examined the extent to which work ethic may reflect shared environmental or socio-economic factors. This research addresses this concern by examining the influence of geographic proximity on the work ethic experienced by 254 employees from Mexico, working in 11 different cities in the Northern, Central and Southern regions of the country. Using a sequence of complementary analyses to assess the main source of variance on seven dimensions of work ethic, our results indicate that work ethic is most appropriately considered at the individual level. © 2018 International Union of Psychological Science.
43 CFR 2541.5 - Publication; protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Publication; protests. 2541.5 Section 2541... Act § 2541.5 Publication; protests. (a) The applicant will be required to publish once a week for four... that publication has been had for the required time. ...
43 CFR 2547.4 - Publication and protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Publication and protests. 2547.4 Section... Omitted Lands: General § 2547.4 Publication and protests. (a) The applicant shall be required to publish a... the publication has been made for the required time. ...
43 CFR 2541.5 - Publication; protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2014-10-01 2014-10-01 false Publication; protests. 2541.5 Section 2541... Act § 2541.5 Publication; protests. (a) The applicant will be required to publish once a week for four... that publication has been had for the required time. ...
43 CFR 2541.5 - Publication; protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false Publication; protests. 2541.5 Section 2541... Act § 2541.5 Publication; protests. (a) The applicant will be required to publish once a week for four... that publication has been had for the required time. ...
43 CFR 2541.5 - Publication; protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false Publication; protests. 2541.5 Section 2541... Act § 2541.5 Publication; protests. (a) The applicant will be required to publish once a week for four... that publication has been had for the required time. ...
Solving work-related ethical problems.
Laukkanen, Laura; Suhonen, Riitta; Leino-Kilpi, Helena
2016-12-01
Nurse managers are responsible for solving work-related ethical problems to promote a positive ethical culture in healthcare organizations. The aim of this study was to describe the activities that nurse managers use to solve work-related ethical problems. The ultimate aim was to enhance the ethical awareness of all nurse managers. The data for this descriptive cross-sectional survey were analyzed through inductive content analysis and quantification. Participants and research context: The data were collected in 2011 using a questionnaire that included an open-ended question and background factors. Participants were nurse managers working in Finnish healthcare organizations (n = 122). Ethical considerations: Permission for the study was given by the Finnish Association of Academic Managers and Experts of Health Sciences. Nurse managers identified a variety of activities they use to solve work-related ethical problems: discussion (30%), cooperation (25%), work organization (17%), intervention (10%), personal values (9%), operational models (4%), statistics and feedback (4%), and personal examples (1%). However, these activities did not follow any common or systematic model. In the future, nurse managers need a more systematic approach to solve ethical problems. It is important to establish new kinds of ethics structures in organizations, such as a common, systematic ethical decision-making model and an ethics club for nurse manager problems, to support nurse managers in solving work-related ethical problems.
43 CFR 2450.4 - Protests: Initial classification decision.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Protests: Initial classification decision... CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM Petition-Application Procedures § 2450.4 Protests: Initial classification decision. (a) For a period of 30 days after the proposed classification decision has been served upon the parties...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Tang, Thomas Li-Ping; Smith-Brandon, Vancie L.
2001-01-01
Work-related attitudes of 164 welfare recipients, 159 recipients in job training, and 158 employed former recipients were compared. Those employed had the highest scores in money ethic, work ethic, and self-esteem; higher education and income; and longer job tenure. Recipients not in training had the least positive money and work ethic. (Contains…
Global Justice Protest Events and the Production of Knowledge about Differences
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Daro, Vinci E. F.
2009-01-01
Recent social movement activities--in particular, transnationally-coordinated global justice mobilizations--require participants to work across substantial differences in languages, cultural backgrounds, political visions, and organizing traditions. Negotiating such differences is an active, adaptive, and learning-intensive process. In contrast to…
Worldwide actions to combat abuse.
1998-01-01
This paper reports several developments on the global efforts to combat abuse and violence against women and children. It is noted that in South Africa, Belem, Brazil, and Lesotho, protest actions were conducted against women and child abuse. Although the protests were made separately, the protests generally called for implementation of initiatives from the government to address the issue of child and women abuse. In the context of preventing abusive behaviors, a study by the University of Cape Town in South Africa on the appropriateness and feasibility of short-term community-based group therapy concluded that such an approach might be effective in treating delinquent behavior. In Indonesia, the Rifka Annisa Women's Crisis Centre is working to combat violence against women by providing services to victims; while in Israel, a media campaign is aiming to increase awareness and support for women's help centers. In addition, the government of Bangladesh has established a Cell Against Violence Against Women that provides legal counseling and assistance for civil and criminal cases related to violence against women. Furthermore, the WHO and the International Federation of Obstetricians and Gynecologists have collaborated to conduct a joint workshop to explore how violence against women can be eliminated.
48 CFR 852.233-70 - Protest content/alternative dispute resolution.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... encouraged to use alternative dispute resolution (ADR) procedures to resolve protests at any stage in the protest process. If ADR is used, the Department of Veterans Affairs will not furnish any documentation in an ADR proceeding beyond what is allowed by the Federal Acquisition Regulation. (End of provision) ...
48 CFR 852.233-70 - Protest content/alternative dispute resolution.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... encouraged to use alternative dispute resolution (ADR) procedures to resolve protests at any stage in the protest process. If ADR is used, the Department of Veterans Affairs will not furnish any documentation in an ADR proceeding beyond what is allowed by the Federal Acquisition Regulation. (End of provision) ...
13 CFR 127.602 - What are the grounds for filing an EDWOSB or WOSB status protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... ADMINISTRATION WOMEN-OWNED SMALL BUSINESS FEDERAL CONTRACT ASSISTANCE PROCEDURES Protests § 127.602 What are the... owned and controlled by one or more women who are United States citizens and, if the protest is in... women who are economically disadvantaged. ...
10 CFR 590.304 - Protests and answers.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... 10 Energy 4 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Protests and answers. 590.304 Section 590.304 Energy DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY (CONTINUED) NATURAL GAS (ECONOMIC REGULATORY ADMINISTRATION) ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES WITH RESPECT TO THE IMPORT AND EXPORT OF NATURAL GAS Procedures § 590.304 Protests and answers. (a) Any...
4 CFR 21.5 - Protest issues not for consideration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... official to file a protest or not to file a protest in connection with a public-private competition. [61 FR... business size standards and North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) standards. Challenges of established size standards or the size status of particular firms, and challenges of the selected NAICS code...
20 CFR 345.307 - Rate protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... 20 Employees' Benefits 1 2012-04-01 2012-04-01 false Rate protest. 345.307 Section 345.307... EMPLOYERS' CONTRIBUTIONS AND CONTRIBUTION REPORTS Contribution Rates § 345.307 Rate protest. (a) Request for reconsideration. An employer may appeal a determination of a contribution rate computed under this part by filing...
20 CFR 345.307 - Rate protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... 20 Employees' Benefits 1 2014-04-01 2012-04-01 true Rate protest. 345.307 Section 345.307... EMPLOYERS' CONTRIBUTIONS AND CONTRIBUTION REPORTS Contribution Rates § 345.307 Rate protest. (a) Request for reconsideration. An employer may appeal a determination of a contribution rate computed under this part by filing...
20 CFR 345.307 - Rate protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... 20 Employees' Benefits 1 2011-04-01 2011-04-01 false Rate protest. 345.307 Section 345.307... EMPLOYERS' CONTRIBUTIONS AND CONTRIBUTION REPORTS Contribution Rates § 345.307 Rate protest. (a) Request for reconsideration. An employer may appeal a determination of a contribution rate computed under this part by filing...
20 CFR 345.307 - Rate protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... 20 Employees' Benefits 1 2013-04-01 2012-04-01 true Rate protest. 345.307 Section 345.307... EMPLOYERS' CONTRIBUTIONS AND CONTRIBUTION REPORTS Contribution Rates § 345.307 Rate protest. (a) Request for reconsideration. An employer may appeal a determination of a contribution rate computed under this part by filing...
20 CFR 345.307 - Rate protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 20 Employees' Benefits 1 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Rate protest. 345.307 Section 345.307... EMPLOYERS' CONTRIBUTIONS AND CONTRIBUTION REPORTS Contribution Rates § 345.307 Rate protest. (a) Request for reconsideration. An employer may appeal a determination of a contribution rate computed under this part by filing...
48 CFR 819.307 - SDVOSB/VOSB small business status protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false SDVOSB/VOSB small business... AFFAIRS SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business Programs 819.307 SDVOSB/VOSB small business status protests. (a) All protests relating to whether...
10 CFR 590.304 - Protests and answers.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... 10 Energy 4 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Protests and answers. 590.304 Section 590.304 Energy DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY (CONTINUED) NATURAL GAS (ECONOMIC REGULATORY ADMINISTRATION) ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES WITH RESPECT TO THE IMPORT AND EXPORT OF NATURAL GAS Procedures § 590.304 Protests and answers. (a) Any...
18 CFR 343.2 - Requirements for filing interventions, protests and complaints.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... interventions, protests and complaints. 343.2 Section 343.2 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL... PROCEDURAL RULES APPLICABLE TO OIL PIPELINE PROCEEDINGS § 343.2 Requirements for filing interventions, protests and complaints. (a) Interventions. Section 385.214 of this chapter applies to oil pipeline...
18 CFR 343.2 - Requirements for filing interventions, protests and complaints.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... interventions, protests and complaints. 343.2 Section 343.2 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL... PROCEDURAL RULES APPLICABLE TO OIL PIPELINE PROCEEDINGS § 343.2 Requirements for filing interventions, protests and complaints. (a) Interventions. Section 385.214 of this chapter applies to oil pipeline...
18 CFR 35.8 - Protests and interventions by interested parties.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... interventions by interested parties. 35.8 Section 35.8 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL ENERGY... AND TARIFFS Application § 35.8 Protests and interventions by interested parties. Unless the notice issued by the Commission provides otherwise, any protest or intervention to a rate filing made pursuant...
18 CFR 343.2 - Requirements for filing interventions, protests and complaints.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... interventions, protests and complaints. 343.2 Section 343.2 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL... PROCEDURAL RULES APPLICABLE TO OIL PIPELINE PROCEEDINGS § 343.2 Requirements for filing interventions, protests and complaints. (a) Interventions. Section 385.214 of this chapter applies to oil pipeline...
18 CFR 35.8 - Protests and interventions by interested parties.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... interventions by interested parties. 35.8 Section 35.8 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL ENERGY... AND TARIFFS Application § 35.8 Protests and interventions by interested parties. Unless the notice issued by the Commission provides otherwise, any protest or intervention to a rate filing made pursuant...
18 CFR 343.2 - Requirements for filing interventions, protests and complaints.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... interventions, protests and complaints. 343.2 Section 343.2 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL... PROCEDURAL RULES APPLICABLE TO OIL PIPELINE PROCEEDINGS § 343.2 Requirements for filing interventions, protests and complaints. (a) Interventions. Section 385.214 of this chapter applies to oil pipeline...
18 CFR 343.2 - Requirements for filing interventions, protests and complaints.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... interventions, protests and complaints. 343.2 Section 343.2 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL... PROCEDURAL RULES APPLICABLE TO OIL PIPELINE PROCEEDINGS § 343.2 Requirements for filing interventions, protests and complaints. (a) Interventions. Section 385.214 of this chapter applies to oil pipeline...
18 CFR 35.8 - Protests and interventions by interested parties.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... interventions by interested parties. 35.8 Section 35.8 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL ENERGY... AND TARIFFS Application § 35.8 Protests and interventions by interested parties. Unless the notice issued by the Commission provides otherwise, any protest or intervention to a rate filing made pursuant...
18 CFR 35.8 - Protests and interventions by interested parties.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... interventions by interested parties. 35.8 Section 35.8 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL ENERGY... AND TARIFFS Application § 35.8 Protests and interventions by interested parties. Unless the notice issued by the Commission provides otherwise, any protest or intervention to a rate filing made pursuant...
18 CFR 35.8 - Protests and interventions by interested parties.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... interventions by interested parties. 35.8 Section 35.8 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL ENERGY... AND TARIFFS Application § 35.8 Protests and interventions by interested parties. Unless the notice issued by the Commission provides otherwise, any protest or intervention to a rate filing made pursuant...
43 CFR 2545.3 - Publication and protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Publication and protests. 2545.3 Section... Erroneously Meandered Lands: Wisconsin § 2545.3 Publication and protests. (a) The applicant will be required..., accompanied by a copy of the notice published, showing that publication has been had for the required time. ...
76 FR 55217 - Procedures for Protests and Contracts Dispute
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-09-07
... revised to clarify the standard for requesting a dismissal or summary decision, and the process for... revised to clarify when such a decision is to be construed as a final agency order. Adjudicative Process... practice and dismissal or summary decision of protests. 17.21 Adjudicative Process for protests. 17.23...
48 CFR 819.307 - SDVOSB/VOSB Small Business Status Protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false SDVOSB/VOSB Small Business... AFFAIRS SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business Programs 819.307 SDVOSB/VOSB Small Business Status Protests. (a) All protests relating to whether...
48 CFR 819.307 - SDVOSB/VOSB small business status protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false SDVOSB/VOSB small business... AFFAIRS SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business Programs 819.307 SDVOSB/VOSB small business status protests. (a) All protests relating to whether...
48 CFR 819.307 - SDVOSB/VOSB Small Business Status Protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2014-10-01 2014-10-01 false SDVOSB/VOSB Small Business... AFFAIRS SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business Programs 819.307 SDVOSB/VOSB Small Business Status Protests. (a) All protests relating to whether...
48 CFR 819.307 - SDVOSB/VOSB small business status protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false SDVOSB/VOSB small business... AFFAIRS SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business Programs 819.307 SDVOSB/VOSB small business status protests. (a) All protests relating to whether...
48 CFR 19.306 - Protesting a firm's status as a HUBZone small business concern.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Protesting a firm's status... FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business Programs 19.306 Protesting a firm's status as a HUBZone small business...
The Social Work Ethics Audit: A Risk-Management Strategy.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Reamer, Frederic G.
2000-01-01
Article integrates current knowledge on social work ethics and introduces the concept of a social work ethics audit to aid social workers in their efforts to identify pertinent ethical issues; review and assess the adequacy of their current ethics-related practices; modify their practices as needed; and monitor the implementation of these changes.…
Bioethics and academic freedom.
Singer, Peter
1990-01-01
The author describes the events surrounding his attempts to lecture on the subject of euthanasia in West Germany in June 1989. Singer, who defends the view that active euthanasia for some newborns with handicaps may be ethically permissible, had been invited to speak to professional and academic groups. Strong public protests against Singer and his topic led to the cancellation of some of his engagements, disruptions during others, and harrassment of the German academics who had invited him to speak. These incidents and the subject of euthanasia became matters of intense national debate in West Germany, but there was little public or academic support for Singer's right to be heard. Singer argues that bioethics and bioethicists must have the freedom to challenge conventional moral beliefs, and that the events in West Germany illustrate the grave danger to that freedom from religious and political intolerance.
78 FR 76319 - Filing of Plats of Survey: California
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-12-17
... of Survey: California AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior. ACTION: Notice. SUMMARY: The plats of survey of lands described below are scheduled to be officially filed in the Bureau of Land [[Page.... Protest: A person or party who wishes to protest a survey must file a notice that they wish to protest...
The Protest as a Teaching Technique for Promoting Feminist Activism.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rose, Suzanna
An assignment about protesting was given to students in an upper-level undergraduate women's studies course to provide them with experience and skills in political protesting and to promote feminist activism. The students selected for their assignments: (1) a letter writing campaign against Robert Bork's Supreme Court nomination; (2) a picket…
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... after bid opening or the closing time for receipt of proposals. (b) Protests untimely on their face may... 4 Accounts 1 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Time for filing. 21.2 Section 21.2 Accounts GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE GENERAL PROCEDURES BID PROTEST REGULATIONS § 21.2 Time for filing. (a)(1) Protests based...
Youth Protests against Education Privatization Reforms in Post-Soviet States
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Silova, Iveta; Brezheniuk, Viktoriia; Kudasova, Marina; Mun, Olga; Artemev, Nikolai
2014-01-01
This article examines youth protests against education privatization in the post-Soviet countries of Latvia, Russia, and Ukraine. Drawing on a sample of online sources and scholarly articles, this study uses critical discourse analysis and visual methodologies to examine why and how post-Soviet university students have organized to protest against…
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... status determinations in considering an SDB protest? 124.1013 Section 124.1013 Business Credit and... § 124.1013 How does SBA make disadvantaged status determinations in considering an SDB protest? (a... status determination, and a previous SDB certification will stand. (d) Basis for determination. (1...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... status determinations in considering an SDB protest? 124.1013 Section 124.1013 Business Credit and... § 124.1013 How does SBA make disadvantaged status determinations in considering an SDB protest? (a... status determination, and a previous SDB certification will stand. (d) Basis for determination. (1...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... status determinations in considering an SDB protest? 124.1013 Section 124.1013 Business Credit and... § 124.1013 How does SBA make disadvantaged status determinations in considering an SDB protest? (a... status determination, and a previous SDB certification will stand. (d) Basis for determination. (1...
Development of Vocal Protests from 3 to 18 Months
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Chen, Xin; Green, James A.; Gustafson, Gwen E.
2009-01-01
Infants often protest the activities of their caregivers, and this particular social interaction may provide an important window on early communication and its development. This study used naturalistic methods to investigate the development of vocal protests. Fifteen mother-infant dyads at each of 5 ages, from 3 to 18 months, were observed at…
78 FR 13662 - Kansas Gas Service, a Division of ONEOK, Inc.; Notice of Petition
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-02-28
....214). Protests will be considered by the Commission in determining the appropriate action to be taken... must file a notice of intervention or motion to intervene, as appropriate. Such notices, motions, or... before the intervention or protest date need not serve motions to intervene or protests on persons other...
78 FR 13662 - The East Ohio Gas Company; Notice of Petition for Rate Approval
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-02-28
...). Protests will be considered by the Commission in determining the appropriate action to be taken, but will... file a notice of intervention or motion to intervene, as appropriate. Such notices, motions, or... before the intervention or protest date need not serve motions to intervene or protests on persons other...
78 FR 20314 - Enogex LLC; Notice of Filing
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-04-04
... considered by the Commission in determining the appropriate action to be taken, but will not serve to make... or motion to intervene, as appropriate. Such notices, motions, or protests must be filed on or before... protest date need not serve motions to intervene or protests on persons other than the Applicant. The...
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-11-26
... Application for Amendment of Licenses and Soliciting Comments, Motions To Intervene, and Protests Take notice..., or [email protected] . j. Deadline for filing comments, motions to intervene, and protests... electronic filing. Please file any motion to intervene, protest, comments, and/or recommendations using the...
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-05-06
..., Inc.; Notice of Declaration of Intention and Soliciting Comments, Protests, and/or Motions To..., or Email address: [email protected] j. Deadline for filing comments, protests, and/or motions is: 30 days from the issuance of this notice by the Commission. Comments, Motions to Intervene, and...
A Contribution to a Theory of Organizations: An Examination of Student Protest.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Norr, James L.
Until recently most of the research on college student protest of the 1960's has taken either a political socialization or cultural-historical perspective. The research reported here takes an organizational perspective with the expectation that an examination of student protest should contribute to a theory of organizations. Two classes of…
13 CFR 121.1004 - What time limits apply to size protests?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
..., after bid or proposal opening. (2) Negotiated procurement. A protest must be received by the contracting... paragraph (e), for purposes of the SBIR program the contracting officer and SBA may file a protest in... purposes of the SBIR and STTR programs. Notwithstanding paragraph (e), for purposes of the SBIR and STTR...
14 CFR 17.19 - Dismissal or summary decision of protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
..., be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, if the protester fails to establish that the protest is timely... material facts in dispute that would overcome a finding of the lack of such a rational basis. (b) In... Resolution for Acquisition may, at any time, exercise its discretion to: (1) Recommend to the Administrator...
43 CFR 2621.2 - Publication and protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 43 Public Lands: Interior 2 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Publication and protests. 2621.2 Section... § 2621.2 Publication and protests. (a) The State will be required to publish once a week for five... a copy of the notice published, showing that publication has been had for the required time. [35 FR...
48 CFR 19.302 - Protesting a small business representation or rerepresentation.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... letter postmarked no later than 1 business day after the oral protest. (ii) A protest may be made in writing if it is delivered to the contracting officer by hand, telegram, or letter within the 5-day period... business representation or rerepresentation. 19.302 Section 19.302 Federal Acquisition Regulations System...
Examining Relationships among Work Ethic, Academic Motivation and Performance
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Meriac, John P.
2015-01-01
In this study, work ethic was examined as a predictor of academic motivation and performance. A total of 440 undergraduate students completed measures of work ethic and academic motivation, and reported their cumulative grade point average. Results indicated that several dimensions of work ethic were related to academic motivation and academic…
[Dimensions of work ethic as predictors of strategies to cope with stress].
Grabowski, Damian; Pollak, Anita; Czerw, Agnieszka
2017-10-17
The article presents the mutual relations between the components of work ethic and the strategies of coping with stress used by employees of different branches. Work ethic was presented as a syndrome of the following attitudes: perceiving work as a moral value, treating work as a central value in life, and the belief in the importance of hard work that leads to success. This ethic also consists of the following components: unwillingness to waste time, disapproval of spare time (anti-leisure), willingness to delay gratification, willingness to act honestly at work (morality/ethic), and being independent (self-reliance). Coping strategies were presented as 3 dimensions (obtained by application of factor analysis of the questionnaire scales COPE (Coping Orientations to Problems Experienced)): proactive cognitive operations, avoidance of action and seeking support. The study conducted on 360 employees of different branches shows that the dimensions of the work ethic are moderately related to strategies emphasizing proactive cognitive operations and poorly related to seeking support and avoidance of action. At the same time, the relations between work ethic and avoidance of action are negative (higher work ethic is linked with lower tendency to avoid action). Predictors of proactive cognitive operations are unwillingness to waste time, treating work as a central value in life, willingness to act honestly at work (morality/ethic) and being independent (self-reliance). Med Pr 2017;68(6):711-724. This work is available in Open Access model and licensed under a CC BY-NC 3.0 PL license.
A Model of Comparative Ethics Education for Social Workers
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Pugh, Greg L.
2017-01-01
Social work ethics education models have not effectively engaged social workers in practice in formal ethical reasoning processes, potentially allowing personal bias to affect ethical decisions. Using two of the primary ethical models from medicine, a new social work ethics model for education and practical application is proposed. The strengths…
Risk perception and public acceptance toward a highly protested Waste-to-Energy facility.
Ren, Xiangyu; Che, Yue; Yang, Kai; Tao, Yun
2016-02-01
The application of Waste-to-Energy treatment in Municipal Solid Waste faces strong protest by local communities, especially in cities with high population densities. This study introduces insight into the public awareness, acceptance and risk perception toward Waste-to-Energy through a structured questionnaire survey around a Waste-to-Energy facility in Shanghai, China. The Dichotomous-Choice contingent valuation method was applied to study the willingness to accept of residents as an indicator of risk perception and tolerance. The factors influencing risk perception and the protest response choice were analyzed. The geographical distributions of the acceptance of Waste-to-Energy facility and protest response were explored using geographical information systems. The findings of the research indicated an encouraging vision of promoting Waste-to-Energy, considering its benefits of renewable energy and the conservation of land. A high percentage of protest willingness to accept (50.94%) was highlighted with the effect of income, opinion about Waste-to-Energy, gender and perceived impact. The fuzzy classification among people with different opinions on compensation (valid 0, positive or protest willingness to accept) revealed the existing yet rejected demand of compensation among protesters. Geographical distribution in the public attitude can also be observed. Finally significant statistical relation between knowledge and risk perception indicates the need of risk communication, as well as involving public into whole management process. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Grammatikopoulou, Ioanna; Olsen, Søren Bøye
2013-11-30
Based on a Contingent Valuation survey aiming to reveal the willingness to pay (WTP) for conservation of a wetland area in Greece, we show how protest and warm glow motives can be taken into account when modeling WTP. In a sample of more than 300 respondents, we find that 54% of the positive bids are rooted to some extent in warm glow reasoning while 29% of the zero bids can be classified as expressions of protest rather than preferences. In previous studies, warm glow bidders are only rarely identified while protesters are typically identified and excluded from further analysis. We test for selection bias associated with simple removal of both protesters and warm glow bidders in our data. Our findings show that removal of warm glow bidders does not significantly distort WTP whereas we find strong evidence of selection bias associated with removal of protesters. We show how to correct for such selection bias by using a sample selection model. In our empirical sample, using the typical approach of removing protesters from the analysis, the value of protecting the wetland is significantly underestimated by as much as 46% unless correcting for selection bias. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Ethical concerns and dilemmas of Finnish and Dutch health professionals.
Hopia, Hanna; Lottes, Ilsa; Kanne, Mariël
2016-09-01
Healthcare professionals encounter ethical dilemmas and concerns in their practice. More research is needed to understand these ethical problems and to know how to educate professionals to respond to them. To describe ethical dilemmas and concerns at work from the perspectives of Finnish and Dutch healthcare professionals studying at the master's level. Exploratory, qualitative study that used the text of student online discussions of ethical dilemmas at work as data. Participants' online discussions were analyzed using inductive content analysis. The sample consisted of 49 students at master's level enrolled in professional ethics courses at universities in Finland and the Netherlands. Permission for conducting the study was granted from both universities of applied sciences. All students provided their informed consent for the use of their assignments as research data. Participants described 51 problematic work situations. Among these, 16 were found to be ethical dilemmas, and the remaining were work issues with an ethical concern and did not meet criteria of a dilemma. The most common problems resulted from concerns about quality care, safety of healthcare professionals, patients' rights, and working with too few staff and inadequate resources. The results indicated that participants were concerned about providing quality of care and raised numerous questions about how to provide it in challenging situations. The results show that it was difficult for students to differentiate ethical dilemmas from other ethical work concerns. Online discussions among healthcare providers give them an opportunity to relate ethical principles to real ethical dilemmas and problems in their work as well as to critically analyze ethical issues. We found that discussions with descriptions of ethical dilemmas and concerns by health professionals provide important information and recommendations not only for education and practice but also for health policy. © The Author(s) 2015.
Generational differences in work ethic among 3 generations of registered nurses.
Jobe, Laura L
2014-05-01
The purpose of this study was to understand if differences in dimensions of work ethic exist among 3 generations of nurses working in an inpatient setting at an acute care facility. Generational differences are linked with increased turnover, with work ethic frequently cited as an important difference. The quantitative, quasi-experimental cross-sectional study recruited inpatient registered nurses from 2 teaching hospitals in a southern US metropolitan area to complete the Multidimensional Work Ethic Profile online. The 285 completed surveys indicated that similarities exist among the 3 generations, with statistically significant differences only in leisure, hard work, and delay of gratification dimensions. Understanding differences in work ethic dimensions could lead to strategies for improving the generational conflict. These results also lead to the conclusion that work ethic differences may not be the cause of the generational conflict among nurses.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Anderson, Michelle D.
2009-01-01
In the 1960s, in the midst of Vietnam War protests and the emergence of the Black power movement, students John Garland and James Renick worked as campus advocates to change the environment and curricula at Central State University. Today, Garland, president of Central State, and his college friend Renick, who began serving as senior adviser to…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gore, Deborah, Ed.
1991-01-01
This theme journal issue is devoted to an exploration of peace and its history in Iowa. The features and activities include: Iowa's Peace Tradition; A Global View; World Map; A Mesquakie Tale; Swords into Plowshares; Make a Peace Crane; Student Protest; Goldfinch Patriotism Debate; Peace Meal; A Short Story; and Work It Out. (DB)
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hernandez, Arelis
2010-01-01
The author reports on the dismissal of a longtime diversity administrator Dr. Cordell Black, combined with a declining minority enrollment and a deflated state budget, which has raised concerns about the University of Maryland's commitment to diversity and resulted to student protests. For years, the university has worked hard to reverse the…
The Corporate EEO Officer and Limits of Lawful Protest.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Jauvits, Robert L.
1983-01-01
Decisions of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the courts have affirmed that corporate Equal Employment Opportunity officers are quasi-managerial employees. Their primary role is to work with the company and its personnel to resolve problems and foster compliance with applicable employment laws and regulations. (Author/MLF)
The Ache: Genocide Continues in Paraguay. IWGIA Document No. 17.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Munzel, Mark
In 1972, the Paraguayan Roman Catholic Church protested against the massacre of Indians in Paraguay. This was followed by further protests from Paraguayan intellectuals. These protests led to the removal of Jesus de Pereira, one of the executors of the official Ache policy. Thus, the critics were appeased. Since the beginning of 1973, new protests…
Social Protest and the Future of Higher Education in Puerto Rico
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rodriguez, Victor M.
2011-01-01
In 2010, in thirty states across the nation, students and faculty members protested for access to public education and against tuition and fee hikes. A common theme of the protests was the fear that rising tuition would effectively privatize public higher education, making it inaccessible to a broad segment of the nation's youth. These protests…
Raising Cain: The University Student and the Politics of Protest
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hundscheid, John
2010-01-01
Student protests and occupations are not new phenomena. On February 10, 1355, what came to be known as the St. Scholastica Day riot occurred. Oxford students and townspeople clashed after a dispute in a local tavern and almost one hundred people were killed. But while student protests have occurred throughout history, the 1960s introduced a new…
Rallies, Protests, and Institutional Change: How Consultants Can Address Campus Climate
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Ford, Kristie A.
2017-01-01
Student-led rallies and protests continue to gain attention nationwide, due in part to the use of social media. Debates over free speech, acts of protest during the national anthem, and mascot choices or building names reflecting racist histories all illustrate the tensions present on many college campuses. Lack of faculty and staff expertise in…
Social Protest Novels in Management Education: Using "Hawk's Nest" to Enhance Stakeholder Analysis
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Westerman, James W.; Westerman, Jennifer Hughes
2009-01-01
This article examines the potential of the social protest novel as a teaching tool in the management classroom. It suggests that the social protest novel provides a uniquely powerful medium in that it effectively captures the student's imagination and interest with an engrossing narrative, personalizes the importance of management issues and…
48 CFR 1352.233-71 - GAO and Court of Federal Claims protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false GAO and Court of Federal Claims protests. 1352.233-71 Section 1352.233-71 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEPARTMENT OF....233-71 GAO and Court of Federal Claims protests. As prescribed in 48 CFR 1333.104-70(a), insert the...
48 CFR 1352.233-71 - GAO and Court of Federal Claims protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false GAO and Court of Federal Claims protests. 1352.233-71 Section 1352.233-71 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEPARTMENT OF....233-71 GAO and Court of Federal Claims protests. As prescribed in 48 CFR 1333.104-70(a), insert the...
31 CFR 240.9 - Reclamation procedures; reclamation protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... reclamation debt through offset in accordance with §§ 240.10 and 240.11. (5) Effect of protest decision. The..., by filing a protest in accordance with § 240.9(b), request Treasury to review its decision that the... debtor of Treasury's decision. In those cases where it is not possible to render a decision within 60...
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-11-06
...; Notice of Declaration of Intention and Soliciting Comments, Protests, and/or Motions To Intervene Take..., or email address: [email protected] . j. Deadline for filing comments, protests, and/or motions is: 30 days from the issuance of this notice by the Commission. Comments, Motions to Intervene, and...
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-06-17
....214). Protests will be considered by the Commission in determining the appropriate action to be taken... must file a notice of intervention or motion to intervene, as appropriate. Such notices, motions, or... before the intervention or protest date need not serve motions to intervene or protests on persons other...
78 FR 20314 - Jefferson Island Storage & Hub, L.L.C.; Notice of Filing
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-04-04
... considered by the Commission in determining the appropriate action to be taken, but will not serve to make... or motion to intervene, as appropriate. Such notices, motions, or protests must be filed on or before... protest date need not serve motions to intervene or protests on persons other than the Applicant. The...
75 FR 55324 - Columbia Gas Transmission, LLC; Notice of Request Under Blanket Authorization
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-09-10
... regulations under the Natural Gas Act (NGA) for authorization to abandon: (1) The Weaver Storage Well No. 9297... NGA (18 CFR 157.205) file a protest to the request. If no protest is filed within the time allowed... section 7 of the NGA. The Commission strongly encourages electronic filings of comments, protests, and...
75 FR 61480 - Gulf South Pipeline Company, LP; Notice of Request Under Blanket Authorization
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-10-05
... Commission's regulations under the Natural Gas Act (NGA) for authorization to drill construct an additional... the NGA (18 CFR 157.205) file a protest to the request. If no protest is filed within the time allowed... section 7 of the NGA. The Commission strongly encourages electronic filings of comments, protests, and...
Cycles of Protest in West Germany: Experiences from Three Decades.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mushaben, Joyce Marie
The effects of the West German peace movement over the past 30 years have led to the development of a new concept of political participation in that country. Since 1950, a proliferation of protest movements has reflected a wide range of ideological, social, and geographic perspectives. Pacifist Protestants and the German Trade Union began sporadic…
Teacher and Institutional Self-Censorship of English Texts in NSW Protestant Schools
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hastie, David
2017-01-01
Australian Protestant schools have often been depicted as sites that restrict knowledge. This paper presents the findings of a 2010-2013 field study of 137 teachers, exploring the nature and extent of Protestant School English teacher self-censorship when excluding and selecting texts to teach. In both survey and interview data, I find that the…
19 CFR 174.3 - Power of attorney to file protest.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... principal, other than an attorney at law or a customhouse broker or his authorized employee acting in his... law. When the protest is filed by an attorney at law as agent or attorney for the principal, the signing of the protest as agent or attorney for the principal by the attorney at law shall be considered a...
Work Ethic and Employment Status: A Study of Jobseekers
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hill, Roger B.; Fouts, Susan
2005-01-01
Although there have been numerous changes within the workplace during the past century, employers continue to search for employees with a strong work ethic. Employers often cite a strong work ethic as the most desired characteristic in a new employee. Work ethic can be described as a set of characteristics and attitudes in which an individual…
Development and Validation of a Short Form of the Occupational Work Ethic Inventory
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Park, HwaChoon; Hill, Roger B.
2017-01-01
The Occupational Work Ethic Inventory (OWEI) has been widely used to measure work ethic constructs by professionals in the fields of Career and Technical Education (CTE) and Human Resource Development (HRD). However, there are circumstances when a shorter instrument would have advantages, especially when a measure of work ethic is needed along…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Dunn, Andrew
2013-01-01
This article argues that work ethic research has suffered from a tendency to conflate preference and morality, and that this has been particularly detrimental to our understanding of the relationship between commitment to the work ethic and educational attainment. The work ethic is almost always measured quantitatively, yet in-depth research…
Ethical principles in the work of nurse educator-A cross-sectional study.
Salminen, Leena; Stolt, Minna; Metsämäki, Riikka; Rinne, Jenni; Kasen, Anne; Leino-Kilpi, Helena
2016-01-01
The application of ethical principles within the teaching profession and nursing practice forms the core of the nurse educator's professional ethics. However, research focusing on the professional ethics of nurse educators is scarce. To describe ethical principles and issues relating to the work of nurse educators from the perspectives of both nurse educators themselves and nursing students. A descriptive study using cross-sectional data and content analysis. Nursing education program involving students from nine polytechnics in Finland. Nursing students (n=202) and nurse educators (n=342). Data were derived from an online survey, with two open-ended questions: Nursing students and nurse educators were asked to name the three main ethical principles that guide the work of nurse educators and also to describe ethical issues involved in the work. Students most often named professionalism, justice, and equality as the main ethical principles for a nurse educator. Nurse educators considered justice, equality, and honesty as the main ethical principles. The content analysis showed that professionalism and the relationship between educator and student were the key categories for ethical issues as perceived by nursing students. Nursing students most often identified inequality between the nurse educator and nursing student as the ethical issue faced by the nurse educator. Nursing students and nurse educators differed somewhat both in their views of the ethical principles guiding an educator's work and in the ethical issues arising in the work. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Spiro, Emma S; Monroy-Hernández, Andrés
2016-01-01
In this paper we examine two protests characterized by substantial social media presence and distributed participation frameworks via two core questions: what roles did organizations and individuals play, and how did participants' social interactions change over the course of the protests? To answer these questions, we analyzed a large Twitter activity dataset for the #YoSoy132 student uprising in Mexico and Brazil's "bus rebellion." Results indicate that individuals initially took prominence at the protests but faded in importance as the movements dwindled and organizations took over. Regarding the dynamics and structure of the interactions, we found that key time points with unique social structures often map to exogenous events such as coordinated protests in physical locations. Our results have important consequences for the visibility of such social movements and their ability to attract continued participation by individuals and organizations.
2016-01-01
In this paper we examine two protests characterized by substantial social media presence and distributed participation frameworks via two core questions: what roles did organizations and individuals play, and how did participants’ social interactions change over the course of the protests? To answer these questions, we analyzed a large Twitter activity dataset for the #YoSoy132 student uprising in Mexico and Brazil’s “bus rebellion.” Results indicate that individuals initially took prominence at the protests but faded in importance as the movements dwindled and organizations took over. Regarding the dynamics and structure of the interactions, we found that key time points with unique social structures often map to exogenous events such as coordinated protests in physical locations. Our results have important consequences for the visibility of such social movements and their ability to attract continued participation by individuals and organizations. PMID:27776191
Issue bricolage: explaining the configuration of the social movement sector, 1960-1995.
Jung, Wooseok; King, Brayden G; Soule, Sarah A
2014-07-01
Social movements occupy a shared ideational and resource space, which is often referred to as the social movement sector. This article contributes to the understanding of the relational dynamics of the social movement sector by demonstrating how ideational linkages are formed through protest events. Using a data set of protest events occurring in the United States from 1960 to 1995, the authors model the mechanisms shaping why certain movement issues (e.g., women's and peace or environmental and gay rights) appear together at protest events. They argue that both cultural similarity and status differences between two social movement issues are the underlying mechanisms that shape joint protest and the resultant ideational linkages between issues. Finally, they show that the linking of issues at protest events results in changes in the prominence of a given issue in the social movement sector.
A way of work and a way of life: Coal mining and coal miners in Thurber, Texas, 1888-1926
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Rhinehart, M.D.
1988-01-01
Founded in the late 1800s on the western edge of North Central Texas, Thurber Village thrived for almost 35 years as a coal-mining company town dependent on the railroads' need for fuel. By the turn of the century a largely immigrant population dominated by Italians and Poles lived and toiled in the camp, but despite ethnic and racial differences, a sense of community based on occupational ties shaped life there. Shared traditions, grievances, fears, and expectations of autonomy at the work place facilitated protest and influenced social activities in the miners' after-work lives. A way of work thus expanded intomore » a way of life. Poor employer/employee relations plagued Hunter from the first days of Thurber's existence. Workers resented perennial company interference in their lives and used traditional forms of protest to resist it. By the end of the 1910s Thurber's fortunes waned as the railroad turned to petroleum for fuel and labor demands taxed the coal operators' patience. The Texas Pacific Coal Company added oil to its name and focused attention on its petroleum prospects. After a series of labor difficulties in the 1920s, coal production halted in 1926.« less
Scientists' perception of ethical issues in nanomedicine: a case study.
Silva Costa, Helena; Sethe, Sebastian; Pêgo, Ana P; Olsson, I Anna S
2011-06-01
Research and development in nanomedicine has been accompanied by the consideration of ethical issues; however, little is known about how researchers working in this area perceive such issues. This case-study explores scientists' attitude towards and knowledge of ethical issues. Data were collected by semi-structured interviews with 22 nanomedicine practitioners and subject to content analysis. We found that scientists reflect with ambiguity on the reputed novelty of nanomedicine and what the ethical issues and risks are in their work. Respondents see no necessity for a paradigm shift in ethical considerations, but view ethical issues in nanomedicine as overlapping with those of other areas of biomedical research. Most respondents discuss ethical issues they faced in scientific work with their colleagues, but expect benefit from additional information and training on ethics. Our findings that scientists are motivated to reflect on ethical issues in their work, can contribute to the design of new strategies, including training programs, to engage scientists in ethical discussion and stimulate their responsibility as nanomedicine practitioners.
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-06-15
... addressed in the Draft EIS, including Sentinel Plain. In response, the BLM completed its inventory for... 1610.5-2. Emailed and faxed protests will not be accepted as valid protests unless the protesting party.... Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6 and 1506.10, 43 CFR 1610.2 and 1610.5. Raymond Suazo, Arizona State Director. [FR...
13 CFR 127.600 - Who may protest the status of a concern as an EDWOSB or WOSB?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Who may protest the status of a concern as an EDWOSB or WOSB? 127.600 Section 127.600 Business Credit and Assistance SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION WOMEN-OWNED SMALL BUSINESS FEDERAL CONTRACT ASSISTANCE PROCEDURES Protests § 127.600 Who may...
Notes from the Ethnic Studies Home Front: Student Protests, Texting, and Subtexts of Oppression
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Otero, Lydia R.; Cammarota, Julio
2011-01-01
The protest against Arizona House Bill 2281 designed to ban Ethnic Studies from K-12 public schools on 12 May 2010 in Tucson resulted in 15 arrests. Students walked out of their classrooms in large numbers to defend their Mexican American Studies curriculum and program. Based primarily on participant observation of the protest, the authors examine…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Neuhaus, Dolf-Alexander
2016-01-01
This article sets out to elucidate the role of Japanese Protestants in the education of Koreans during the early twentieth century. Scholarship has often assigned only marginal roles to Japanese Protestants within the history of Japanese imperialism, despite the remarkable success of western missionaries in Korea at the time. As imperial expansion…
The Silent Campus Speaks: North Carolina State University and the National Student Protest, May 1970
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Broadhurst, Christopher James
2012-01-01
May 1970 became a pivotal moment in higher education. In that month, the backlash over two events, the announcement of the American invasion of Cambodia and the National Guard killing four Kent State University students protesting that military offensive, triggered the largest student protest in history. Across the nation, hundreds of thousands of…
Exline, Julie J; Krause, Steven J; Broer, Karen A
2016-10-01
This study examined anger and protest behaviors toward God among 80 US adults seeking treatment for chronic headaches (66 women, 14 men; 71 completed treatment). Measures were administered before and after an intensive 3-week outpatient treatment program. At both times, anger and protest toward God correlated with lower pain acceptance, more emotional distress, and greater perceived disability. However, when considered simultaneously, anger predicted sustained distress, whereas protest behaviors (e.g., complaining, questioning, arguing) predicted both reduced distress and an increased sense of meaning. These findings suggest the utility of distinguishing between anger toward God and behaviors suggesting assertiveness toward God.
Bhui, Kamaldeep; Warfa, Nasir; Jones, Edgar
2014-01-01
Background Doctors, lawyers and criminal justice agencies need methods to assess vulnerability to violent radicalization. In synergy, public health interventions aim to prevent the emergence of risk behaviours as well as prevent and treat new illness events. This paper describes a new method of assessing vulnerability to violent radicalization, and then investigates the role of previously reported causes, including poor self-reported health, anxiety and depression, adverse life events, poverty, and migration and socio-political factors. The aim is to identify foci for preventive intervention. Methods A cross-sectional survey of a representative population sample of men and women aged 18–45, of Muslim heritage and recruited by quota sampling by age, gender, working status, in two English cities. The main outcomes include self-reported health, symptoms of anxiety and depression (common mental disorders), and vulnerability to violent radicalization assessed by sympathies for violent protest and terrorist acts. Results 2.4% of people showed some sympathy for violent protest and terrorist acts. Sympathy was more likely to be articulated by the under 20s, those in full time education rather than employment, those born in the UK, those speaking English at home, and high earners (>£75,000 a year). People with poor self-reported health were less likely to show sympathies for violent protest and terrorism. Anxiety and depressive symptoms, adverse life events and socio-political attitudes showed no associations. Conclusions Sympathies for violent protest and terrorism were uncommon among men and women, aged 18–45, of Muslim heritage living in two English cities. Youth, wealth, and being in education rather than employment were risk factors. PMID:24599058
Ethical dilemmas experienced by speech-language pathologists working in private practice.
Flatley, Danielle R; Kenny, Belinda J; Lincoln, Michelle A
2014-06-01
Speech-language pathologists experience ethical dilemmas as they fulfil their professional roles and responsibilities. Previous research findings indicated that speech-language pathologists working in publicly funded settings identified ethical dilemmas when they managed complex clients, negotiated professional relationships, and addressed service delivery issues. However, little is known about ethical dilemmas experienced by speech-language pathologists working in private practice settings. The aim of this qualitative study was to describe the nature of ethical dilemmas experienced by speech-language pathologists working in private practice. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with 10 speech-language pathologists employed in diverse private practice settings. Participants explained the nature of ethical dilemmas they experienced at work and identified their most challenging and frequently occurring ethical conflicts. Qualitative content analysis was used to analyse transcribed data and generate themes. Four themes reflected the nature of speech-language pathologists' ethical dilemmas; balancing benefit and harm, fidelity of business practices, distributing funds, and personal and professional integrity. Findings support the need for professional development activities that are specifically targeted towards facilitating ethical practice for speech-language pathologists in the private sector.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Brauchle, Paul E.; Azam, Md. Shafiqul
2004-01-01
"Work ethic" is a cultural norm that advocates being personally accountable and responsible for the work that one does. It is based on a belief that work has intrinsic value to the individual. The concept of "work ethic" relates to the desirable work attitudes, values, and habits expected from employees. Positive work attitudes…
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-07-05
...-AM08 Federal Acquisition Regulation; Extension of Sunset Date for Protests of Task and Delivery Orders... against the award of task or delivery orders by DoD, NASA, and the Coast Guard from May 27, 2011, to... protests against the award of task and delivery orders from May 27, 2011, to September 30, 2016, but only...
The Rural Arena: The Diversity of Protest in Rural England
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Reed, Matt
2008-01-01
In the past 15-20 years, the rural areas of England have been used by a wide diversity of groups as the stage for their protest activities. Some have argued that this is due the rise of a rural social movement; this paper contends that rural areas have become both available and advantageous as the locale of protest through a range of interlocking…
Opening the black box of ethics policy work: evaluating a covert practice.
Frolic, Andrea; Drolet, Katherine; Bryanton, Kim; Caron, Carole; Cupido, Cynthia; Flaherty, Barb; Fung, Sylvia; McCall, Lori
2012-01-01
Hospital ethics committees (HECs) and ethicists generally describe themselves as engaged in four domains of practice: case consultation, research, education, and policy work. Despite the increasing attention to quality indicators, practice standards, and evaluation methods for the other domains, comparatively little is known or published about the policy work of HECs or ethicists. This article attempts to open the "black box" of this health care ethics practice by providing two detailed case examples of ethics policy reviews. We also describe the development and application of an evaluation strategy to assess the quality of ethics policy review work, and to enable continuous improvement of ethics policy review processes. Given the potential for policy work to impact entire patient populations and organizational systems, it is imperative that HECs and ethicists develop clearer roles, responsibilities, procedural standards, and evaluation methods to ensure the delivery of consistent, relevant, and high-quality ethics policy reviews.
Unfamiliar Feminisms: Revisiting the National Council of Women Psychologists
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Johnson, Ann; Johnston, Elizabeth
2010-01-01
Second-generation women psychologists lived and worked between the two waves of organized feminist protest in the United States. This period is usually described as a time when feminist activity was suppressed or put on hold, and women psychologists from this period are often depicted as being collectively nonfeminist in orientation. In…
Pupils' Religious Identity Formation for a Secular Age
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Miedema, Siebren
2010-01-01
Starting his work as endowed Hendrik Pierson Professor for Christian Education at VU University Amsterdam in 1993 the author focused on the relationship of education, pedagogy, and religion. However, his attention was rather exclusively directed to Protestant schools. The argument was that in academia at that time, even in the faculties of…
U. of Iowa Writing Students Quash Planned Open Access
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Foster, Andrea L.
2008-01-01
The University of Iowa has reversed course on a plan to make some students' theses freely available online, following protests from students in the university's writing programs. The students said the plan could have threatened the potential commercial value of their novels, plays, and other creative works. The controversy began in late winter,…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Healy, Julie
2006-01-01
Research continues to illustrate the resonance and intensity of feeling that attachment to a locality can generate, within this highlighting the gender-specific impacts created by the intersection of ethnicity and locality. Within the ethnically segregated working class communities of Belfast, the importance of locality takes on added…
Fabulation as a Pedagogical Possibility: Working towards a Politics of Affirmation
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Kruger, Frans; Le Roux, Adré
2017-01-01
The wave of student-led protests that have taken place across the South African higher education landscape over the last two years provides us, as teacher educators, with the opportune time to reflect on how our pedagogical practices relate to larger societal transformative imperatives. We engage with the relationship between pedagogical practices…
Divorce, Religious Coping, and Depressive Symptoms in a Conservative Protestant Religious Group
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Webb, Amy Pieper; Ellison, Christopher G.; McFarland, Michael J.; Lee, Jerry W.; Morton, Kelly; Walters, James
2010-01-01
A long tradition of research demonstrates that divorce is a risk factor for depressive symptoms. Although a growing literature examines links between religious factors and marital quality and stability, researchers have neglected the role of religion in successful or problematic coping following divorce. Building on Pargament's seminal work on…
How engineers perceive the importance of ethics in Finland
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Taajamaa, Ville; Majanoja, Anne-Maarit; Bairaktarova, Diana; Airola, Antti; Pahikkala, Tapio; Sutinen, Erkki
2018-01-01
Success in complex and holistic engineering practices requires more than problem-solving abilities and technical competencies. Engineering education must offer proficient technical competences and also train engineers to think and act ethically. A technical 'engineering-like' focus and demand have made educators and students overlook the importance of ethical awareness and transversal competences. Using two Finnish surveys, conducted in 2014 and 2016, we examine how engineers perceive working life needs regarding ethics. The data consider different age groups. We research whether an engineer's age affects their perception of the importance of ethics in their work and if there are differences between young experts and young managers in their use of ethics within work. The results indicate that practising engineers do not consider ethical issues important in their work. This especially applies to younger engineers; the older an engineer, the more important they consider ethics. No statistically significant difference was found between young engineering experts and managers.
Understanding and Mitigating Protests of Department of Defense Acquisition Contracts
2010-08-01
of delivery time that can lock out a rejected offeror from a market . Sixth, more complex contracts, like services versus products , generate more...The engineers, attorneys, or head of a business unit need to explain to the team that spent time working on a bid why the company lost. Executives...agency executives have to explain to their team, who also spent time working on the source solicitation, evaluation, and selection, why the company
Political legitimacy and approval of political protest and violence among children and adolescents.
Funderburk, C
1975-06-01
A question of general theoretical relevance for political socialization research concerns the role played by basic political orientations in structuring specific political opinions. This report investigates the relationship between beliefs in the legitimacy of political objects and approval of political protest and violence among a sample of children and adolescents. The setting for the research was a Florida town. Four aspects of political legitimacy are defined and measured. Measures of approval of political protest and political violence are distinguished conceptually and empirically. Beliefs in political legitimacy are shown to be of considerable importance in structuring opinions about political violence but have little impact on opinions about protest.
Cohen, Adam B; Hill, Peter C
2007-08-01
We propose the theory that religious cultures vary in individualistic and collectivistic aspects of religiousness and spirituality. Study 1 showed that religion for Jews is about community and biological descent but about personal beliefs for Protestants. Intrinsic and extrinsic religiosity were intercorrelated and endorsed differently by Jews, Catholics, and Protestants in a pattern that supports the theory that intrinsic religiosity relates to personal religion, whereas extrinsic religiosity stresses community and ritual (Studies 2 and 3). Important life experiences were likely to be social for Jews but focused on God for Protestants, with Catholics in between (Study 4). We conclude with three perspectives in understanding the complex relationships between religion and culture.
Egypt's Popular Uprising and the Stakes of Medical Neutrality.
Hamdy, Sherine F; Bayoumi, Soha
2016-06-01
Amidst the recent political uprisings in the Arab region, physicians and other healthcare workers have found themselves in the crossfire. This paper focuses on Egypt's doctors, paying special attention to how many have both appealed to and practiced medical neutrality as its own potent and contested political stance, particularly since the period of military rule following Mubarak's removal from power. Our paper draws on interviews with physicians who served as volunteers in the field hospitals in the days of unrest and violence, and with others who played a major role in documenting protesters' injuries, police brutality, and other forms of state violence against unarmed citizens. Based on interviews with doctors who belong to organizations such as "Tahrir Doctors" and "Doctors Without Rights," our paper reveals how these doctors' commitment to professional ethics put them at odds with the orders of military personnel, rendering their appeal to "medical neutrality" a weighty political act in and of itself.
Antiscience and ethical concerns associated with advocacy of Lyme disease
Auwaerter, Paul G; Bakken, Johan S; Dattwyler, Raymond J; Dumler, J Stephen; Halperin, John J; McSweegan, Edward; Nadelman, Robert B; O’Connell, Susan; Shapiro, Eugene D; Sood, Sunil K; Steere, Allen C; Weinstein, Arthur; Wormser, Gary P
2015-01-01
Advocacy for Lyme disease has become an increasingly important part of an antiscience movement that denies both the viral cause of AIDS and the benefits of vaccines and that supports unproven (sometimes dangerous) alternative medical treatments. Some activists portray Lyme disease, a geographically limited tick-borne infection, as a disease that is insidious, ubiquitous, difficult to diagnose, and almost incurable; they also propose that the disease causes mainly non-specific symptoms that can be treated only with long-term antibiotics and other unorthodox and unvalidated treatments. Similar to other antiscience groups, these advocates have created a pseudoscientific and alternative selection of practitioners, research, and publications and have coordinated public protests, accused opponents of both corruption and conspiracy, and spurred legislative efforts to subvert evidence-based medicine and peer-reviewed science. The relations and actions of some activists, medical practitioners, and commercial bodies involved in Lyme disease advocacy pose a threat to public health. PMID:21867956
Anonymous pastoral care for problems pertaining to sexuality.
van Drie, A; Ganzevoort, R R; Spiering, M
2014-12-01
Anonymous pastoral care is one of the options for help in problems pertaining to sexuality. This paper explores the topics they seek help for, the religious aspects involved, and the relation between the normativity of their church tradition on the one hand and sexual and spiritual health criteria on the other. We analyzed helpseeking questions of two protestant Christian organizations in the Netherlands providing anonymous pastoral care: Refoweb and EO-Nazorg. Sexual themes were addressed in 19 and 2.3 % of the submitted questions, respectively. Of the helpseekers, 56 % is female, 15 % male, and 29 % unknown. Questions and problems for which people seek anonymous pastoral care focus primarily on premarital abstinence, gender roles, contraception, sexual orientation and masturbation. The authority of the Bible seems to be important for questioners, especially when dealing with ethical questions. Different relations between the normativity of the church tradition and sexual and spiritual health are discussed.
Ethical Behavior in Early Childhood Education.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Katz, Lilian G.; Ward, Evangeline H.
This booklet contains two essays on ethics for early childhood educators. The first essay discusses the meaning of a code of ethics, the importance of a code of ethics for working with preschool children, ethical conflicts in day care and preschool work, and steps which may be taken to help early childhood workers resolve these conflicts. Ethical…
How social media matter: Repression and the diffusion of the Occupy Wall Street movement.
Suh, Chan S; Vasi, Ion Bogdan; Chang, Paul Y
2017-07-01
This study explores the role played by social media in reshaping the repression-mobilization relationship. Drawing on the case of the Occupy Wall Street movement, we examine the impact of Facebook and Twitter on the spatial diffusion of protests during a period of heightened state repression. Results from event history analyses suggest that the effects of repression on protest diffusion are contingent on the presence of social media accounts supporting the movement. We find that state repression at earlier protest sites encouraged activists to create Facebook and Twitter accounts in their own cities, which then served as important vehicles for the initiation of new Occupy protests. Moreover, results suggest that repression incidents can directly facilitate future protests in cities that already have Occupy Facebook accounts. This study highlights the potential of social media to both mediate and moderate the influence of repression on the diffusion of contemporary movements. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Association between Protestant religiosity and obsessive-compulsive symptoms and cognitions.
Abramowitz, Jonathan S; Deacon, Brett J; Woods, Carol M; Tolin, David F
2004-01-01
There is evidence that religion and other cultural influences are associated with the presentation of obsessive-compulsive symptoms, as well as beliefs and assumptions presumed to underlie the development and maintenance of these symptoms. We sought to further examine the relationship between Protestant religiosity and (1) various symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) (e.g., checking, washing) and (2) OCD-related cognitions. Using self-report questionnaires, we compared differences in these OCD-related phenomena between highly religious Protestants, moderately religious Protestants, and atheist/agnostic participants drawn from an undergraduate sample. Highly religious versus moderately religious Protestants reported greater obsessional symptoms, compulsive washing, and beliefs about the importance of thoughts. Additionally, the highly religious evinced more obsessional symptoms, compulsive washing, intolerance for uncertainty, need to control thoughts, beliefs about the importance of thoughts, and inflated responsibility, compared to atheists/agnostics. Results are discussed in terms of the relationship between religion and OCD symptoms in the context of the cognitive-behavioral conceptualization of OCD. Copyright 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Online Networks and the Diffusion of Protests
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Moreno, Yamir
2013-03-01
Undoubtedly, online social networks have an enormous impact on opinions and cultural trends. Also, these platforms have revealed as a fundamental organizing mechanism in country-wide social movements. Recent events in the Middle East and North Africa (the wave of protests in the Arab world), across Europe (in the form of anti-cuts demonstrations or riots) and United States (the OWS movement) have generated much discussion on how digital media is connected to the diffusion of protests. In this talk, we investigate the mechanisms driving the emergence, development and stabilization of unrest movements in Spain and the USA by analyzing data from Twitter. Messages related to the protests are analyzed at both static and dynamic levels. We show that the online trace of the protests provides a unique opportunity to tackle central issues like recruitment patterns, information cascades and their spatiotemporal dynamics. Our findings shed light on the connection between online networks and social movements, and offer an empirical test to elusive sociological questions about collective action.
John porter lecture: waves of protest--direct action, deliberation, and diffusion.
Wood, Lesley
2015-02-01
The book Direct Action, Deliberation and Diffusion: Collective Action After the WTO Protests in Seattle argues that the process of diffusion is dependent on social processes in the receiving context. The most important in social movements is an egalitarian and reflexive deliberation among diverse actors. The book traces the direct action tactics associated with the Seattle protests against the World Trade Organization in 1999 and how these spread to activists in Toronto and New York City. It shows how the structure of the political field, racial and class inequalities, identity boundaries, and organizational and conversational dynamics limited deliberation among activists, and thus limited the diffusion of the Seattle tactics. By constraining the spread of the Seattle tactics, this slowed the global justice movement's wave of protest. In this paper, I explore the application of and implications of this model of protest tactic diffusion to the recent Idle No More mobilizations. © 2015 Canadian Sociological Association/La Société canadienne de sociologie.
Bid Protests on DoD Source Selections
2017-06-13
values, Government Accountability Office 16. SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF: 17. LIMITATION OF 18. NUMBER a. REPORT b. ABSTRACT c. THIS PAGE ABSTRACT OF...Logistics (AT&L) closely monitors the Government Accountability Office (GAO) Bid Protest statistics for trends. These statistics combined with our trend...large protests are removed, there was still a slight trend since FY 2006 but it disappears if measured since 2009. Also, if we remove the 23 large
Seong-Hoon Cho; Steven T. Yen; J. Michael Bowker; David H. Newman
2008-01-01
This study compares an ordered probit model and a Tobit model with selection to take into account both true zero and protest zero bids while estimating the willingness to pay (WTP) for conservation easements in Macon County, NC. By comparing the two models, the ordered/Unordered selection issue of the protest responses is analyzed to demonstrate how the treatment of...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Crook, David
2006-01-01
This article highlights a violent incident in the history of British student protests and outlines the judicial process that resulted. A wider consideration of student protests of the late 1960s and early 1970s, both in the UK and overseas is offered, together with some consideration of the significance of this particular case. At the time of the…
Ethical aspects of limiting residents' work hours.
Wiesing, Urban
2007-09-01
The regulation of residents' work hours involves several ethical conflicts which need to be systematically analysed and evaluated. ARGUMENTS AND CONCLUSION: The most important ethical principle when regulating work hours is to avoid the harm resulting from the over-work of physicians and from an excessive division of labour. Additionally, other ethical principles have to be taken into account, in particular the principles of nonmaleficence and beneficence for future patients and for physicians. The article presents arguments for balancing the relevant ethical principles and analyses the structural difficulties that occur unavoidably in any regulation of the complex activities of physicians.
Aristotle Meets Youth Work: A Case for Virtue Ethics
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Bessant, Judith
2009-01-01
What ethical framework provides the best guide for contemporary youth work is the central question in this article. An account is provided of why the two dominant ethical frameworks, namely, utilitarianism and deontic ethics, are not appropriate. It is argued that virtue ethics is most relevant because it specifies the nature of social goods, and…
Trends in Anti-Nuclear Protests in the United States, 1984-1987
1989-01-01
Obispo, CA. 2 days of peaceful protests at Diablo Canyon nuclear powerplant against licensing of plant. Date: January 12 and 13, 1984 Group: Abalone ...Members of the Abalone Alliance and the Livermore Action Group blocked entrance to Bohemian Grove club, a conservative all-male club to which Reagan...belongs, to protest the club members’ connections to the nuclear weapons industry. Date: July 22, 1984 Group: Abalone and Livermore Action Group
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Buhle, Mari Jo; Buhle, Paul
2011-01-01
The events in Wisconsin during February and March 2011 will long be considered remarkable in many ways. That includes the documenting of the protests. Perhaps at no previous time have so many journalists--paid and unpaid--gathered so much information about a protest movement and dispersed it in so many formats so quickly. Ubiquitous, touching, and…
[Fundamental principles of social work--(also) a contribution to public health ethics].
Lob-Hüdepohl, A
2009-05-01
Social work and public health are different but mutually connected. Both are professions with their own ethical foundations. Despite all differences, they have the same goal: to protect and to enhance the well-being of people. This is, in part, why the fundamental ethical principles of social work are salient for developing public health ethics. As a human rights profession, social work respects the personal autonomy of clients, supports solidarity-based relationships in families, groups or communities, and attempts to uphold social justice in society. Social workers need to adopt special professional attitudes: sensibility for the vulnerabilities of clients, care and attentiveness for their resources and strengths, assistance instead of paternalistic care and advocacy in decision making for clients' well-being when clients are not able to decide for themselves. These fundamental ethical principles are the basis for discussion of special topics of social work ethics as public health ethics, for example, in justifying intervention in individual lifestyles by public services without the participation or consent of the affected persons.
School Psychologists and Ethical Challenges
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Kapoulitsas, Maryanne; Corcoran, Tim
2017-01-01
This research explored how psychologists working in the Victorian secondary state school system construct meaning around ethical practice. The specific aims of the research were to examine psychologists understanding of ethics in practice within schools and to explore challenges they faced regarding professional ethics when working in the…
Beyond War Stories: Clifford G. Christians' Influence on the Teaching of Media Ethics, 1976-1984.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Peck, Lee Anne
Clifford Glenn Christians' work in the area of media ethics education from 1976 through 1984 has influenced the way media ethics is taught to many college students today. This time period includes, among his other accomplishments, Christians' work on an extensive survey of how media ethics was taught in the late 1970s, his work on the Hastings…
What Is Protest? Feminism, Psychoanalysis and Methods of Social Change
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hansen, Marie
2016-01-01
Despite the fact that feminism has recognised psychoanalysis to be a theory with direct application to the understanding of sexism for over 50 years, the application of psychoanalytic thinking to feminist activism has yet to be significantly realised. Using the work of Julia Kristeva, sexism is described as a symptom of an intolerable situation…
Less Talk More Drone: Social Research with UAVs
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Birtchnell, Thomas; Gibson, Chris
2015-01-01
There is a growing body of work in geography and sociology on the impact of drones on warfare, surveillance and civil protest. This paper assesses the challenges of using drones for teaching human geography and spatial social sciences. Affordable and expensive drones are now available in the market place; however, there has been next to no…
Putting Political Spectacle to Work: Understanding Local Resistance to the Common Core
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Szolowicz, Michael
2016-01-01
In the fall of 2013, a parents' group formed to protest the new Common Core based mathematics textbook recently adopted by their school district. Quickly allying with teachers, the new coalition began to, "hammer," the district to drop the Common Core and return to more traditional texts and pedagogies. They did so by speaking at…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Sapiie, Stephanie
2012-01-01
Whereas previous studies of the Indonesian student movement have been limited to studies of single episodes of activism of student protests, this work focuses on the narratives, and repertoires that, together with crucial external events of political and economic realignments created both pressures and opportunities that produced contentious…
The Neglected Genius of American Christianity As a Way Out of the School Mess.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gatto, John Taylor
1997-01-01
Modern compulsory schooling ignores the spiritual component of human existence, to the detriment of individual and society. In American Protestant spirituality, everyone counts; a good life's requisites are spelled out: work as salvation, pain as path to self-knowledge, duty, compassion, acceptance of loss, preparation for death. But no teacher…
Changing Core Values in American Society: 1876-1976.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Bosserman, Phillip
The paper reviews changes in core values of American society from 1876-1976 from a perspective of changes in allocation of time between work and nonwork. According to the author, core values motivate and direct people in a society. An historical review of sociological literature indicates a late 20th century trend away from the Protestant Work…
The ABC's of a Good Work Ethic
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Berry, R. Ladson; Glenn, Robert E.
2004-01-01
The work ethic incorporates more than just a single concept of high effort. It includes qualities like commitment, dependability, and willingness to learn. The work ethic also is closely associated with other values such as honesty, patience, and generosity. In this article, the authors emphasize the importance of hard work as well as the…
How orthodox protestant parents decide on the vaccination of their children: a qualitative study.
Ruijs, Wilhelmina L M; Hautvast, Jeannine L A; van Ijzendoorn, Giovanna; van Ansem, Wilke J C; van der Velden, Koos; Hulscher, Marlies E J L
2012-06-06
Despite high vaccination coverage, there have recently been epidemics of vaccine preventable diseases in the Netherlands, largely confined to an orthodox protestant minority with religious objections to vaccination. The orthodox protestant minority consists of various denominations with either low, intermediate or high vaccination coverage. All orthodox protestant denominations leave the final decision to vaccinate or not up to their individual members. To gain insight into how orthodox protestant parents decide on vaccination, what arguments they use, and the consequences of their decisions, we conducted an in-depth interview study of both vaccinating and non-vaccinating orthodox protestant parents selected via purposeful sampling. The interviews were thematically coded by two analysts using the software program Atlas.ti. The initial coding results were reviewed, discussed, and refined by the analysts until consensus was reached. Emerging concepts were assessed for consistency using the constant comparative method from grounded theory. After 27 interviews, data saturation was reached. Based on characteristics of the decision-making process (tradition vs. deliberation) and outcome (vaccinate or not), 4 subgroups of parents could be distinguished: traditionally non-vaccinating parents, deliberately non-vaccinating parents, deliberately vaccinating parents, and traditionally vaccinating parents. Except for the traditionally vaccinating parents, all used predominantly religious arguments to justify their vaccination decisions. Also with the exception of the traditionally vaccinating parents, all reported facing fears that they had made the wrong decision. This fear was most tangible among the deliberately vaccinating parents who thought they might be punished immediately by God for vaccinating their children and interpreted any side effects as a sign to stop vaccinating. Policy makers and health care professionals should stimulate orthodox protestant parents to make a deliberate vaccination choice but also realize that a deliberate choice does not necessarily mean a choice to vaccinate.
de Munter, Anne C; Tostmann, Alma; Hahné, Susan J M; Spaan, D Henri; van Ginkel, Rijk; Ruijs, Wilhelmina L M
2018-04-30
Measles is an infectious disease providing lifelong immunity. Epidemics periodically occur among unvaccinated orthodox Protestants in the Netherlands. During the 2013/2014 epidemic, 17% of the reported patients was over 14 years old. Apparently, they did not catch measles during the previous 1999/2000 epidemic and remained susceptible. We wanted to identify risk factors for this so-called persisting measles susceptibility, and thus risk factors for acquiring measles at older age with increased risk of complications. A case-control study was performed among unvaccinated orthodox Protestants born between 1988 and 1998; cases had measles in 2013/2014, controls during or before 1999/2000. Associations between demographic, geographical and religion-related determinants and persisting measles susceptibility were determined using univariate and multivariable logistic regression. Analyses were stratified in two age-groups: infants/toddlers and primary school-aged children during the 1999/2000 measles epidemic. In total, 204 cases and 563 controls were included. Risk factors for persisting measles susceptibility for infants/toddlers in 1999/2000 were belonging to a moderately conservative church, absence of older siblings and residency outside low vaccination coverage (LVC)-municipalities. Risk factors for primary school-aged children were residency outside LVC-municipalities and attendance of non-orthodox Protestant primary school. Unvaccinated orthodox Protestant adolescents and adults who resided outside the LVC-municipalities, did not attend an orthodox Protestant primary school, had no older siblings and belonged to a moderately conservative church were at risk for persisting measles susceptibility and, thus, for acquiring measles at older age with increased risk of complications. For this subgroup of orthodox Protestants targeted information on vaccination is recommended.
Brosnan, Caragh; Cribb, Alan; Wainwright, Steven P; Williams, Clare
2013-11-01
The ethical issues neuroscience raises are subject to increasing attention, exemplified in the emergence of the discipline neuroethics. While the moral implications of neurotechnological developments are often discussed, less is known about how ethics intersects with everyday work in neuroscience and how scientists themselves perceive the ethics of their research. Drawing on observation and interviews with members of one UK group conducting neuroscience research at both the laboratory bench and in the clinic, this article examines what ethics meant to these researchers and delineates four specific types of ethics that shaped their day-to-day work: regulatory, professional, personal and tangible. While the first three categories are similar to those identified elsewhere in sociological work on scientific and clinical ethics, the notion of 'tangible ethics' emerged by attending to everyday practice, in which these scientists' discursive distinctions between right and wrong were sometimes challenged. The findings shed light on how ethical positions produce and are, in turn, produced by scientific practice. Informing sociological understandings of neuroscience, they also throw the category of neuroscience and its ethical specificity into question, given that members of this group did not experience their work as raising issues that were distinctly neuro-ethical. © 2013 The Authors. Sociology of Health & Illness © 2013 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness/John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Government Accountability Office Bid Protests in Air Force Source Selections: Evidence and Options
2012-01-01
chapter, we focus on the sustained protests and lessons that can be learned from them. Th is chapter does not off er complete case histories of these...resulting research project, “Air Force Source Selections: Lessons Learned and Best Practices,” which was conducted within the Resource Management...Program of PAF in fiscal year (FY) 2009. This project studied the Air Force’s recent experience with bid protests before GAO and documented lessons that
2014-03-01
The Oakland Police Officers Association, responding to what they believed was a laissez - faire approach from Mayor Quan, released an open letter to...little or no opportunity to negotiate an amicable outcome.541 In fairness , a lack of cohesive central leadership on the part of the various Occupy...11 C. POLICE LEADERSHIP ...............................................................................15 D. SOCIOLOGY OF PROTEST
Italian protesters win concessions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cartlidge, Edwin
2008-12-01
Thousands of researchers and students who have taken to the streets in protest at reforms of Italian universities and public research institutes have won some limited concessions from the government. The protesters had argued that the reforms, which include significant budget cuts, would further weaken a research base that is already short of resources. The Italian government maintains that its reforms are necessary to modernize a university system that is corrupt and inefficient, but has reversed some of the cuts.
Defense Contracting: Complete Historical Data Not Available on Canceled DOD Solicitations
2016-06-29
Solicitations If a contractor believes that a solicitation has been canceled without meeting the standards to do so, it may file a formal bid protest with...its own merits and circumstances, as outlined in the examples of DOD cases below: • In 2015, a contractor filed a protest arguing that the Army...government. A contractor protested the cancelation claiming that the solicitation was not ambiguous; therefore, the USACE did not have a compelling reason
Burdette, Amy M; Haynes, Stacy H; Hill, Terrence D; Bartkowski, John P
2014-06-01
In this paper, we examine associations among personal religiosity, perceived infertility, and inconsistent contraceptive use among unmarried young adults (ages 18-29). The data for this investigation came from the National Survey of Reproductive and Contraceptive Knowledge (n = 1,695). We used multinomial logistic regression to model perceived infertility, adjusted probabilities to model rationales for perceived infertility, and binary logistic regression to model inconsistent contraceptive use. Evangelical Protestants were more likely than non-affiliates to believe that they were infertile. Among the young women who indicated some likelihood of infertility, evangelical Protestants were also more likely than their other Protestant or non-Christian faith counterparts to believe that they were infertile because they had unprotected sex without becoming pregnant. Although evangelical Protestants were more likely to exhibit inconsistent contraception use than non-affiliates, we were unable to attribute any portion of this difference to infertility perceptions. Whereas most studies of religion and health emphasize the salubrious role of personal religiosity, our results suggest that evangelical Protestants may be especially likely to hold misconceptions about their fertility. Because these misconceptions fail to explain higher rates of inconsistent contraception use among evangelical Protestants, additional research is needed to understand the principles and motives of this unique religious community. Copyright © 2014 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Detenber, Benjamin H.; Cenite, Mark; Malik, Shelly; Neo, Rachel L.
2012-01-01
This study examines education and work experience in newsrooms as predictors of ethical perceptions among communication undergraduates at a large Singaporean university (N = 826). Results indicate that education is associated with ethical ideologies, perceived importance of journalism ethics codes, justifiability of using contentious news…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Azam, Md. Shafiqul; Brauchle, Paul E.
2003-01-01
The self-perceived work ethic of industrial employees in information jobs (N=304) and non-information jobs (N=277), and employees' work ethic as assessed by their supervisors, were examined using the Occupational Work Ethic Inventory (OWEI). A Principle Components Analysis yielded four factors (Teamwork, Dependability, Ambition and Self-Control)…
Singer, L
1998-01-01
As soon as Adolf Hitler came to into power in 1933, four laws on racial segregation and race protection were edicted between 1934 and 1935. Schizophrenia, manic-depressive psychoses, epilepsy and alcoholism were regarded as hereditary mental illnesses. These laws were responsible for the sterilisation of 350,000 individuals who were thought to be at the source of the propagation of hereditary illnesses which might endanger the health and the future of the Aryan Germans. On September 1, 1939, Action T4 was launched: it required that all the mentally ill be exterminated. This action, which was run by the highest level of the Reich's chancellery with the help of psychiatrists coming from all backgrounds including university professors, was supposed to grant a serene death to all the mentally ill considered as untreatable. The death sentences were carried out by the medical staff in psychiatric hospitals specially equipped with gas chambers. Following protests, Action T4 was officially stopped on August 24, 1941, but, in reality, continued until the end of the war. The death sentences were carried out using either lethal doses of medication or food deprivation. One hundred and fifty thousand individuals fell victim to that therapeutic extermination which played an economic role as important as the one deemed to social protection. Many German academics, researchers, psychiatrists, geneticians and anthropologists played and active part in these murders which were carried out in the name of Nazi ideology based upon the supremacy of the Northern Germanic race and the necessity to protect it from miscegenation, especially from Jews. In the final part of this paper, the author gives an explanation of the perversion of ethics carried out by German psychiatrists.
An ADPE Protest Primer: Lessons Learned from GSBCA Protest Decisions
1991-06-01
reverse if necessary and identify, by block number) The General services Administration’s Board of Contract Appeals (GSBCA) is a significant venue for...David R. Whipple,i D ep a rtm en t of A d i i t a i eS ci ce iim ABSTRACT The General Services Administration’s Board of Contract Appeals (GSBCA) is a...Administration Board of Contract Appeals (GSBCA) ADPE protest decisions. In effect this study will serve as a primer to familiarize new Federal ADPE
Protest Movements and the Security Policy of the Federal Republic of Germany Since 1950.
1983-12-01
to rearmament. The state of mind that framed a majority of the members, however, remained one of 33 semi- abstentionism where German labor remained on...I 0D A132 201 PROTEST MOVEMENTS AND THE SECURI Y POLICY 0 THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY SINCE 1950( U) NAVAL\\ POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONEREY CA A N...1 THESIS PROTEST MOVEMENTS AND THE SECURITY POLICY OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY SINCE 1950 by Arthur Neil Black 0. December 1983 C-) LIJ Thesis
Ethical Issues in the Research of Group Work
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Goodrich, Kristopher M.; Luke, Melissa
2017-01-01
This article provides a primer for researchers exploring ethical issues in the research of group work. The article begins with an exploration of relevant ethical issues through the research process and current standards guiding its practice. Next, the authors identify resources that group work researchers can consult prior to constructing their…
WORK ETHICS, ORGANIZATIONAL ALIENATION AND JUSTICE AMONG HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY MANAGERS.
Zadeh, Jamileh Mahdi; Kahouei, Mehdi; Cheshmenour, Omran; Sangestani, Sajjad
2016-06-01
Failure to comply with work ethics by employees working in Health Information Technology (HIT) Departments and their negative attitudes about organizational justice may have an adverse impact on patient satisfaction, quality of care, collecting health statistics, reimbursement, and management and planning at all levels of health care; it can also lead to unbearable damages to the health information system in the country. As so far there has been no research on HIT managers to assess the moral and ethical aspects of works and their relationship with organizational alienation and justice, this study aimed to evaluate the relationship between work ethics and organizational justice and alienation among the HIT managers. This study was performed in affiliated hospitals of Semnan University of medical sciences in Semnan, Iran, in 2015. In this study, a census method was used. The data collection tool was a researcher made questionnaire. There was a negative and significant relationship between work ethic and organizational alienation (B= - 0.217, P<0.001), and there was also a positive and significant relationship between work ethic and organizational justice (B= 0.580, P<0.001). There were negative and significant relationships among between education level and work ethic (B= - 0.215, P=0.034) and organizational justice (B=- 0.147, P=0.047). The results of this study showed that the managers' attitude toward justice and equality in the organization can affect their organizational commitment and loyalty and thus have a significant impact on the work ethics in the work environment. On the other hand, with increasing the education level of the managers, they will have higher expectation of the justice in the organization, and they feel that the justice is not observed in the organization.
WORK ETHICS, ORGANIZATIONAL ALIENATION AND JUSTICE AMONG HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY MANAGERS
Zadeh, Jamileh Mahdi; Kahouei, Mehdi; Cheshmenour, Omran; Sangestani, Sajjad
2016-01-01
Introduction: Failure to comply with work ethics by employees working in Health Information Technology (HIT) Departments and their negative attitudes about organizational justice may have an adverse impact on patient satisfaction, quality of care, collecting health statistics, reimbursement, and management and planning at all levels of health care; it can also lead to unbearable damages to the health information system in the country. As so far there has been no research on HIT managers to assess the moral and ethical aspects of works and their relationship with organizational alienation and justice, this study aimed to evaluate the relationship between work ethics and organizational justice and alienation among the HIT managers. Methods: This study was performed in affiliated hospitals of Semnan University of medical sciences in Semnan, Iran, in 2015. In this study, a census method was used. The data collection tool was a researcher made questionnaire. Results: There was a negative and significant relationship between work ethic and organizational alienation (B= - 0.217, P<0.001), and there was also a positive and significant relationship between work ethic and organizational justice (B= 0.580, P<0.001). There were negative and significant relationships among between education level and work ethic (B= - 0.215, P=0.034) and organizational justice (B=- 0.147, P=0.047). Conclusion: The results of this study showed that the managers’ attitude toward justice and equality in the organization can affect their organizational commitment and loyalty and thus have a significant impact on the work ethics in the work environment. On the other hand, with increasing the education level of the managers, they will have higher expectation of the justice in the organization, and they feel that the justice is not observed in the organization. PMID:27482167
From Goya to Afghanistan--an essay on the ratio and ethics of medical war pictures.
van Bergen, Leo; de Mare, Heidi; Meijman, Frans J
2010-01-01
For centuries pictures of the dead and wounded have been part and parcel of war communications. Often the intentions were clear, ranging from medical instructions to anti-war protests. The public's response could coincide with or diverge from the publisher's intention. Following the invention of photography in the nineteenth century, and the subsequent claim of realism, the veracity of medical war images became more complex. Analysing and understanding such photographs have become an ethical obligation with democratic implications. We performed a multidisciplinary analysis of War Surgery (2008), a book containing harsh, full-colour photographs of mutilated soldiers from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Our analysis shows that, within the medical context, this book is a major step forward in medical war communication and documentation. In the military context the book can be conceived as an attempt to put matters right given the enormous sacrifice some individuals have suffered. For the public, the relationship between the 'reality' and 'truth' of such photographs is ambiguous, because only looking at the photographs without reading the medical context is limiting. If the observer is not familiar with medical practice, it is difficult for him to fully assess, signify and acknowledge the value and relevance of this book. We therefore assert the importance of the role of professionals and those in the humanities in particular in educating the public and initiating debate.
"And Then There Were None"--Take It Away: I Don't Like It.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Small, Robert C., Jr.
The quiet, but determined, censorship crisis in Virginia is a good example of the attitudes that produce censorship protests and of the damage that can be done. Although the criticisms have been sincere, they are based on total misinterpretations of the works involved. As may be seen from the excerpts taken from five books under fire, the…
Operation Day's Work: Students Making a Difference
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Swerdlow, Linda Kantor
2006-01-01
In 1994, students from Broad Meadows Middle School met Iqbal Masih, a 12-year-old Pakistani activist who had been sold into bonded labor at age 4 and escaped at age 10. They were moved to take action, and started a letter-writing campaign protesting child labor. When they heard of Iqbal's death later that year, they decided to build a school in…
A University for the World: The United Nations Plan. Fastback 51.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Taylor, Harold
This booklet discusses how the United Nations University, established in 1973, can bring youth together on a world scale and create an international system through which youth can join in the work of building a world community. The first chapter, A University for the World: The United Nations Plan, describes student protests in Thailand in 1973.…
Telling Their Own Story: How Student Newspapers Reported Campus Unrest, 1962-1970
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Armstrong, Kaylene Dial
2013-01-01
The work of student journalists often appears as a source in the footnotes when researchers tell the story of perhaps the most significant period in the history of higher education in the United States--the student protest era throughout the 1960s and early 1970s. Yet researchers and historians have ignored the student press itself during this…
Ethical preferences for the clinical practice of empowerment social work.
Miley, Karla; DuBois, Brenda
2007-01-01
Social workers in health care and mental health benefit from interventions that integrate principles of contextual social work practice with standards for clinical practice. The authors articulate a conceptual framework for the ethical practice of social work that complements the social justice purpose. The sixteen ethical preferences in this framework are the ethics of care, autonomy, power, change, respect, critical thinking, praxis, discourse, critique, justice, contextual practice, inclusion, anti-oppression, advocacy, collaboration, and politicized practice.
14 CFR 17.13 - Dispute resolution process for protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... Resolution (ADR) techniques to resolve the protest, pursuant to subpart D of this part, or they will proceed....31(c), informal ADR techniques may be utilized simultaneously with ongoing adjudication. (e) The...
14 CFR 17.13 - Dispute resolution process for protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... Resolution (ADR) techniques to resolve the protest, pursuant to subpart D of this part, or they will proceed....31(c), informal ADR techniques may be utilized simultaneously with ongoing adjudication. (e) The...
Militant morality: civil disobedience and bioethics.
Cohen, C
1989-01-01
Seven essays in this issue of the Hastings Center Report defend civil disobedience as a legitimate form of protest against terrible injustices: legalized abortion (G. Leber); abridgement of women's reproductive rights (S. Davis); government policy toward persons with AIDS (H. Spiers and A. Novick); abuse of the rights of animals (S. Siegel, C. Jackson, and P. Singer). An eighth essay, by B. Nathanson, examines the motivations of Operation Rescue, an organization that uses civil disobedience to protest legalized abortion. Cohen explores the problems that these authors and others encounter in trying to justify deliberately breaking the law in public conscientious protest. He examines three forms of protest -- direct civil disobedience, indirect civil disobedience, and direct action -- and three justifications -- higher-law, utilitarian, and only possible means. Cohen concludes that, in a democracy, objective justification of civil disobedience is very difficult.
Mauno, Saija; Ruokolainen, Mervi; Kinnunen, Ulla; De Bloom, Jessica
2016-05-01
The study examined whether three resources, that is, compassion, transformational leadership and work ethic feasibility, buffer against the negative effects of emotional labour on work engagement. Emotional labour is a common job stressor among nurses, but little is known about whether certain personal and work resources buffer against it in relation to work engagement. Revealing buffers of emotional labour would help organizations to design tailored interventions. Cross-sectional online survey conducted in 2014. Participants were 3466 Finnish nurses. Hypotheses were tested via hierarchical moderated regression analyses. Higher emotional labour related to lower engagement. Two interaction effects were found. First, work ethic feasibility buffered against emotional labour: the nurses who perceived work ethic feasibility as high in a situation of high emotional labour, scored higher on engagement compared with those nurses who in this stress situation perceived work ethic feasibility to be low. Second, high compassion was detrimental to engagement in the presence of high emotional labour. Transformational leadership did not act as a buffer but showed a positive relationship with engagement. Work ethic feasibility (being able to work according to high ethical standards) is an important resource in nursing as it protects an employee against the negative effects of emotional labour and as it also directly promotes engagement. However, compassion may not always be beneficial in nursing, especially if co-occurring with high job stress. Transformational leadership has potential to improve engagement in nursing although it may not operate as a stress buffer. © 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
How Jane Addams Expands Our View of Education as an Ethical Enterprise
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Bruce, Bertram C.
2017-01-01
Jane Addams's "Democracy and Social Ethics" is more than a historical artifact describing the work of a prominent social reformer. It is also a significant contribution to philosophy, especially in the area of social ethics. Moreover, though less widely acknowledged, Addams's work is essential for anyone who seeks an ethical vision for…
Developing a Social Work Research Agenda on Ethics in Health Care.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Jansson, Bruce S.; Dodd, Sarah-Jane
1998-01-01
Advocates greater empirical research on ethics in health care by social-work researchers. A theoretical framework is presented as a heuristic device to stimulate research on a range of topics. Argues that by demonstrating empirically that their interventions improve ethical outcomes, social-work researchers can provide ammunition to support social…
Extensive Training Is Insufficient to Produce the Work-Ethic Effect in Pigeons
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Vasconcelos, Marco; Urcuioli, Peter J.
2009-01-01
Zentall and Singer (2007a) hypothesized that our failure to replicate the work-ethic effect in pigeons (Vasconcelos, Urcuioli, & Lionello-DeNolf, 2007) was due to insufficient overtraining following acquisition of the high- and low-effort discriminations. We tested this hypothesis using the original work-ethic procedure (Experiment 1) and one…
Perceived corporate ethical values and individual cynicism of working students.
Valentine, Sean; Elias, Rafik Z
2005-12-01
This study explored a proposed relationship between the corporate ethical values and cynicism of 195 working students. Analysis indicated students' perceived ethical values were negatively related to individual cynicism after accounting for several variables.
Abou Hashish, Ebtsam Aly
2017-03-01
Healthcare organizations are now challenged to retain nurses' generation and understand why they are leaving their nursing career prematurely. Acquiring knowledge about the effect of ethical work climate and level of perceived organizational support can help organizational leaders to deal effectively with dysfunctional behaviors and make a difference in enhancing nurses' dedication, commitment, satisfaction, and loyalty to their organization. This study aims to determine the relationship between ethical work climate, and perceived organizational support and nurses' organizational commitment, job satisfaction, and turnover intention. A descriptive correlational research design was conducted in all inpatient care units at three major hospitals affiliated to different health sectors at Alexandria governorate. All nurses working in these previous hospitals were included in the study (N = 500). Ethical Climate Questionnaire, Survey of Perceived Organizational Support, Organizational Commitment Questionnaire, Index of Job Satisfaction, and Intention to Turnover scale were used to measure study variables. Ethical considerations: Approval was obtained from Ethics Committee at Faculty of Nursing, Alexandria University. Privacy and confidentiality of data were maintained and assured by obtaining subjects' informed consent to participate in the research before data collection. The result revealed positive significant correlations between nurses' perception of overall ethical work climate and each of perceived organizational support, commitment, as well as their job satisfaction. However, negative significant correlations were found between nurses' turnover intention and each of these variables. Also, approximately 33% of the explained variance of turnover intention is accounted by ethical work climate, organizational support, organizational commitment, and job satisfaction, and these variables independently contributed significantly in the prediction of turnover intention. Strategies to foster and enhance ethical and supportive work climates as well as job-related benefits are considered significant factors in increasing nurses' commitment and satisfaction and decreasing their turnover intention.
Legal and ethical issues involved when counseling minors in nonschool settings.
Lawrence, G; Kurpius, S E R
2000-01-01
Many counselors in non-school settings will work with children at some time during their practice; therefore, it is essential that they understand the legal and ethical issues relevant to working with minors. Major court cases and legislation are presented, and 4 critical ethical issues--counselor competence, the client's rights to confidentiality and informed consent, and duties related to child abuse--are addressed. Suggestions for working ethically with minors in order to limit legal liability are presented.
The use of Ethics Decision-Making Frameworks by Canadian Ethics Consultants: A Qualitative Study.
Kaposy, Chris; Brunger, Fern; Maddalena, Victor; Singleton, Richard
2016-10-01
In this study, Canadian healthcare ethics consultants describe their use of ethics decision-making frameworks. Our research finds that ethics consultants in Canada use multi-purpose ethics decision-making frameworks, as well as targeted frameworks that focus on reaching an ethical resolution to a particular healthcare issue, such as adverse event reporting, or difficult triage scenarios. Several interviewees mention the influence that the accreditation process in Canadian healthcare organizations has on the adoption and use of such frameworks. Some of the ethics consultants we interviewed also report on their reluctance to use these tools. Limited empirical work has been done previously on the use of ethics decision-making frameworks. This study begins to fill this gap in our understanding of the work of healthcare ethics consultants. © 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Perceptions of the hospital ethical environment among hospital social workers in the United States.
Pugh, Greg L
2015-01-01
Hospital social workers are in a unique context of practice, and one where the ethical environment has a profound influence on the ethical behavior. This study determined the ratings of ethical environment by hospital social workers in large nationwide sample. Correlates suggest by and compared to studies of ethical environment with nurses are explored. Positive ratings of the ethical environment are primarily associated with job satisfaction, as well as working in a centralized social work department and for a non-profit hospital. Religiosity and MSW education were not predictive. Implications and suggestions for managing the hospital ethical environment are provided.
The status of research ethics in social work.
Ferguson, Aidan; Clark, James J
2018-01-01
Research ethics provide important and necessary standards related to the conduct and dissemination of research. To better understand the current state of research ethics discourse in social work, a systematic literature search was undertaken and numbers of publications per year were compared between STEM, social science, and social work disciplines. While many professions have embraced the need for discipline-specific research ethics subfield development, social work has remained absent. Low publication numbers, compared to other disciplines, were noted for the years (2006-2016) included in the study. Social work published 16 (1%) of the 1409 articles included in the study, contributing 3 (>1%) for each of the disciplines highest producing years (2011 and 2013). Comparatively, psychology produced 75 (5%) articles, psychiatry produced 64 (5%) articles, and nursing added 50 (4%) articles. The STEM disciplines contributed 956 (68%) articles between 2006 and 2016, while social science produced 453 (32%) articles. Examination of the results is provided in an extended discussion of several misconceptions about research ethics that may be found in the social work profession. Implications and future directions are provided, focusing on the need for increased engagement, education, research, and support for a new subfield of social work research ethics.
Bollig, Georg; Schmidt, Gerda; Rosland, Jan Henrik; Heller, Andreas
2015-12-01
Many ethical problems exist in nursing homes. These include, for example, decision-making in end-of-life care, use of restraints and a lack of resources. The aim of the present study was to investigate nursing home staffs' opinions and experiences with ethical challenges and to find out which types of ethical challenges and dilemmas occur and are being discussed in nursing homes. The study used a two-tiered approach, using a questionnaire on ethical challenges and systematic ethics work, given to all employees of a Norwegian nursing home including nonmedical personnel, and a registration of systematic ethics discussions from an Austrian model of good clinical practice. Ninety-one per cent of the nursing home staff described ethical problems as a burden. Ninety per cent experienced ethical problems in their daily work. The top three ethical challenges reported by the nursing home staff were as follows: lack of resources (79%), end-of-life issues (39%) and coercion (33%). To improve systematic ethics work, most employees suggested ethics education (86%) and time for ethics discussion (82%). Of 33 documented ethics meetings from Austria during a 1-year period, 29 were prospective resident ethics meetings where decisions for a resident had to be made. Agreement about a solution was reached in all 29 cases, and this consensus was put into practice in all cases. Residents did not participate in the meetings, while relatives participated in a majority of case discussions. In many cases, the main topic was end-of-life care and life-prolonging treatment. Lack of resources, end-of-life issues and coercion were ethical challenges most often reported by nursing home staff. The staff would appreciate systematic ethics work to aid decision-making. Resident ethics meetings can help to reach consensus in decision-making for nursing home patients. In the future, residents' participation should be encouraged whenever possible. © 2015 The Authors. Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Nordic College of Caring Science.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Kurt, Layla J.; Piazza, Nick J.
2012-01-01
In 2005, the American Counseling Association (ACA) introduced a new ethical standard for counselors working with clients with terminal illness who are considering hastened death options. The authors' purpose is to inform counselors of the Death With Dignity Act and explore relevant ethical guidelines in the "ACA Code of Ethics" (ACA, 2005).
How orthodox protestant parents decide on the vaccination of their children: a qualitative study
2012-01-01
Background Despite high vaccination coverage, there have recently been epidemics of vaccine preventable diseases in the Netherlands, largely confined to an orthodox protestant minority with religious objections to vaccination. The orthodox protestant minority consists of various denominations with either low, intermediate or high vaccination coverage. All orthodox protestant denominations leave the final decision to vaccinate or not up to their individual members. Methods To gain insight into how orthodox protestant parents decide on vaccination, what arguments they use, and the consequences of their decisions, we conducted an in-depth interview study of both vaccinating and non-vaccinating orthodox protestant parents selected via purposeful sampling. The interviews were thematically coded by two analysts using the software program Atlas.ti. The initial coding results were reviewed, discussed, and refined by the analysts until consensus was reached. Emerging concepts were assessed for consistency using the constant comparative method from grounded theory. Results After 27 interviews, data saturation was reached. Based on characteristics of the decision-making process (tradition vs. deliberation) and outcome (vaccinate or not), 4 subgroups of parents could be distinguished: traditionally non-vaccinating parents, deliberately non-vaccinating parents, deliberately vaccinating parents, and traditionally vaccinating parents. Except for the traditionally vaccinating parents, all used predominantly religious arguments to justify their vaccination decisions. Also with the exception of the traditionally vaccinating parents, all reported facing fears that they had made the wrong decision. This fear was most tangible among the deliberately vaccinating parents who thought they might be punished immediately by God for vaccinating their children and interpreted any side effects as a sign to stop vaccinating. Conclusions Policy makers and health care professionals should stimulate orthodox protestant parents to make a deliberate vaccination choice but also realize that a deliberate choice does not necessarily mean a choice to vaccinate. PMID:22672710
Ethics Education in Social Work: Comparing Outcomes of Graduate Social Work Students
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Sanders, Scott; Hoffman, Kay
2010-01-01
This research presents findings from a study comparing groups of students enrolled in three U.S. graduate social work programs. Each program represents a differing approach to teaching ethics: (a) infusion of ethics content, (b) a required discrete course emphasizing what the authors term a "mixed-model approach", and (c) a required discrete…
Teachers' and Students' Perception of Work Ethics: A Look at Pennsylvania's Community Colleges
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Dincher, Michael A.
2010-01-01
The volume of literature for research on work ethics is extensive but most involves workers on the job or looking for employment (Petty & Hill, 2005). A gap in the literature exists for research of work ethics among students and instructors involved in Career and Technical Education. Using the Employability Skills Assessment (ESA) authored by…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Salopek, Michelle M.
2013-01-01
This comparative case study examines the influence of ethics education on moral reasoning among pre-service teacher preparation and social work students. This study specifically investigates the ethical values of students enrolled in a teacher preparation and social work education program by their fourth year of study; the degree of ethical…
13 CFR 127.604 - How will SBA process an EDWOSB or WOSB status protest?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... ADMINISTRATION WOMEN-OWNED SMALL BUSINESS FEDERAL CONTRACT ASSISTANCE PROCEDURES Protests § 127.604 How will SBA... determination. SBA's determination is effective immediately and is final unless overturned by OHA on appeal...
13 CFR 121.1003 - Where should a size protest be filed?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... involving a government procurement or sale must be filed with the contracting officer for the procurement or sale, who must forward the protest to the SBA Government Contracting Area Office serving the area in...
Abortion in Australia: access versus protest.
Dean, Rebecca Elizabeth; Allanson, Susie
2004-05-01
Currently in Australia anti-choice protesters' right to freedom of speech and freedom to protest is privileged over a woman's right to privacy and to access a health service safely, free from harassment, intimidation and obstruction. This article considers how this situation is played out daily at one Victorian abortion-providing clinic. The Fertility Control Clinic was thrown into the spotlight after the murder of its security guard by an anti-choice crusader in July 2001. Australian common law appears not to offer women protection from anti-choice protesters. By contrast, United States and Canadian "bubble" legislation sits comfortably with key constitutional rights. It would be a useful development if Australian governments passed legislation to ensure the rights, wellbeing and safety of Australian women accessing health services. Such legislation would be another step away from the misogynistic and androcentric values once central to our legislative framework.
The Role of the Relationship with Parents with Respect to Work Orientation and Work Ethic.
Leenders, Monique V E; Buunk, Abraham P; Henkens, Kène
2017-01-01
We examined the extent to which individual relationships with mother and father, social support from partner, and quality of the relationship with the partner, are related to work orientation and work ethic. Survey data were obtained from 3841 respondents from the Netherlands Kinship Panel Study (wave 2). The results showed that, overall, people with a more positive relationship with their parents had a more positive work orientation and a stronger work ethic. A positive relationship with the father had a greater influence on these work aspects than a positive relationship with the mother, particularly for men. Partner support and the quality of the partner relationship partially mediated the association between the relationship with one's parents and work orientation only for women. There were no significant relationships between partner support or the quality of the partner relationship, and work ethic. Research on the relationship with parents and work-related variables is discussed.
Organizational ethics in Catholic health care: honoring stewardship and the work environment.
Magill, G
2001-04-01
Organizational ethics refers to the integration of values into decision making, policies, and behavior throughout the multi-disciplinary environment of a health care organization. Based upon Catholic social ethics, stewardship is at the heart of organizational ethics in health care in this sense: stewardship provides the hermeneutic filter that enables basic ethical principles to be realized practically, within the context of the Catholic theology of work, to concerns in health care. This general argument can shed light on the specific topic of non-executive compensation programs as an illustration of organizational ethics in health care.
77 FR 56772 - Safety Zone; Water Main Crossing; Choctawhatchee Bay; Santa Rosa Beach, FL
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-09-14
... Activities The Coast Guard respects the First Amendment rights of protesters. Protesters are asked to contact..., 2012 to October 14, 2012. This amendment is necessary to reflect changes in the project's timeline...
48 CFR 922.608-3 - Protests against eligibility.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS APPLICATION OF LABOR LAWS TO GOVERNMENT ACQUISITION Walsh-Healey Public Contracts Act 922.... However, if the eligibility determination challenged pertains to a small business, the protest shall be forwarded to the Small Business Administration for determination. ...
48 CFR 3433.101 - Definitions.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 7 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Definitions. 3433.101... GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 3433.101 Definitions. Filed, as... Accounting Office (GAO), or the General Services Administration Board of Contract Appeals (GSBCA). ...
13 CFR 121.1001 - Who may initiate a size protest or request a formal size determination?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... which the headquarters of the protested offeror is located, regardless of the location of a parent company or affiliates, or the Director, Office of Government Contracting; and (iv) Other interested...
Novel Paths to Relevance: How Clinical Ethics Committees Promote Ethical Reflection.
Magelssen, Morten; Pedersen, Reidar; Førde, Reidun
2016-09-01
How may clinical ethics committees (CECs) inspire ethical reflection among healthcare professionals? How may they deal with organizational ethics issues? In recent years, Norwegian CECs have attempted different activites that stretch or go beyond the standard trio of education, consultation, and policy work. We studied the novel activities of Norwegian CECs by examining annual reports and interviewing CEC members. Through qualitative analysis we identified nine categories of novel CEC activities, which we describe by way of examples. In light of the findings, we argue that some novel working methods may be well suited to promote ethical reflection among clinicians, and that the CEC may be a suitable venue for discussing issues of organizational ethics.
Chen, Wendy Y; Hua, Junyi
2015-05-15
Protest response is a common aspect of contingent valuation (CV) studies, which has attracted growing attention from scholars worldwide. Distrust of government, understood as one of the major reasons for protest response, has been prevalent across transitional China experiencing dramatic changes in its economy, society and natural environment. Citizen distrust of government would significantly hinder the efficiency and validity of the contingent valuation method (CVM) application focusing on the provision of public environmental and ecological goods in China, as a large proportion of protest responses might be induced. Hitherto little has been done to link residents' trust in government to their environmental behaviors in developing and transitional economies like China where CVM has been increasingly applied to generate meaningful and reliable information for integrating both ecological and socioeconomic perspectives into policy decisions. This study aims to investigate the discrepancies between protest responses induced by distrust of government and non-protest responses, using the contingent valuation of heritage trees in Guangzhou as a case. The combination of a set of debriefing questions and several attitudinal questions is employed in the questionnaire. Based on logit analysis and discriminant analysis, it has been found that protestors who distrust government and non-protestors share similar salient values associated with urban heritage trees in Guangzhou, especially their distinctive historical and cultural values, in comparison with ordinary urban trees. Residents with low familiarity with heritage trees (who rarely visit sites with heritage trees, know little about management and conservation techniques, and consider present management to be ineffective) are likely to act as protesters with the "distrust of government" belief. Only if more opportunities are provided for residents to obtain access to urban heritage tree sites, more information (about urban heritage trees and other environmental and ecological goods) is disseminated, and more effective management is implemented, can better governmental trust be developed and stronger public participation and support secured. The results of this study can shed light on understanding protest responses in CV studies and improving the reliability and efficiency of CVM in China and other developing countries where a low level of trust in government prevails. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
La Russa, M. F.; Ruffolo, S. A.; Malagodi, M.; Barca, D.; Cirrincione, R.; Pezzino, A.; Crisci, G. M.; Miriello, D.
2010-09-01
In this multidisciplinary contribution, several diagnostic tests were carried out in order to characterize the stone materials, forms of alteration, and protective products applied in the past to two monumental tombs located in the Protestant Cemetery of Rome (Italy). The Protestant Cemetery is a very important historic site, and has been included in the List of 100 Most Endangered Sites in the World since 2005. In this work, two of its tombs were studied: those of Karl (or Charles) Brjullov, a Russian painter who lived in the first half of the nineteenth century, and of Lady Elisa Temple, wife of the artist Sir Grenville Temple. The tombs are both made of white marble and travertine, and the same forms of alteration and degradation, such as blackish biological patinas, black crusts, and chromatic alterations, were found on both monuments. Petrographic analysis of the different lithotypes made it possible to determine textural characteristics, evaluate the state of preservation, and formulate some hypotheses about their provenance by means of oxygen and carbon isotopic ratios, and evaluation of maximum grain size (MGS) and shape preferred orientation (SPO) of calcite grains. Laboratory culture analysis identified autotrophic species and, in some cases, black patinas caused by fungal species were found. Lastly, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) revealed that some synthetic protective products had been used in previous, undocumented restoration processes on some portions of both graves.
[The ethical reflection approach, a source of wellbeing at work].
Bréhaux, Karine; Grésyk, Bénédicte
2014-01-01
Clinical nursing practice, beyond its application to care procedures, can be expressed in terms of ethical added value in the support of patients. In Reims university hospital, where a clinical ethics and care think-tank was created in June 2010, the ethical reflection approach is encouraged in order to reemphasise the global meaning of care as a source of wellbeing at work.
Development and Validation of a Short Form for the Multidimensional Work Ethic Profile
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Meriac, John P.; Woehr, David J.; Gorman, C. Allen; Thomas, Amanda L. E.
2013-01-01
The multidimensional work ethic profile (MWEP) has become one of the most widely-used inventories for measuring the work ethic construct. However, its length has been a potential barrier to even more widespread use. We developed a short form of the MWEP, the MWEP-SF. A subset of items from the original measure was identified, using item response…
Extensive Training Is Insufficient to Produce The Work-Ethic Effect In Pigeons
Vasconcelos, Marco; Urcuioli, Peter J
2009-01-01
Zentall and Singer (2007a) hypothesized that our failure to replicate the work-ethic effect in pigeons (Vasconcelos, Urcuioli, & Lionello-DeNolf, 2007) was due to insufficient overtraining following acquisition of the high- and low-effort discriminations. We tested this hypothesis using the original work-ethic procedure (Experiment 1) and one similar to that used with starlings (Experiment 2) by providing at least 60 overtraining sessions. Despite this extensive overtraining, neither experiment revealed a significant preference for stimuli obtained after high effort. Together with other findings, these data support our contention that pigeons do not reliably show a work-ethic effect. PMID:19230517
Ethics education: a priority for general practitioners in occupational medicine.
Alavi, S Shohreh; Makarem, Jalil; Mehrdad, Ramin
2015-01-01
General practitioners (GPs) who work in occupational medicine (OM) should be trained continuously. However, it seems that ethical issues have been neglected. This cross-sectional study aimed to determine educational priorities for GPs working in OM. A total of 410 GPs who participated in OM seminars were asked to answer a number of questions related to items that they usually come across in their work. The respondents were given scores on 15 items, which pertained to their frequency of experience in OM, their felt needs regarding education in the field, and their knowledge and skills. Ethical issues were the most frequently utilised item and the area in which the felt need for education was the greatest. The knowledge of and skills in ethical issues and matters were the poorest. Ethical principles and confidentiality had the highest calculated educational priority scores. It is necessary to consider ethical issues as an educational priority for GPs working in the field of OM.
Qian, Jing; Wang, Bin; Han, Zhuo; Song, Baihe
2017-01-01
This research elucidates the role of ethical leadership in employee feedback seeking by examining how and when ethical leadership may exert a positive influence on feedback seeking. Using matched reports from 64 supervisors and 265 of their immediate employees from a hotel group located in a major city in China, we proposed and tested a moderated mediation model that examines leader-member exchange (LMX) as the mediator and emotional intelligence as well as work-unit structure as double moderators in the relationships between ethical leadership and followers' feedback-seeking behavior from supervisors and coworkers. Our findings indicated that (1) LMX mediated the positive relationship between ethical leadership and feedback seeking from both ethical leaders and coworkers, and (2) emotional intelligence and work-unit structure served as joint moderators on the mediated positive relationship in such a way that the relationship was strongest when the emotional intelligence was high and work-unit structure was more of an organic structure rather than a mechanistic structure.
Should the Bt brinjal controversy concern healthcare professionals and bioethicists?
Seetharam, Sridevi
2010-01-01
The Genetic Engineering Approval Committee's approval of Bt brinjal, the first genetically modified crop for human consumption in India, has sparked off protests across the country. This article questions the so-called benefits of GM crops and highlights some major concerns. These include: inadequately addressed health and environmental risks, inadequate safety guidelines, a lack of transparency in sharing test data, the implications to seed sovereignty of farmers and the lack of informed choice for consumers. Some concerns about field testing by Mahyco, the developer of Bt-brinjal, and the process of evaluation by GEAC remain unresolved. With inadequate information about the crop's long-term safety, a precautionary approach is advocated before national policy allows commercial release of the seeds. A fair process is also needed in the public consultations being proposed by the minister of state for environment and forests. In addition to issues of procedural justice, a basic ethical question remains: do humans have a right to dominate the land and make expendable those creatures that they deem "undesirable"?
Perspective: creating an ethical workplace: reverberations of resident work hours reform.
Lopez, Lenny; Katz, Joel T
2009-03-01
Medical professionals are a community of highly educated individuals with a commitment to a core set of ideals and principles. This community provides both technical and ethical socialization. The development of ethical physicians is highly linked to experiences in the training period. Moral traits are situation-sensitive psychological and behavioral dispositions. The consequence of long duty hours on the moral development of physicians is less understood. The clinical environment of medical training programs can be so intense as to lead to conditions that may actually deprofessionalize trainees. The dynamic relationship between individual character traits and the situational dependence of their expression suggests that a systems approach will help promote and nurture moral development. Ethical behavior can be supported by systems that make it more difficult to veer from the ideal. Work hours limits are a structural change that will help preserve public safety by preventing physicians from taking the moral shortcuts that can occur with increasing work and time pressures. Work hours rules are beneficial but insufficient to optimize an ethical work and training environment. Additional measures need to be put in place to ensure that ethical tensions are not created between the patient's well-being and the resident's adherence to work hours rules. The ethical ideals of physician autonomy, selflessness, and accountability to the patient must be protected through the judicious and flexible use of work hours limits, physician extenders, census caps, nonteaching services, and high-quality handoffs.
Chinese nurses' perceived barriers and facilitators of ethical sensitivity.
Huang, Fei Fei; Yang, Qing; Zhang, Jie; Khoshnood, Kaveh; Zhang, Jing Ping
2016-08-01
An overview of ethical sensitivity among Chinese registered nurses is needed to develop and optimize the education programs and interventions to cultivate and improve ethical sensitivity. The study was conducted to explore the barriers to and facilitators of ethical sensitivity among Chinese registered nurses working in hospital settings. A convergent parallel mixed-methods research design was adopted. In the cross-sectional quantitative study, the Chinese Moral Sensitivity Questionnaire-revised version was used to assess the levels of ethical sensitivity among registered nurses, and the scores were correlated with key demographics, training experiences in ethics, and workplace cultural environments (n = 306). In the qualitative study, semi-structured interviews were used to elicit the nurses' perceptions of the barriers and facilitators in nurturing ethical sensitivity (n = 15). The data were collected from February to June 2014. This study was approved by the Institutional Review Boards of Yale University and Central South University. Despite moderately high overall Chinese Moral Sensitivity Questionnaire-revised version scores, the ethical sensitivity among Chinese nurses lags in practice. Barriers to ethical sensitivity include the lack of knowledge related to ethics, lack of working experience as a nurse, the hierarchical organizational climate, and the conformist working attitude. The positive workplace cultural environments and application of ethical knowledge in practice were considered potential facilitators of ethical sensitivity. The findings of this study were compared with studies from other countries to examine the barriers and facilitators of ethical sensitivity in Chinese nurses. This mixed-methods study showed that even though the Chinese nurses have moderately high sensitivity to the ethical issues encountered in hospitals, there is still room for improvement. The barriers to and facilitators of ethical sensitivity identified here offer new and important strategies to support and enhance the nurses' sensitivity to ethical issues. © The Author(s) 2015.
What are the Effects of Protest Fear?
2014-06-01
Program AT&L Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics BPA blanket purchase agreement CONUS continental United States COR...they have awarded a task/delivery order against an IDIQ contract (or Blanket Purchase Agreement [ BPA ]) in order to avoid a bid protest. The data shows
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-04-12
... provisions to provide access for vehicles operated by people with physical handicaps. Finally, language was clarified regarding grazing and mineral rights. Three protests were received during the 30-day protest...
48 CFR 833.104 - Protests to GAO.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... after award has been filed with GAO, the contracting officer must submit a report to the DAS for A&MM... until the matter is resolved. However, award may be made despite the protest if the DAS for A&MM, or the...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Definitions. 733.101 Section 733.101 Federal Acquisition Regulations System AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 733.101 Definitions. (a) All “days” referred...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Definitions. 733.101 Section 733.101 Federal Acquisition Regulations System AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GENERAL CONTRACTING REQUIREMENTS PROTESTS, DISPUTES, AND APPEALS Protests 733.101 Definitions. (a) All “days” referred...
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-12-22
..., protests, and/or motions filed. k. Description of Project: The proposed run-of-river Fivemile Creek...-foot-long powerhouse, containing a 300-kW pelton wheel turbine and electrical generating equipment; (3...
27. AERIAL VIEW LOOKING EAST DOWN THE WEST ACCESS ROAD. ...
27. AERIAL VIEW LOOKING EAST DOWN THE WEST ACCESS ROAD. THE FIRST LARGE PROTEST AT THE PLANT CAME IN 1978. IT WAS THE FIRST MAJOR PROTEST AT ANY DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY PLANT. IN RESPONSE TO CONTINUING ANTI- NUCLEAR PROTESTS, IN PARTICULAR A 1979 RALLY THAT DREW 10,000 PARTICIPANTS, ROCKWELL EMPLOYEES AT THE PLANT FORMED A GRASSROOT ORGANIZATION, CITIZENS FOR ENERGY AND FREEDOM, AND ORGANIZED A PRO-NUCLEAR RALLY, 'POWER TO THE PEOPLE,' THAT ATTRACTED 16,000 PEOPLE (5/4/78). - Rocky Flats Plant, Bounded by Indiana Street & Routes 93, 128 & 72, Golden, Jefferson County, CO
Goebel, Allison
2011-01-01
The waves of popular protest sweeping contemporary South Africa are inadequately explained by anti-globalisation, anti-neoliberal and even anti-government sentiments and analysis. Attention to the gendered dynamics of township life, including the nature of households, gender relations and the critical importance of social welfare provisions to poor women and their households, yields a revised understanding of protests and movements. The Durban-based shack-dwellers' movement Abahlali baseMjondolo is used to illustrate these points, as are original quantitative and qualitative data from urban townships in KwaZulu-Natal.
Women in black: challenging Israel's gender and socio-political orders.
Helman, S; Rapoport, T
1997-12-01
The Israeli protest movement 'Women in Black' is studied by focusing on the movement's mode of protest, which is used as a prism through which to analyse the manner in which the structure, contents and goals of protest challenge the socio-political and gender orders. The article analyses the protest vigil of 'Women in Black' in Jerusalem, and characterizes it, following Handelman (1990), as a minimalist public event. After examining and analysing the sources of minimalism it was concluded that minimalism was the result of two social processes attendant at the formation of 'Women in Black' as a social movement: personal interpretation of the political field, and avoidance of ideological deliberation amongst the participants. The minimalism of the public event preserved the movement for six years and created a collective identity that emphasized the symbolic difference between those within the demonstration and those outside it. This difference was symbolized by a juxtaposition of opposites. The essence of opposites is analysed by means of 'thick description', i.e., by deciphering them in the context of Israeli society. The study concluded that the mode of protest of 'Women in Black' has created a symbolic space in which a new type of political woman is enacted. This identity challenges established socio-cultural categories Israel.
Hunt, Matthew R
2008-08-01
Health professionals are involved in humanitarian assistance and development work in many regions of the world. They participate in primary health care, immunization campaigns, clinic- and hospital-based care, rehabilitation and feeding programs. In the course of this work, clinicians are frequently exposed to complex ethical issues. This paper examines how health workers experience ethics in the course of humanitarian assistance and development work. A qualitative study was conducted to consider this question. Five core themes emerged from the data, including: tension between respecting local customs and imposing values; obstacles to providing adequate care; differing understandings of health and illness; questions of identity for health workers; and issues of trust and distrust. Recommendations are made for organizational strategies that could help aid agencies support and equip their staff as they respond to ethical issues.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
van Baarle, Eva; Verweij, Desiree; Molewijk, Bert; Widdershoven, Guy
2018-01-01
How can ethical decision-making in organizations be further reinforced? This article explores the relevance of Michel Foucault's ideas on art-of-living for ethics education in organizations. First, we present a theoretical analysis of art-of-living in the work of Foucault as well as in the work of two philosophers who greatly influenced his work,…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Miller, Pamela F., Ed.; Coady, William T., Ed.
A team of consultants met with personnel from the Vocational Ethics Infusion Project to discuss vocational ethics from the perspectives of the current and future world of work. This activity was undertaken with the goal of defining the domain of vocational ethics. Issues in the first session included whether the future world of work presents an…
1. Title Sheet; Door Profiles; Roof Truss, Protestant Chapel; Mess ...
1. Title Sheet; Door Profiles; Roof Truss, Protestant Chapel; Mess Hall/Corridor Window Jamb; Circular Stair Newel Post and Balustrade - National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers - Battle Mountain Sanitarium, Mess Hall, 500 North Fifth Street, Hot Springs, Fall River County, SD
75 FR 69688 - Agency Information Collection Activities: Regulation on Agency Protests
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-11-15
... Protests AGENCY: Office of Chief Procurement Officer, Acquisition Policy and Legislation Office, DHS... Department of Homeland Security, Office of Chief Procurement Officer, Acquisition Policy and Legislation..., Acquisition Policy and Legislation Office, DHS Attn.: Camara Francis, Department of Homeland Security, Office...
What are the Effects of Protest Fear?
2014-06-17
Acquisition Professional Development Program AT&L Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics BPA blanket purchase agreement CONUS continental United States...Blanket Purchase Agreement [ BPA ]) in order to avoid a bid protest. The data shows that 88 respondents had done so throughout their career with 4,139
Claude McKay: Black Protest in Western Traditional Form.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hudson-Weems, Clenora
1992-01-01
The protest poetry of Claude McKay, a leading writer of the Harlem Renaissance, is couched in the Western sonnet form. How the poetic form supports or conflicts with the messages of African-American pride and contempt for racism is examined. (SLD)
The Timing of First Marriage: Are There Religious Variations?
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Xu, Xiaohe; Hudspeth, Clark D.; Bartkowski, John P.
2005-01-01
Using survey data from a nationally representative sample, this article explores how marriage timing varies across major religious denominations. Survival analysis indicates that net of statistical controls, Catholics, moderate Protestants, conservative Protestants, and Mormons marry significantly earlier than their unaffiliated counterparts. This…
Self Perceptions of Student Activists
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Astin, Helen S.
1971-01-01
This study examines personality differences and similarities between student groups in protest activities by comparing activists to student leaders and random students. Results indicate many similarities in personality dimensions but protesters are more adventurous, autocratic and individualistic. They are also more spontaneous and irresponsible.…
48 CFR 19.302 - Protesting a small business representation or rerepresentation.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business Programs 19.302 Protesting a small business representation or rerepresentation. (a)(1) The Small Business Administration (SBA) regulations on small business size and size...
48 CFR 19.305 - Protesting a representation of disadvantaged business status.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... representation of disadvantaged business status. 19.305 Section 19.305 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAMS Determination of Small Business Status for Small Business Programs 19.305 Protesting a representation of disadvantaged business...
The Role of Empirical Research in Bioethics
Kon, Alexander A.
2010-01-01
There has long been tension between bioethicists whose work focuses on classical philosophical inquiry and those who perform empirical studies on bioethical issues. While many have argued that empirical research merely illuminates current practices and cannot inform normative ethics, others assert that research-based work has significant implications for refining our ethical norms. In this essay, I present a novel construct for classifying empirical research in bioethics into four hierarchical categories: Lay of the Land, Ideal Versus Reality, Improving Care, and Changing Ethical Norms. Through explaining these four categories and providing examples of publications in each stratum, I define how empirical research informs normative ethics. I conclude by demonstrating how philosophical inquiry and empirical research can work cooperatively to further normative ethics. PMID:19998120
The role of empirical research in bioethics.
Kon, Alexander A
2009-01-01
There has long been tension between bioethicists whose work focuses on classical philosophical inquiry and those who perform empirical studies on bioethical issues. While many have argued that empirical research merely illuminates current practices and cannot inform normative ethics, others assert that research-based work has significant implications for refining our ethical norms. In this essay, I present a novel construct for classifying empirical research in bioethics into four hierarchical categories: Lay of the Land, Ideal Versus Reality, Improving Care, and Changing Ethical Norms. Through explaining these four categories and providing examples of publications in each stratum, I define how empirical research informs normative ethics. I conclude by demonstrating how philosophical inquiry and empirical research can work cooperatively to further normative ethics.
Guta, Adrian; Murray, Stuart J; Strike, Carol; Flicker, Sarah; Upshur, Ross; Myers, Ted
2017-11-01
In this paper, we extend Michel Foucault's final works on the 'care of the self' to an empirical examination of research practice in community-based research (CBR). We use Foucault's 'morality of behaviors' to analyze interview data from a national sample of Canadian CBR practitioners working with communities affected by HIV. Despite claims in the literature that ethics review is overly burdensome for non-traditional forms of research, our findings suggest that many researchers using CBR have an ambivalent but ultimately productive relationship with institutional research ethics review requirements. They understand and use prescribed codes, but adapt them in practice to account for the needs of participating community members, members of their research teams and the larger communities with whom they work. Complying with ethics protocols was seen as only the beginning, a minimum standard; our research suggests that the real ethical work happens in the field, where CBR practitioners encounter community members in diverse public roles and must forge ethical consensus across communities. CBR represents an ethical terrain in which practitioners challenge themselves to work differently, and as a result they care for themselves-and others-in ways that often resist the propensity for domination through public health research. '…there are different ways to "conduct oneself" morally, different ways for the acting individual to operate, not just as an agent, but as an ethical subject of action.' (Foucault, 1985: 26).
An Ethics Challenge for School Counselors
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Froeschle, Janet G.; Crews, Charles
2010-01-01
Ethical issues arise more often for school counselors than for those who work in other settings (Remley, 2002). The challenge of working not only with minors but also with other stakeholders including parents, teachers, school administrators, and community members sets the stage for potential legal and ethical dilemmas. Awareness and adherence to…
The Educational Technology of Ethical Development for Students
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Song, Ting; Ustin, Pavel N.; Popov, Leonid M.; Mudarisov, Marat M.
2017-01-01
The relevance of this work was connected with the problem of ethical competencies forming among future psychologists during their learning in university. The first task of research was to work out the technology of ethical development for students-psychologists. The structure of this technology included four main educational components:…
Ethical Challenges in the Teaching of Multicultural Course Work
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Fier, Elizabeth Boyer; Ramsey, MaryLou
2005-01-01
The authors explore the ethical issues and challenges frequently encountered by counselor educators of multicultural course work. Existing ethics codes are examined, and the need for greater specificity with regard to teaching courses of multicultural content is addressed. Options for revising existing codes to better address the challenges of…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gardner, Howard
2008-01-01
Ethical quandaries abound in the emerging field of neuroeducation. Concepts and findings from the GoodWork[R] Project may help neuroeducators deal ethically with these quandaries. In particular, ethical work is easier to carry out when all stakeholders concur on the means and goals of the profession. Similarly, when professionals wear only one…
Wright, David M; Rosato, Michael; Raab, Gillian; Dibben, Chris; Boyle, Paul; O'Reilly, Dermot
2017-05-01
Religion frequently indicates membership of socio-ethnic groups with distinct health behaviours and mortality risk. Determining the extent to which interactions between groups contribute to variation in mortality is often challenging. We compared socio-economic status (SES) and mortality rates of Protestants and Catholics in Scotland and Northern Ireland, regions in which interactions between groups are profoundly different. Crucially, strong equality legislation has been in place for much longer and Catholics form a larger minority in Northern Ireland. Drawing linked Census returns and mortality records of 404,703 people from the Scottish and Northern Ireland Longitudinal Studies, we used Poisson regression to compare religious groups, estimating mortality rates and incidence rate ratios. We fitted age-adjusted and fully adjusted (for education, housing tenure, car access and social class) models. Catholics had lower SES than Protestants in both countries; the differential was larger in Scotland for education, housing tenure and car access but not social class. In Scotland, Catholics had increased age-adjusted mortality risk relative to Protestants but variation among groups was attenuated following adjustment for SES. Those reporting no religious affiliation were at similar mortality risk to Protestants. In Northern Ireland, there was no mortality differential between Catholics and Protestants either before or after adjustment. Men reporting no religious affiliation were at increased mortality risk but this differential was not evident among women. In Scotland, Catholics remained at greater socio-economic disadvantage relative to Protestants than in Northern Ireland and were also at a mortality disadvantage. This may be due to a lack of explicit equality legislation that has decreased inequality by religion in Northern Ireland during recent decades. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bazzul, Jesse
2015-02-01
This article describes how biology textbooks can work to discursively constitute a particular kind of "ethical subjectivity." Not only do textbooks constrain the possibilities for thought and action regarding ethical issues, they also require a certain kind of "subject" to partake in ethical exercises and questions. This study looks at how ethical questions/exercises found in four Ontario textbooks require students and teachers to think and act along specific lines. These include making ethical decisions within a legal-juridical frame; deciding what kinds of research should be publically funded; optimizing personal and population health; and regulation through policy and legislation. While engaging ethical issues in these ways is useful, educators should also question the kinds of (ethical) subjectivities that are partially constituted by discourses of science education. If science education is going to address twenty-first century problems such as climate change and social inequality, educators need to address how the possibilities for ethical engagement afforded to students work to constitute specific kinds of "ethical actors."
'Working behind the scenes'. An ethical view of mental health nursing and first-episode psychosis.
Moe, Cathrine; Kvig, Erling I; Brinchmann, Beate; Brinchmann, Berit S
2013-08-01
The aim of this study was to explore and reflect upon mental health nursing and first-episode psychosis. Seven multidisciplinary focus group interviews were conducted, and data analysis was influenced by a grounded theory approach. The core category was found to be a process named 'working behind the scenes'. It is presented along with three subcategories: 'keeping the patient in mind', 'invisible care' and 'invisible network contact'. Findings are illuminated with the ethical principles of respect for autonomy and paternalism. Nursing care is dynamic, and clinical work moves along continuums between autonomy and paternalism and between ethical reflective and non-reflective practice. 'Working behind the scenes' is considered to be in a paternalistic area, containing an ethical reflection. Treating and caring for individuals experiencing first-episode psychosis demands an ethical awareness and great vigilance by nurses. The study is a contribution to reflection upon everyday nursing practice, and the conclusion concerns the importance of making invisible work visible.
Ethical problems in the relationship between health and work.
Berlinguer, G; Falzi, G; Figa-Talamanca, I
1996-01-01
Throughout history, the relationship between employers and workers has been subject to the equilibrium of power, to legislative norms, to ethical considerations, and more recently to scientific knowledge. The authors examine the ethical conflicts that arise from the application of scientific knowledge to preventive health policies in the workplace. In particular, they discuss the ethical conflicts in the application of screening practices, in the setting of "allowable limits" of harmful work exposures, and in the right of workers to be informed about work hazards. Ethical problems are also created by conflicting interests in the protection of the environment, the health of the general public, and the health of the working population, and by conflicting interests among workers, and even within the individual worker, as in the case of "fetal protection" policies. The authors emphasize the positive use of scientific information and respect for human dignity in resolving these conflicts.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mingie, Walter; And Others
The residential outdoor program involved 60 sixth grade students, divided into 5 groups, distributed as evenly as possible. Each group consisted of leaders, followers, and children with experience in the field and those without experience. Teachers were also divided into 5 groups, usually two or three working together. Each team of teachers chose…
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... Chief, Office of Technology. If the protest involves the size status of a concern that SBA has certified... of privacy or confidentiality, because SBA will not disclose information obtained in the course of a...
Black Protest: Past and Present Two Hundred Years of Black Resistance to Oppression
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hale, Frank W.
1976-01-01
Traces the extent to which black men and women have protested conditions like discrimination, segregation, poverty, the lack of jobs, etc. during the full course of the two hundred years since the birth of the U.S. (Author/AM)
4 CFR 21.14 - Request for reconsideration.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE GENERAL PROCEDURES BID PROTEST REGULATIONS § 21.14 Request for... reconsideration of a bid protest decision. GAO will not consider a request for reconsideration that does not... deemed warranted, specifying any errors of law made or information not previously considered. (b) A...
18 CFR 157.10 - Interventions and protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 1 2011-04-01 2011-04-01 false Interventions and..., Sales, Service, Construction, Extension, Acquisition or Abandonment § 157.10 Interventions and protests... intervention. (1) Any person filing a petition to intervene or notice of intervention shall state specifically...
18 CFR 157.10 - Interventions and protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 1 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Interventions and..., Sales, Service, Construction, Extension, Acquisition or Abandonment § 157.10 Interventions and protests... intervention. (1) Any person filing a petition to intervene or notice of intervention shall state specifically...
18 CFR 157.10 - Interventions and protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 1 2012-04-01 2012-04-01 false Interventions and..., Sales, Service, Construction, Extension, Acquisition or Abandonment § 157.10 Interventions and protests... intervention. (1) Any person filing a petition to intervene or notice of intervention shall state specifically...
18 CFR 157.10 - Interventions and protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 1 2013-04-01 2013-04-01 false Interventions and..., Sales, Service, Construction, Extension, Acquisition or Abandonment § 157.10 Interventions and protests... intervention. (1) Any person filing a petition to intervene or notice of intervention shall state specifically...
18 CFR 157.10 - Interventions and protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 1 2014-04-01 2014-04-01 false Interventions and..., Sales, Service, Construction, Extension, Acquisition or Abandonment § 157.10 Interventions and protests... intervention. (1) Any person filing a petition to intervene or notice of intervention shall state specifically...
5. 1859 sketch of the hospital, before construction commenced in ...
5. 1859 sketch of the hospital, before construction commenced in 1860. Photocopied from Report of the Board of Managers of the Hospital of the Protestant Episcopal Church, 1859. - Hospital of Protestant Episcopal Church in Philadelphia, Front Street & Lehigh Avenue, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA
18 CFR 270.503 - Protests to the Commission.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 1 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Protests to the Commission. 270.503 Section 270.503 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION, DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY PROCEDURES GOVERNING DETERMINATIONS FOR TAX CREDIT PURPOSES DETERMINATION...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... after SBA receives a size protest or request for a formal size determination? Link to an amendment... by the form or other missing information would demonstrate that the concern is other than a small...
13 CFR 124.1010 - What procedures apply to disadvantaged status protests?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... 13 Business Credit and Assistance 1 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false What procedures apply to disadvantaged status protests? 124.1010 Section 124.1010 Business Credit and Assistance SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION 8(a) BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT/SMALL DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS STATUS DETERMINATIONS Eligibility...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... (generally, for formally advertised procurement, after bid opening, within 1 week after the basis for the...'s written or other formal notice is first received. (2) A protest appeal authorized by paragraph (e... constitute final agency action, from which there shall be no further administrative appeal. The Regional...
Ethics expertise for health technology assessment: a Canadian national survey.
Bond, Kenneth; Oremus, Mark; Duthie, Katherine M; Griener, Glenn G
2014-04-01
The aim of this study was to identify individuals with expertise in ethics analysis in Canada, who might contribute to health technology assessment (HTA); to gauge these individuals' familiarity with, and experience participating in, the production of HTA. A contact list was developed using the Canadian Bioethics Society membership list and faculty listings of Canadian universities, bioethics centers, and health agencies. An eighteen-question email survey was distributed to potential respondents to collect data on demographic information, education and work experience in applied ethics, and involvement in HTA. The survey response rate was 52.8 percent (350/663). Respondents worked primarily in academic institutions (50.4 percent) or hospitals (15.4 percent). Many respondents (83.1 percent) had education, formal training, or work-related experience in practical ethics related to health care, with many having a doctorate (34.5 percent) or master's degree (19.0 percent). One quarter (24.5 percent; n = 87) of respondents indicated they had been involved in an analysis of ethical issues for HTA. Almost two-thirds (65.4 percent; n = 165) of those who had not previously participated in ethics analysis believed they might usefully contribute to an analysis of ethical issues in HTA. Experts who have conducted ethics analysis in HTA had more than twice the odds of having education and training in ethics and a PhD than those who might contribute to ethics analysis. Many people have contributed to ethics analysis in HTA in Canada, and more are willing to do so. Given the absence of a reliable credential for ethics expertise, HTA producers should exercise caution when enlisting ethics experts.
Teixeira, Carla; Ribeiro, Orquídea; Fonseca, António M; Carvalho, Ana Sofia
2014-02-01
Ethical decision making in intensive care is a demanding task. The need to proceed to ethical decision is considered to be a stress factor that may lead to burnout. The aim of this study is to explore the ethical problems that may increase burnout levels among physicians and nurses working in Portuguese intensive care units (ICUs). A quantitative, multicentre, correlational study was conducted among 300 professionals. The most crucial ethical decisions made by professionals working in ICU were related to communication, withholding or withdrawing treatments and terminal sedation. A positive relation was found between ethical decision making and burnout in nurses, namely, between burnout and the need to withdraw treatments (p=0.032), to withhold treatments (p=0.002) and to proceed to terminal sedation (p=0.005). This did not apply to physicians. Emotional exhaustion was the burnout subdimension most affected by the ethical decision. The nurses' lack of involvement in ethical decision making was identified as a risk factor. Nevertheless, in comparison with nurses (6%), it was the physicians (34%) who more keenly felt the need to proceed to ethical decisions in ICU. Ethical problems were reported at different levels by physicians and nurses. The type of ethical decisions made by nurses working in Portuguese ICUs had an impact on burnout levels. This did not apply to physicians. This study highlights the need for education in the field of ethics in ICUs and the need to foster inter-disciplinary discussion so as to encourage ethical team deliberation in order to prevent burnout.
Evangelical Protestants and the ACA: An Opening for Community-Based Primary Care?
Franz, Berkeley; Skinner, Daniel
2016-07-01
Evangelical Protestants make up the largest religious subgroup in the United States, and previous research has shown that Evangelical churches are disproportionately active in community engagement and efforts toward social change. Although Evangelical Protestant perspectives have been considered with regard to persistent socioeconomic stratification and racial discrimination, less focus has been given to how churches interpret poor health outcomes within the United States. In particular, this research addresses how enduring health disparities are understood within the larger discussion of healthcare reform. Due to the similarity of approaches favored by participants in this study and community-based philosophy, a suggestion is made for future health policy dialogue. Although Evangelical Protestants have been most likely to reject all aspects of the Affordable Care Act, in many ways the findings of this study suggest the potential for successful future health policy collaboration. In particular, community-based primary care might appeal to Evangelicals and health professionals in the ongoing effort to improve population health and the quality of healthcare in the United States.
Padmanabhanunni, Anita; Edwards, David
2016-05-01
This article examines the experiences of nine rape survivors who participated in the Silent Protest, an annual protest march at Rhodes University that aims to highlight the sexual abuse of women, validate the harm done, and foster solidarity among survivors. Participants responded to a semi-structured interview focusing on the context of their rape and its impact, and their experiences of participation in the Protest In the first phase of data analysis, synoptic case narratives were written. In the second, themes from participants' experience were identified using interpretative phenomenological analysis. In the third, the data were examined in light of questions around the extent to which participation contributed to healing. Participants reported experiences of validation and empowerment but the majority were suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder. In some cases, participation had exacerbated self-blame and avoidant coping. Recommendations are made about the provision of psychoeducation and counseling at such events. © The Author(s) 2015.
Osborne, Danny; Huo, Yuen J; Smith, Heather J
2015-03-01
Although group-based relative deprivation predicts people's willingness to protest unfair outcomes, perceiving that one's subgroup is respected increases employees' support for organizations. An integration of these perspectives suggests that subgroup respect will dampen the impact of group-based relative deprivation on workers' responses to unfair organizational outcomes. We examined this hypothesis among university faculty (N = 804) who underwent a system-wide pay cut. As expected, group-based relative deprivation predicted protest intentions. This relationship was, however, muted among those who believed university administrators treated their area of expertise (i.e., their subgroup) with a high (vs. low) level of respect. Moderated mediation analyses confirmed that group-based relative deprivation had a conditional indirect effect on protest intentions via participants' (dis)identification with their university at low to moderate, but not high, levels of subgroup respect. Our finding that satisfying relational needs can attenuate responses to group-based relative deprivation demonstrates the benefits of integrating insights from distinct research traditions. © 2014 The British Psychological Society.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Taft, Susan H.; White, Judith
2007-01-01
Ethics education that prepares students to address ethical challenges at work is a multifaceted and long-term endeavor. In this article, the authors propose an inductive ethics pedagogy that begins the process of ethics education by grounding students in their own individual ethical principles. The approach centers on developing students' ethical…
Importance of a midterm time horizon for addressing ethical issues integral to nanobiotechnology.
Khushf, George
2007-01-01
There is a consensus emerging on the importance of upstream ethical engagement in nanobiotechnology. Such a preventive ethic would anticipate downstream concerns that might arise and mitigate them as part of the research and development process. However, there is an unappreciated tension between the time horizon of upstream ethics and that assumed by most bioethical research. Current standards of high-quality research on ethical issues biases the research in favor of near-term, science-based, results-oriented work. A near-term focus would miss many of the important ethical issues integral to nanobiotechnology and undermine the goals integral to upstream ethical engagement. However, if we move to a far-term time horizon, the ethical debates tend to get too speculative and are no longer disciplined by existing research trajectories. This paper addresses the link between the midterm time horizon necessary for upstream ethics and the form, content, and style of ethical reflection. New paradigm cases, standards, and criteria will be needed for high-quality upstream ethics work in the area of nanobiotechnology.
Zoupanou, Zoi(e); Rydstedt, Leif W.
2017-01-01
The purpose of this study was to explore the moderating effects of work beliefs in the relationship between work interruptions and general health, wellbeing and reports of psychosomatic symptoms. Self-report data were gathered from 310 employees from different occupational sectors. Results revealed that beliefs in hard work and morality ethic moderated the positive appraisal of work interruptions and acted as protective factors on impaired general health and wellbeing. The relationship was stronger among employees who endorsed strong beliefs in hard work and did not have regard for morality/ethics as a value. Likewise, beliefs in delay of gratification and morality/ethics moderated positive appraisal of work interruptions and reduced psychosomatic complaints. More specifically, the relationship was stronger among employees who had strong belief in the values of delayed gratification and weaker morality/ethics. These findings indicate that organisations should adopt work ideology or practices focused on work values particularly of hard work, delay of gratification and conformity to morality as protective factors that reduce the impact of work interruptions on employees’ general health and wellbeing. PMID:28580023
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Panos, Patrick T.; Panos, Angelea; Cox, Shirley E.; Roby, Jini L.; Matheson, Kenneth W.
2002-01-01
Examines current ethical guidelines affecting the use of videoconferencing in the supervision of social work students nationally and internationally. Suggests protocols to address ethical and professional practice issues that are likely to arise as a result of using videoconferencing to conduct supervision across international borders. (EV)
Ethics and Engineering. Working Papers Series Volume 2.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Cutcliffe, Stephen H., Ed.
This collection of essays is the second volume in a series of working papers from Lehigh University Technology Studies Resource Center. The papers focus on the ethical implications of engineering as a profession and the current problems associated with the public responsibility of engineers. Issues that relate to the ethical dimensions of…
Foundation Officers, Evaluation, and Ethical Problems: A Pilot Investigation
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Morris, Michael
2007-01-01
Ethical problems encountered by foundation officers in their evaluation-related work were identified via an email survey of a sample of Council on Foundations member organizations. Of the respondents who had worked with evaluators, one-third indicated that they had faced ethical challenges. Most challenges fell into one of four categories:…
Management Ethics: Integrity at Work. Sage Series on Business Ethics.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Petrick, Joseph A.; Quinn, John F.
This book tries to redefine what it means for a manager to function with integrity and competence in the private and public sectors domestically and globally. It integrates theoretical work in both descriptive and normative ethics and incorporates legal, communication, quality, and organizational theories into a conceptual framework designed to…
Manhattan College Center for Professional Ethics Report, Fall 1985.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Arena, Lydia E., Ed.
Published once each semester by Manhattan College (New York), the report serves as a resource for faculty and students as they deal with professional ethical dilemmas and conflicts in their course work and work lives; it also helps to further the Center for Professional Ethics basic purpose of promoting greater sensitivity to the ethical…
Qian, Jing; Wang, Bin; Han, Zhuo; Song, Baihe
2017-01-01
This research elucidates the role of ethical leadership in employee feedback seeking by examining how and when ethical leadership may exert a positive influence on feedback seeking. Using matched reports from 64 supervisors and 265 of their immediate employees from a hotel group located in a major city in China, we proposed and tested a moderated mediation model that examines leader-member exchange (LMX) as the mediator and emotional intelligence as well as work-unit structure as double moderators in the relationships between ethical leadership and followers’ feedback-seeking behavior from supervisors and coworkers. Our findings indicated that (1) LMX mediated the positive relationship between ethical leadership and feedback seeking from both ethical leaders and coworkers, and (2) emotional intelligence and work-unit structure served as joint moderators on the mediated positive relationship in such a way that the relationship was strongest when the emotional intelligence was high and work-unit structure was more of an organic structure rather than a mechanistic structure. PMID:28744251
Ethics rounds do not improve the handling of ethical issues by psychiatric staff.
Silén, Marit; Haglund, Kristina; Hansson, Mats G; Ramklint, Mia
2015-08-01
One way to support healthcare staff in handling ethically difficult situations is through ethics rounds that consist of discussions based on clinical cases and are moderated by an ethicist. Previous research indicates that the handling of ethically difficult situations in the workplace might have changed after ethics rounds. This, in turn, would mean that the "ethical climate", i.e. perceptions of how ethical issues are handled, would have changed. To investigate whether ethics rounds could improve the ethical climate perceived by staff working in psychiatry outpatient clinics. In this quasi-experimental study, six inter-professional ethics rounds led by a philosopher/ethicist were conducted at two psychiatry outpatient clinics. Changes in ethical climate were measured at these clinics as well as at two control clinics at baseline and after the intervention period using the instrument Hospital Ethical Climate Survey. Within-groups comparisons of median sum scores of ethical climate showed that no statistically significant differences were found in the intervention group before or after the intervention period. The median sum scores for ethical climate were significantly higher, both at baseline and after the intervention period (P ≤ 0.001; P = 0.046), in the intervention group. Ethics rounds in psychiatric outpatient clinics did not result in significant changes in ethical climate. Outcomes of ethics rounds might, to a higher degree, be directed towards patient-related outcomes rather than towards the staff's working environment, as the questions brought up for discussion during the ethics rounds concerned patient-related issues.
76 FR 10384 - Agency Information Collection Activities: Regulation on Agency Protests
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-02-24
... Protests AGENCY: Office of Chief Procurement Officer, Acquisition Policy and Legislation Office, DHS... Department of Homeland Security, Office of Chief Procurement Officer, Acquisition Policy and Legislation... comments were received by DHS. DHS would also like to correct the Total Burden Cost (capital/startup): $4...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Parker, Franklin; Parker, Betty
The Chinese university students who protested in Spring 1989 were concerned about inflation, shortages of goods and services, and pay inequities. They disliked corruption, bribery, and unfair favoritism, and wanted more press freedom and more independence for their student organizations. Most of all, they wanted more dialogue with aging leaders…
48 CFR 1352.233-70 - Agency protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Agency protests. 1352.233-70 Section 1352.233-70 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE CLAUSES AND..., Chief, Contract Law Division, Room 5893, Herbert C. Hoover Building, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue...
48 CFR 1352.233-70 - Agency protests.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false Agency protests. 1352.233-70 Section 1352.233-70 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE CLAUSES AND..., Chief, Contract Law Division, Room 5893, Herbert C. Hoover Building, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Publication. 174.32 Section 174.32 Customs Duties U.S. CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY; DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Review and Disposition of Protests § 174.32 Publication. Within 120 days after issuing a...
Information Literacy Practices and Student Protests: Mapping Community Information Landscapes
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Špiranec, Sonja; Kos, Denis
2013-01-01
Introduction: This paper provides a contribution to understandings of information literacy regarding context and transferability of information practices. Specifically, the paper analyses the subset of information practices in situations of student protests and addresses issues of transfer of information literacy practice from a highly formal…
Attitudes of Catholic and Protestant Clergy Toward Euthanasia
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Nagi, Mostafa H.; And Others
1977-01-01
Even though Catholic and Protestant clergymen, in about the same proportions, tend to see the terminal patient as competent to make decisions concerning euthanasia, the two groups, strongly agree that neither the individual patient nor the state should be allowed sole responsibility for the decision. (Author)
18 CFR 156.9 - Protests and interventions.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... interventions. 156.9 Section 156.9 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY...) OF THE NATURAL GAS ACT § 156.9 Protests and interventions. Notices of applications, as provided by... interested regulatory agency desiring to intervene may file its notice of intervention. Failure to make...
18 CFR 156.9 - Protests and interventions.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... interventions. 156.9 Section 156.9 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY...) OF THE NATURAL GAS ACT § 156.9 Protests and interventions. Notices of applications, as provided by... interested regulatory agency desiring to intervene may file its notice of intervention. Failure to make...
18 CFR 156.9 - Protests and interventions.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... interventions. 156.9 Section 156.9 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY...) OF THE NATURAL GAS ACT § 156.9 Protests and interventions. Notices of applications, as provided by... interested regulatory agency desiring to intervene may file its notice of intervention. Failure to make...
18 CFR 156.9 - Protests and interventions.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... interventions. 156.9 Section 156.9 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY...) OF THE NATURAL GAS ACT § 156.9 Protests and interventions. Notices of applications, as provided by... interested regulatory agency desiring to intervene may file its notice of intervention. Failure to make...
18 CFR 156.9 - Protests and interventions.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... interventions. 156.9 Section 156.9 Conservation of Power and Water Resources FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY...) OF THE NATURAL GAS ACT § 156.9 Protests and interventions. Notices of applications, as provided by... interested regulatory agency desiring to intervene may file its notice of intervention. Failure to make...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2012-04-01 2012-04-01 false Publication. 174.32 Section 174.32 Customs Duties U.S. CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY; DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Review and Disposition of Protests § 174.32 Publication. Within 90 calendar days after...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2014-04-01 2014-04-01 false Publication. 174.32 Section 174.32 Customs Duties U.S. CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY; DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Review and Disposition of Protests § 174.32 Publication. Within 90 calendar days after...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2013-04-01 2013-04-01 false Publication. 174.32 Section 174.32 Customs Duties U.S. CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY; DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Review and Disposition of Protests § 174.32 Publication. Within 90 calendar days after...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... 19 Customs Duties 2 2011-04-01 2011-04-01 false Publication. 174.32 Section 174.32 Customs Duties U.S. CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY; DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (CONTINUED) PROTESTS Review and Disposition of Protests § 174.32 Publication. Within 90 calendar days after...
78 FR 14746 - Federal Acquisition Regulation; Small Business Protests and Appeals
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-03-07
... awarded to eligible small business concerns. DATES: Interested parties should submit written comments to... located. (2) * * * (3) The protest shall include a referral letter written by the contracting officer with... referral letter written by the contracting officer with information pertaining to the solicitation. The...
Finlay, Ilora G
2015-01-01
This article is a personal reflection on work as a physician with work as a member of the UK Parliament's House of Lords. Ethical thinking should underpin everything we do; the 'four principles' of medical ethics provide an applicable and relevant ethical framework. This article explores its application in both domains of work-as a clinician and as a legislator-with some examples of its use 'to do good medical ethics' in both roles. Debates around tobacco and drug control, pandemic control, abortion and assisted suicide are explored. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.
Cancer nurses' perceptions of ethical climate in Greece and Cyprus.
Constantina, Cloconi; Papastavrou, Evridiki; Charalambous, Andreas
2018-01-01
In recent years, the interest in ethical climate has increased in the literature. However, there is limited understanding of the phenomenon within the cancer care context as well as between countries. To evaluate cancer nurses' perceptions of hospital ethical climate in Greece and Cyprus. This was a quantitative descriptive-correlational comparative study with cancer nurses. Data were collected with the Greek version of the Hospital Ethical Climate Survey questionnaire in addition to demographic data. Participants and research context: In total, n = 235 cancer nurses working in cancer care settings in Greece and Cyprus were recruited at two national oncology nursing conferences. Ethical considerations: The study conforms to the principles of the World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki and the relevant ethical approvals were obtained according to national law. The results showed that in terms of the "Managers" dimension, participants working in Greek hospitals (4.30 ± 0.73) had a higher score compared to the Cyprus participants (3.66 ± 0.93) (t = -5.777, p ≤ 0.001). The perceptions of nurses working in oncology units in Greece regarding the ethical climate were more positive compared to Cyprus (M = 3.67 for Greece and M = 3.53 for Cyprus, p ≤ 0.001). Nurses with a higher level of education had a lower average ethical climate score across all dimensions. All dimensions exhibit positive and moderate to high correlations between them (r = 0.414-0.728, p < 0.01). It is imperative to evaluate and improve the hospital ethical climate that prevails in each cancer care department. This highlights the fact that nurses working in seemingly similar cultural and organizational contexts might still have different perceptions of the ethical climate. Despite these differences, it is necessary to create the right conditions to address ethical issues. A positive ethical climate requires good relationships between healthcare professionals and the presence of good teamwork in order to ensure better healthcare provision.
Guta, Adrian; Murray, Stuart J; Strike, Carol; Flicker, Sarah; Upshur, Ross; Myers, Ted
2017-01-01
Abstract In this paper, we extend Michel Foucault’s final works on the ‘care of the self’ to an empirical examination of research practice in community-based research (CBR). We use Foucault’s ‘morality of behaviors’ to analyze interview data from a national sample of Canadian CBR practitioners working with communities affected by HIV. Despite claims in the literature that ethics review is overly burdensome for non-traditional forms of research, our findings suggest that many researchers using CBR have an ambivalent but ultimately productive relationship with institutional research ethics review requirements. They understand and use prescribed codes, but adapt them in practice to account for the needs of participating community members, members of their research teams and the larger communities with whom they work. Complying with ethics protocols was seen as only the beginning, a minimum standard; our research suggests that the real ethical work happens in the field, where CBR practitioners encounter community members in diverse public roles and must forge ethical consensus across communities. CBR represents an ethical terrain in which practitioners challenge themselves to work differently, and as a result they care for themselves—and others—in ways that often resist the propensity for domination through public health research. ‘…there are different ways to “conduct oneself” morally, different ways for the acting individual to operate, not just as an agent, but as an ethical subject of action.’ (Foucault, 1985: 26) PMID:29731810
Emotions and Ethics: A Foucauldian Framework for becoming an Ethical Educator
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Niesche, Richard; Haase, Malcom
2012-01-01
This paper provides examples of how a teacher and a principal construct their "ethical selves". In doing so we demonstrate how Foucault's four-part ethical framework can be a scaffold with which to actively connect emotions to a personal ethical position. We argue that ethical work is and should be an ongoing and dynamic life long process rather…
Being Ethically Minded: Practising the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in an Ethical Manner
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Healey, Ruth L.; Bass, Tina; Caulfield, Jay; Hoffman, Adam; McGinn, Michelle K.; Miller-Young, Janice; Haigh, Martin
2013-01-01
The authors propose a working definition of ethical Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL), advance an ethical framework for SoTL inquiry, and present a case study that illustrates the complexity of ethical issues in SoTL. The Ethical SoTL Matrix is a flexible framework designed to support SoTL practitioners, particularly in the formative…
Think Locally, Act Globally? The Transnationalization of Canadian Resource-Use Conflicts.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Barker, Mary L.; Soyez, Dietrich
1994-01-01
Describes the reversal of the strategy to "think globally, act locally," whereby environmentalists and indigenous peoples of Canada, protesting environmentally unsound practices, have taken their protests to the countries most related to those practices. Issues discussed include logging in British Columbia, the James Bay hydroelectric…
77 FR 20648 - Filing of Plats of Survey: California
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-04-05
... Plats of Survey: California AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior. ACTION: Notice. SUMMARY: The plats of survey and supplemental plats of lands described below are scheduled to be officially filed in... required payment. Protest: A person or party who wishes to protest a survey must file a notice that they...
76 FR 49785 - Filing of Plats of Survey: California
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-08-11
... Plats of Survey: California AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior. ACTION: Notice. SUMMARY: The plats of survey and supplemental plats of lands described below are scheduled to be officially filed in... 95825, upon required payment. Protest: A person or party who wishes to protest a survey must file a...
76 FR 76179 - Filing of Plats of Survey: California
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-12-06
... Plats of Survey: California AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior. ACTION: Notice. SUMMARY: The plats of survey and supplemental plats of lands described below are scheduled to be officially filed in... required payment. Protest: A person or party who wishes to protest a survey must file a notice that they...
77 FR 7180 - Filing of Plats of Survey: California
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-02-10
... Plats of Survey: California AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior. ACTION: Notice. SUMMARY: The plats of survey and supplemental plats of lands described below are scheduled to be officially filed in... required payment. Protest: A person or party who wishes to protest a survey must file a notice that they...
77 FR 34401 - Filing of Plats of Survey: California
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-06-11
... of Survey: California AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior. ACTION: Notice. SUMMARY: The plats of survey of lands described below are scheduled to be officially filed in the Bureau of Land... who wishes to protest a survey must file a notice that they wish to protest with the California State...