Media advocacy for alcohol policy support: results from the New Zealand Community Action Project

1993 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 167-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
LIZ STEWART ◽  
SALLY CASSWELL
Author(s):  
Ralph Chapman ◽  
◽  
Lucia Sobiecki ◽  

New Zealand’s sprawling urban development and high levels of car dependency have resulted in significant environmental impacts, including increased carbon emissions and pollution. Car sharing can support sustainable transport patterns by offering an alternative to private vehicle ownership. Internationally, it has become increasingly popular but is still in the early stages of development in New Zealand. A survey of 356 Wellington residents and interviews with 13 car share stakeholders collected data on interest in car sharing and barriers facing the service in New Zealand’s capital. The results suggest that car sharing could become an important mobility option in Wellington and further policy support for car sharing could enable Wellington to take full advantage of its benefits.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lorra Garey ◽  
Mark A. Prince ◽  
Kate B. Carey

Author(s):  
Federico D. Uicich ◽  
Paola F. Salinas

In this article we describe the community action project that is being developed, since 2017, between the Escuela Argentina de Negocios (EAN) and School N°10 in Martinez, Province of Buenos Aires, Argentina. The objective of the project is to provide a soc ial service by teaching digital tools to the teachers, in order to enable them to self manage and independently use various digital technologies resources for teaching. To achieve its learning objectives, the project takes place every four months with stud ents from the Bachelor's degree in Human Factor Management, specifically students enrolled in the Computer Science and Applied Educational Technology modules, who are then trained in the field by leading the training sessions at the school.


1999 ◽  
Vol 26 (10) ◽  
pp. 584-589 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheana S. Bull ◽  
Cornelis Rietmeijer ◽  
Dennis J. Fortenberry ◽  
Bradley Stoner ◽  
Kevin Malotte ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (272) ◽  
Author(s):  
Geoffrey Bannister ◽  
Harald Finger ◽  
Yosuke Kido ◽  
Siddharth Kothari ◽  
Elena Loukoianova

While the world is focused on addressing the near-term ramifications of the COVID-19 shock, we turn attention to another important aspect of the pandemic: its fallout on medium-term potential output through scarring. Taking Australia and New Zealand as examples, we show that the pandemic will likely have a large and persistent impact on potential output, broadly in line with the experience of advanced economies from past recessions. The impact is driven by employment, capital stock, and productivity losses in the wake of an unprecedented sectoral reallocation, hightened uncertainty, and reduced migration. Maintaining fiscal and monetary policy support until the recovery is firmly entrenched and putting in place a strong structural policy agenda to counter the pandemic’s adverse effects on medium-term potential output will be important to support standards of living and strengthen economic resilience in case of renewed shocks.


Author(s):  
Kypros Kypri ◽  
Brett Maclennan ◽  
Jennie Connor

Background: We estimated the change in the prevalence of harms attributed by students to their drinking and to others’ drinking, over a decade of concerted effort by university authorities to reduce antisocial behaviour and improve student safety. Interventions included a security and liaison service, a stricter code of conduct, challenges to liquor license applications near campus, and a ban on alcohol advertising. Methods: We used a pre-post design adjusting for population changes. We invited all students residing in colleges of a New Zealand University to complete web surveys in 2004 and 2014, using identical methods. We estimated change in the 4-week prevalence of 15 problems and harms among drinkers, and nine harms from others’ drinking among all respondents. We adjusted for differences in sample sociodemographic characteristics between surveys. Results: Among drinkers there were reductions in several harms, the largest being in acts of vandalism (7.1% to 2.7%), theft (11% to 4.5%), and physical aggression (10% to 5.3%). Among all respondents (including non-drinkers), there were reductions in unwanted sexual advances (14% to 8.9%) and being the victim of sexual assault (1.0% to 0.4%). Conclusion: Alcohol-related harm, including the most serious outcomes, decreased substantially among college residents in this period of alcohol policy reform. In conjunction with evidence of reduced drinking to intoxication in this population, the findings suggest that strategies to reduce the availability and promotion of alcohol on and near campus can substantially reduce the incidence of health and social harms.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. van der Sar ◽  
E. E. Storvoll ◽  
E. P. M. Brouwers ◽  
L. A. M. van de Goor ◽  
J. Rise ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
pp. 123-152
Author(s):  
Erika Hanna

Chapter 4 explores community photography and the new radicalism it brought to amateur photographic practice during the 1970s. This movement, begun in London and disseminated through the pages of Camerawork magazine, propounded the potential of photography as a form of collective action which could bring communities together and empower individuals. Through groups such as the Shankill Photographic Workshop, Derry Camerawork, and the NorthCentre City Community Action Project, activists taught photography to community organizations, as well as prisoners, the unemployed, and women’s groups. This new form of photographic activism served a variety of functions. It was a form of practice that brought people together and taught unemployed and demoralized residents of the inner-city skills and self-respect. It enabled communities that had become the object of a media gaze which turned their lives into stereotypes to create representations of themselves, which they felt more accurately reflected the reality of their lives. In these evening classes and dark rooms, photography became a mechanism of raising consciousness and building communal cohesion. Moreover, it provided a way of making sense of the agglomeration of power, class, and gaze which rendered the lives of the unemployed, or inner-city residents only as ‘types’, and so provided these new photographers with a way of critiquing—if not resisting—these processes.


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