scholarly journals ANALYSIS OF ACCESS TO LEGAL PROFESSIONS OF PUBLIC TRUST IN POLAND IN 2010-2017

10.23856/3101 ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (6) ◽  
pp. 11-18
Author(s):  
Jacek Wiatrowski ◽  
Anna Nowicka

The profession of a lawyer, notary or legal adviser is commonly perceived as a profession of special significance for society, and also as a public service for the protection of higher-order goods such as the social order of the rights of individual freedom, health, life or personal or social property. Ethical values during the performance of these professions, detailed standards of professional ethics, observance of the rules of diligence and professional secrecy are some of the attributes of these professions that make them professionals of a special character in the social dimension - these are jobs endowed with a huge loan of social trust.

2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 132-149
Author(s):  
Marya I. Cherepanova ◽  
Svetlana G. Maximova ◽  
Sydysmaa A. Saryglar

The scientific significance of studying security problems in regional societies is determined by the need to reveal its actual components. Such complex indicator as social capital includes basic indicators of the functioning of civil society: social responsibility, activity, civic initiative, etc. The social capital formed in society induces generalized trust. At the same time, institutional trust contributes to the legitimization of legal and political institutions. The purpose of this article is to describe the social mechanism of interdependence of components of social capital and generalized trust that form a sense of security in the region. The article summarizes expert assessments that indicate heterogeneity of institutional systems, which are indicators of low coherence of the social order and form a low level of trust and, consequently, security in the Altai territory. It is concluded that for modern Russian society, as well as for its regions, the problem of regenerating generalized trust as a social background for optimizing post-industrial transformations is extremely significant. Stability of the active role of social institutions, the reproduction of spiritual values, such as the common good, inter-ethnic tolerance, social justice are among most important factors restoring social trust.


Author(s):  
Neil Michael Ayala

This review contributes to a deeper understanding of what quality of life means from a sustainable consumption perspective. Different motivations of consumers, and the contributions of the rich and poor to unsustainable patterns of consumption are presented. This paper opens the discussion around the complex relationship between consumption, values, identity and mechanisms for making purchase choices in a globalized context, and under the light of relevant literature. Smaller and more localized economic models are described as positive strategies for considering new ways of perceiving a simpler and more local lifestyle as positive to the environment. This paper emphasizes the importance of cultural and ethical values, which are directly linked to patters of consumption.


2021 ◽  
Vol 125 ◽  
pp. 01005
Author(s):  
Zoya Dmitrievna Denikina ◽  
Pirmagomed Shikhmagomedovich Shikhgafizov ◽  
Aleksandr Valentinovich Sablukov ◽  
Vyacheslav Leonidovich Primakov ◽  
Valery Aleksandrovich Lapshov

The article examines the epistemological status of the phenomenon of social trust. The research purpose is to explicate the concept of trust in connection with the fundamental transformation of socio-historical practice and social knowledge. The priority methodological task is to study the problem within the framework of the system methodology evolution and consider the parameters of trust in the intervals of non-classical and post-non-classical systems analysis. The study is based on a philosophical-scientific paradigm approach. Epistemological situations of autonomous and conventional application of different paradigms are modeled in the study of the phenomenon of social trust. In non-classical systems analysis, social trust is an internal characteristic of a society-system in the mode of its correct functioning. Social trust is one of the social order mechanisms. Social trust is also associated with subjective trust, ordering the interaction of subjects. Intersubjective interactions entail the legitimation of the social order. The transformation of social trust in the modern world is associated with trends in the reduction of the role of normativity, the fragmentation of socio-historical existence. There appears augmented reality, which contains to a certain extent the elements of pseudo-being. Subjective social trust can no longer support holistic meanings. In a situation of change in epistemological attitudes to determine the specifics of social trust, a systems analysis of weakly and highly non-equilibrium states of the intersystem environment is promising. Social order formulas are still inadequate for modeling intersystem environmental states (relations between states, blocs, unions, etc.). Within the framework of the post-non-classical systemic methodology, social trust refers to the signs of social holism. Social trust contributes to the emergence of stable intersystem conditions, the formation of a regulatory environment, which becomes an acting unit. Social trust in all philosophical-scientific paradigms is indicative of the rationality of social-historical existence.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 101-115
Author(s):  
Kostas Kolomvatsos ◽  
Maria Kalouda ◽  
Panagiota Papadopoulou ◽  
Stathes Hadjiefthymiades

Pervasive computing applications involve the interaction between autonomous entities for performing complex tasks and producing knowledge. Autonomous entities can interact to exchange data and knowledge to fulfil applications requirements. Intelligent Agents (IAs) ‘activated’ in various devices offer a lot of advantages when representing such entities due to their autonomous nature that enables them to perform the desired tasks in a distributed way. However, in such open and dynamic environments, IAs should be based on an efficient mechanism for trusting unknown entities when exchanging data. The trust level of an entity should be automatically calculated based on an efficient methodology. Each entity is uncertain for the characteristics and the intentions of the others. Fuzzy Logic (FL) seems to be the appropriate tool for handling such kind of uncertainty. In this paper, we present a model for trust calculation under the principles of FL. Our scheme takes into consideration the social dimension of trust as well as personal experiences of entities before they decide interactions with an IA. The proposed model is a two-level system involving three FL sub-systems to calculate (a) the social trust (based on experiences retrieved by the community), (b) the individual trust (based on personal experiences) and (c) the final trust. We present our results by evaluating the proposed system compared to other models and reveal its significance.


2020 ◽  
pp. 239965442095766
Author(s):  
Caroline Patsias

In this reflection, through observation of citizen participation in several local Montreal municipal councils, I examine whether and how people discuss environmental issues. More specifically, I seek to determine whether the politicization of environmental issues favours the expression of environmental justice. I use this term to refer to the social dimension of environmental questions, given that people of different social classes or identities are not affected by environmental issues in the same way. Does the politicization of environmental issues reproduce an unjust social order or does it encourage the struggle against inequalities? The answer reached here underlines the predominance of politicization through the challenging of democratic processes rather than a substantive politicization (where citizens debate the content of issues and discuss values or identities), which hinders the emergence of environmental justice. This study makes two contributions. First, it points out that, beyond conflict, addressing the avenues that conflict takes is vital. Second, while most analyses consider environmental justice within civil society organizations and on the “margins”, this reflection tackles environmental justice within institutions themselves, namely the favoured places of production of social norms. Apprehending the role of institutions in the politicization of environmental issues is, thus, crucial to highlighting some aspects of social framing and the place of environmental issues in society.


Author(s):  
Olga Sitarz

The purpose of this publication is to systematize the present ethical problems relating to transplantation and to confront them with penal legislation, from which norms prohibiting certain types of conduct with regard to transplantations may be derived. The starting point for the analysis is a consideration of the fundamental ethical values required both in the treatment process as such and in transplantation in particular (principle of respect for autonomy, nonmaleficence, benevolence, and justice). Therefore, the problem of admissibility of transplantology as such must be touched upon, along with its tenets and preconditions and, most importantly, with commercialization of the organs intended for transplantation. In the Polish legal system, transplantation is regulated by the 2005 Act on the Removal, Storage and Transplantation of Cells, Tissues and Organs. The Act is a specific Polish response to the doubts and dilemmas relating to transplantation. In this context, special significance attaches to the penal provisions which impose liability for transplantation-related crimes. It is noteworthy that criminalization of paid activities relating to transplantation has a rather complex and specific history. It follows from the evolving evaluation of the social harmfulness of prohibited acts, which in itself gives rise to certain controversies. There are also doubts as regards the object of protection of some crime definitions and the scope of criminalization.


1979 ◽  
Vol 24 (5) ◽  
pp. 459-470 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Collomb

There is an imperialist dimension in occidental science; for instance, mental illnesses are defined and classified according to occidental criteria, which we in the western world tend to consider universal. In the medical model, reinforced by the developments of psychopharmacology, the sequence diagnosis — drugs — discharge tends to exclude the personal and social dimensions. Even the psychoanalytic approach does not get away from the concept of individual illness, and minimizes the social dimension of existence. In traditional African cultures, mental illness is integrated into social order and cosmic order. Each member of the culture has precise conceptual and operational models for the causes of the illness: the patient is the victim of an aggression, carried out by a living person or by a ghost, acting as representative of the law of the group. The social discourse, in particular, the healers, masks and reveals a deep and holistic truth: illness is the outcome of the characteristic and fundamental aggressiveness of the human species. The various representations, changing from one ethnic group to another, reflect two fundamental types of conflictual situations: conflict with the other, derived from the original conflict with the mother; and conflict with the law, which emanates not from the father but from the ancestors or the gods. A typical example is described: the Rab system used by the healers of Senegal. Man is not an isolated individual, perceiving his isolation, separated from the others and from the world. He is a link in a chain, very much part of a lineage, engaged in the universe, protected by the ancestors and the gods. Illness has a social value: it is a sign of a disorder in the community. The healer, whose knowledge and power have been acquired through initiation, does not address himself to the patient: his action, through symbolic procedures, is directed to the community. Not only does he aim at freeing the patient from the illness, but at restoring order in the group. African ethnopsychiatry is therefore a social psychiatry in the fullest sense. Occidental cultures have privileged other models: the medical model centered around the concept of illness, the psychological model around the concept of personality. The social model has not yet obtained the privileged place which it will perhaps reach once the essential importance of the social aspect of mental illness is recognized. These views have led the author to his action-research during twenty years of psychiatric practice and teaching in Senegal (1958–1978), where he found that the medical model as imported from France had proven inefficient. The Fann mental hospital, a cultural heritage of the colonial status, was changed from a closed asylum into a living community, open to families, friends, and former patients at any time of the day or night. A member of the family of each patient had to be hospitalized with him and to share the same life during his whole stay. All kinds of community activities were set out. A blurring of the roles of staff and patients took place. Slowly, madness, because of this liberal acceptance, disappeared from the institution. What has been possible in Africa cannot be achieved in Europe at the present. The pre-eminence of the medical model, the rigidity and hierarchy of the medical power, the heaviness and bureaucratic routines of the health care system are formidable obstacles.


2020 ◽  
pp. 49-87
Author(s):  
Kevin Vallier

This chapter draws on the extensive empirical literatures on trust in the social sciences in order to explore how to create and maintain social and political trust in the real world. The overall conclusion of this chapter is twofold. First, social and political trust are critical social achievements for sustaining a diverse social order, but social trust is more important than political trust. Second, liberal-democratic market institutions play a modest role in sustaining social trust, and a large role in sustaining political trust. We can conclude, then, that liberal democratic market societies are part of a positive causal feedback loop that sustains trusting social orders with diverse persons who disagree. That is how we get trust for the right reasons.


Author(s):  
Emre Rıfat Güpgüpoğlu

From the past to the present day, societies have established institutions to address their needs for social assistance, solidarity and security within their structures. Some social assistance and social security practices established in modern societies had been carried out by the foundation in Islamic societies in the past. In the Ottoman Empire, as in the Turkish-Islamic states, the foundation institution had played an essential role in the provision of the social order and the cooperation and solidarity of the society. The allocation of private property to the public service gives a social content to the property in question. The allocation of the wealth and income of the founders of the foundation to public service and transferring them to the persons belonging to the lower income group reveal the social function of the foundation. In this context, the main aim of the study is to reveal the function of the foundation institution in the context of social assistance, social solidarity and social security in the Ottoman Empire after first considering the definition, function and a short history of the foundation.


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