The book, the stories, the people: an ongoing dialogic narrative inquiry study combining a practice development project. Part 1: the research context

2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (9) ◽  
pp. 844-851 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. GRANT ◽  
F. C. BILEY ◽  
H. LEIGH-PHIPPARD ◽  
H. WALKER
2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Jo Odell ◽  

I chose to write about patient stories as a key influence in my work because of my personal experience of using these. This experience has inspired me to encourage and enable others to use this approach to help them understand better the people they are caring for and their experiences of healthcare. Being introduced to patient stories I was introduced to the idea of patient stories when I was a participant on the Gerontological Nurse Development Programme in 2002. This three year practice development project, a collaboration between the Royal College of Nursing (RCN), the University of Portsmouth and the local acute and community older persons’ services, was aimed at developing nurses and their practices. The RCN facilitator I was working with encouraged me to ask patients I was caring for some unusual questions such as, ‘tell me about your life’ and ‘what prevents you doing what you want to do?’ By listening to the responses I was able to start moving from seeing the patient in one dimension to seeing the whole person living in the context of their family and community, not just their medical condition. Subsequently, I wrote about my experience and the learning I gained from this simple but powerful experience (Odell, 2004). As a result, I started to invite nurses I was working with to ask their patients the same questions as I had used. For example, I was mentoring a student nurse who had assessed an older person on admission to the community hospital. I asked the nurse to return to the patient the following day and ask questions about her life and likes and dislikes, as opposed to the standard medically oriented questions we traditionally ask. The nurse told me that doing so had enabled her to learn more about the person she was caring for and therefore to care for her in a more individualised way.


Author(s):  
Steve Clarke

In philosophical terms, a key issue of communities of practice (CoPs) can be located within one of the key philosophical debates. The need for CoPs is traceable to the inadequacy in certain contexts of the so-called scientific or problem-solving method, which treats problems as independent of the people engaged on them. Examples of this can be drawn from the management domains of information systems development, project management, planning, and many others. In information systems development, for example, the whole basis of traditional systems analysis and design requires such an approach. In essence, in undertaking problem solving, the world is viewed as though it is made up of hard, tangible objects, which exist independently of human perception and about which knowledge may be accumulated by making the objects themselves the focus of our study. A more human-centered approach would, by contrast, see the world as interpreted through human perceptions: the reason why the problem cannot be solved is precisely because it lacks the objective reality required for problem solving. In taking this perspective, it may or may not be accepted that there exists a real world “out there”, but in any event, the position adopted is that our world can be known only through the perceptions of human participants. This question of objective reality is one with which philosophers have struggled for at least 2,500 years, and an understanding of it is essential to determining the need for, and purpose of, CoPs. The next section therefore discusses some of the philosophical issues relevant to the subjective-objective debate: a search for what, in these terms, it is possible for us to know and how we might know it.


2018 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
pp. S44
Author(s):  
Louise Luscri ◽  
Michelle De Vroome ◽  
Maralyn Foureur ◽  
Sarah Winter

2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 104
Author(s):  
Af’idatul Lathifah ◽  
Lydia Christianti

ONE -- of the infrastructure development project was a port that has been done by the government of Indonesia, Sadeng Beach Fishery Port, in Girisubo District Gunung Kidul Regency, Yogyakarta. The emergence of ports in the area of Sadeng Beach Gunung Kidul brought changes to the community around Sadeng Beach area, considering the population in the area is not a fishing area. This research is an ethnographic research, within the researchers directly involved in various community activities in PPP Sadeng. Initially, the government brought fishermen from Gombong regency, Central Java to initiate the operation of the port. The construction of the harbor at Sadeng Beach is a government effort to improve the economy of the people around Sadeng Beach. However, the construction of ports in the middle of the farming community brings the consequences of socio-economic changes in the community around Sadeng Beach, especially the changes in the economic pattern of farmers to fisherman and the emergence of various types of fishermen in PPP Sadeng, the social cohesion changed among the community including the local fishermen with newcomers, and the emergence of new traditions.


2018 ◽  
Vol I (I) ◽  
pp. 12-18
Author(s):  
Aftab Alam ◽  
Iqra Jathol

CPEC offers Pakistan an prospect to address frequent of the economic and political issues troubling the country. If Islamabad and Beijing do not guarantee Balochi companies and workers play a famous role, it could jeopardize China's premeditated gains and Pakistan's most significant development project ever. Pakistan's government cannot afford to fuel further the anger and estrangement in this province. Baluchis must have a wager in CPEC's accomplishment. If CPEC is an implemented in a way that includes Baluchis in its rewards, (through obligation of funds for development and hiring Balochi companies and workers) CPEC has the impending to pull the province out of deficiency and calm the antigovernment anger. CPEC can be a game changer for Pakistan and China, but only if it is first a game changer for Baluchistan. For a state like Pakistan, which faces severe economic and political challenges, CPEC can establish to be a wildcard which will provide a big opportunity to soothe its economy while refining associations with its neighbors and by making Gwadar a trade and economic hub of the region. For an unbalanced economy of Pakistan, the passageway will offer a solution to its troubles and will open new horizons of development by improving socioeconomic conditions of the people and by elevating their quality of life. Many Special Economic Zones are conceived to be established in Punjab, Gilgit-Baltistan, KPK, Baluchistan, and Sindh. This will eventually bring prosperity with the speculation from the budding international investors and will help Pakistan drive its economic expansion. In ultimate remarks it is said that the project of this passageway is the "game change" in this region, it would be accomplished for the affluence of this region.


2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 700
Author(s):  
Yogi Zul Fadhli

Judicial review as an extraordinary legal effort has constitutionally regulated by Indonesian law. However, in the administrative court, related with the dispute of location determination for the public interest, judicial review is dispensed by the Article 19 of Supreme Court Regulation No. 2 of 2016. Those article is unconstitutional because theoretically contrary with the Constitution of Indonesia and disharmonious in the types, hierarchy and substantive of the proportionality principle. Thus, human rights violation is rising especially for the people that being victims of land grabbing of development project for the public interest and disorganize of the system procedures in administrative court.


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