Crime in London Hotels

2002 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Jones ◽  
Karen Groenenboom

There is a considerable literature on tourism and crime, with an emphasis on the tourist as victim. This study attempts to identify aspects of criminal behaviour in which the tourist may be the perpetrator of crime and hotels may be the victim. This paper presents findings on the key issues of hotel crime as described by the security managers of eight large, five-star London hotels. Respondents were asked to discuss the types of crime they have experienced during their careers as hotel security managers, along with their modus operandi and their frequency. The security managers also indicated if there were any seasonal trends that they could identify and how the hotel environment influences the nature of crime in hotels. This exploratory study suggests that hotel crime is different from tourist crime, and identifies factors that may influence level and type of crime in hotels.

2005 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 134-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary P. Corcoran

This paper reports on an exploratory study conducted with non-resident fathers, to elucidate the key issues affecting the development and maintenance of a fathering role after a relationship has ended. In particular, the paper focuses on the contingent nature of fatherhood for young marginalised men in Dublin. The extent to which fathers identify with a fathering role is explored and comparisons are drawn between the experiences of estranged, committed and activist fathers. Key factors that militate against fathers maintaining an active role in their children's lives are identified. The paper concludes that while the experiences of fatherhood vary across different categories of fathers, the majority of them aspire toward and value their fathering role. However, their capacity to adopt a positive fathering role is affected by a range of institutional, economic and social barriers.


Author(s):  
Sonia de Sa

Feminist movements are currently asserting themselves by the capacity of involvement and aggregation of activists and the public identified with the feminist cause, who have in common both the struggle for women's rights and the spaces where they create existence and attribute dimension to that struggle: digital social networks. The purpose of this article is to understand the communication strategies, supported by dialogue, that underlie this aggregation and sharing of meaning when it comes to feminism and its close connection with the fight for gender equality, the end of gender violence or the eradication of racism. Based on the theoretical review on networked PR (Grunig, 2009; Kent, 2017), networked dialogue (Theunissen & Wan Noordin, 2011; Smith & Taylor, 2017; and networked feminism (Fullagar, Parry and Johnson, 2019; Keller, Mendes & Ringrose, 2018; Araüna, Willem & Tortajada, 2019; Yang, Uysal & Taylor, 2017), we applied content analysis (Bardin, 2006) to publications and digital interactions on two Portuguese feminist platforms. Thus, in an adaptation of the model proposed by Lane and Kent (2018) - Dialogic Engagement Interaction - this exploratory study analyzes the dialogical involvement of Coletiva and INMUNE - Instituto da Mulher Negra de Portugal. The analysis results, however, shows a low level of dialogical involvement between organizations and their audiences and, consequently, a reduced collective force to stop online hate clusters with increasing protagonism and with highly technological and effective modus operandi. Thus, the outcomes indicate that the two platforms analyzed do not apply communication strategies through dialogue, limiting exchanges between the organization and the public to the classic top-down communication option, summarizing the practice of dialogical involvement in social digital media to the publication unidirectional content and openness to comments and other reactions. As for the hypotheses raised, only one of them was validated, taking into account that 1) there was no significant dialogical involvement in the content analysis of the two feminist platforms, and 2) although we were unable to verify in the content analysis of the two feminist platforms, the theoretical review validated the idea that online anti-feminist and hate clusters can be fought by online anti-feminist and anti-hate clusters with the same effectiveness in spreading messages as the former. And here, the networked PR must take the strategic and tactical leadership of the action. This work also proposes a model for the analysis of dialogical involvement in digital social networks based on the broader initial proposal of Lane and Kent (2018). The model we propose comprises six categories: 1) existence of comment(s), sharing(s) and / or emoji(s); 2) existence of comment(s) and answer(s); 3) existence of dialogue (with the five dialogical principles: mutuality, propinquity, empathy, risk and commitment; see in Kent, 2017).; 4) existence of freedom to choose the theme and the dialogical flow (when both parts – public and organization – are given freedom to choose the topic and flow of dialogue); 5) without agenda or manipulation (when there is no intention to put issues on the agenda, essentially, those that indicate manipulation); and 6) rhetorical (when a persuasion strategy is applied by both parts participating in the dialogue).


Author(s):  
Imran Muhammad ◽  
Manuel Zwicker ◽  
Nilmini Wickramasinghe

Globally in healthcare, the focus is on designing and implementing national e-health solutions in an attempt to address key challenges that are plaguing healthcare delivery. However, despite the initial euphoria and notwithstanding the significant investments made, to date, many of these e-health solutions have yet to prove their success or have been complete failures. This paper presents the findings from an exploratory study that examined e-health initiatives in five countries Australia, China, Germany, UK and US to understand why these e-health solutions have not as yet delivered the promised results. The paper proffers Actor-Network Theory (ANT) as an appropriately rich theoretical lens that can be used to assist in the understanding of key issues for successful e-health solutions.


2003 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 94-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison Whitehead

This study aimed to develop an understanding of occupational therapy students' experiences of violent attack by a client. A qualitative approach was chosen, which involved semi-structured interviews with three students and an analysis of the researcher's experience of violent attack. A wide variety of reactions to violent attack by a client was reported, including fear, anger, concern for others, minimisation and thoughts about changing career. The explanations for these reactions are reported and discussed. The participants reported changes in their therapeutic relationships with clients. The findings also suggested that there might be some occupational therapy personnel who feel that violence is ‘part of the job’. Three key issues are discussed: the nature of the reactions to violent attack, the perceptions of role and the therapeutic relationship with the client. It is suggested that these findings have important implications for the education and training and the support of occupational therapy students. Recommendations are made regarding the need for further research to inform the way forward in training and supporting those experiencing violence in clinical practice settings.


Author(s):  
Madhavan Lakshmi Raghavan ◽  
Mauro M. Hanaoka ◽  
Jarin A. Kratzberg ◽  
Maria de Lourdes Higuchi ◽  
Erasmo Simao da Silva

Rupture of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a poorly understood phenomenon. Some aneurysms rupture as they grow larger, while many very large ones do not. There have been numerous reports on the failure properties of unruptured AAA [1], but similar data on ruptured AAA is scarce. Some reports suggest that greater pressure-induced tension in the AAA wall may predispose some to rupture [1]. But what of failure properties? It is conceivable that aneurysms which rupture are globally weaker than ones that do not or perhaps have very localized weak spots. Such key issues have not been explored because of lack of specimens from ruptured AAA. In this exploratory study between clinical and engineering investigators, unruptured and ruptured AAA were wholly harvested from fresh cadavers and the regional variations in wall thickness, mechanical properties and cellular content were compared.


BMJ Open ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (10) ◽  
pp. e005550 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda Begley ◽  
Kathy Pritchard-Jones ◽  
Maurice Biriotti ◽  
Anna Kydd ◽  
Tim Burdsey ◽  
...  

ObjectiveIn spite of considerable attention, patients diagnosed with cancer continue to report poor experiences of care. The root causes of this remain unclear. This exploratory study aimed to investigate new ways of understanding the experience of patients with cancer, using a literary-based research approach.DesignInterviews were undertaken with four patients diagnosed with high-grade brain cancers at least 6 months from diagnosis and with people (n=5) identified by the patients as important in their care pathway. Interview transcripts were analysed by humanities academics as pieces of literature, where each patient's story was told from more than one person's perspective. The academics then came together in a facilitated workshop to agree major themes within the patient experiences. The themes were presented at a patient and carer event involving 70 participants to test the validity of the insights.ResultsInsights into the key issues for patients with cancer could be grouped into six themes: accountability; identity; life context; time; language; rigour and emotion. Patients often held a different perspective to the traditionally held medical views of what constitutes good care. For example, patients did not see any conflict between a doctor having scientific rigour and portraying emotion.ConclusionsOne key feature of the approach was its comparative nature: patients often held different views from those traditionally held by physicians of what constitutes health and good outcomes. This revealed aspects that may be considered by healthcare professionals when designing improvements. Proposals for further testing are discussed, with a particular emphasis on the need for sensitivity to individual differences in experiences.


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