scholarly journals Features of planning of the studies of indoor air levels within the action plan implementation

2020 ◽  
pp. 26-33
Author(s):  
Pavlenko T.О. ◽  
◽  
Aksonov М.V. ◽  
Fryziuk M.A. ◽  
Operchuk A.P. ◽  
...  
2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-333
Author(s):  
Margaret Swarbrick ◽  
Patricia B. Nemec

Purpose: Psychiatric rehabilitation is recognized as a field with specialized knowledge and skills required for practice. The certified psychiatric rehabilitation practitioner (CPRP) credential, an exam-based certification process, is based on a regularly updated job task analysis that, in its most recent iteration, identified the new core competency domain of “supporting health and wellness.” This article explains the relevance of this domain to the current practice of psychiatric rehabilitation.Methods: We present a multidimensional foundation model of wellness that describes the job tasks highlighted in the newest CPRP competency domain and examines implications for rehabilitation educators and practitioners who do not hold the CPRP credential but still provide rehabilitation services to individuals with psychiatric disabilities.Results: The health and wellness competencies identified for CPRPs may not translate directly into competencies needed by service providers in other roles; however, practices that involve experiencing personal goal setting and action plan implementation, especially around wellness goals, can be included across service domains.Conclusion: Attending to the health and wellness of people with psychiatric disabilities is imperative. Rehabilitation practitioners who embrace the multidimensional foundation model of wellness can effectively provide services that are holistic and promote recovery and achievement of rehabilitation goals.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie Sherman ◽  
Marc Ancrenaz ◽  
Maria Voigt ◽  
Felicity Oram ◽  
Truly Santika ◽  
...  

Abstract. Sherman J, Ancrenaz M, Voigt M, Oram F, Santika T, Wich S, Meijaard E. 2020. Envisioning a future for Bornean orangutans: Conservation impacts of action plan implementation and recommendations for improved population outcomes. Biodiversitas 21: 465-477. Populations of the Critically Endangered Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) are declining despite more than 10 years of conservation action plan implementation. Here we analyzed the impacts on species' population and habitat from orangutan conservation strategies implemented between 2007 and 2017. We also assessed data on investments into orangutan conservation, orangutan population trends and landcover change in orangutan range between 2007 and 2017. Diverse strategies addressed the range of threats to orangutans but were not implemented at scales that impacted species’ level populations and habitats. Since 2007 orangutan populations and forests across orangutan range have declined, with orangutan killing and deforestation as the major drivers of loss. Protected areas have increased since 2007, notably in Malaysian range states and in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia. However, 80% or tens of thousands of orangutans live outside protected areas in Kalimantan alone. Our results underscore scientific findings that have demonstrated this species’ resiliency and modified previous understanding of their habitat use. Orangutans are regularly found using agriculture landscapes (acacia, oil palm, and timber plantations), and exploited forests. This plasticity must be considered to design more effective orangutan conservation strategies. We need to revise the notion of “orangutan habitat” to extend beyond forests alone, incorporating all landscapes where P. pygmaeus can be found. Orangutans cannot survive in exclusively monoculture production areas; they need some natural forest to fulfill their ecological requirements. However, individuals surviving in isolated forest patches or mosaic landscapes play an important role in sustaining the long-term viability of the local metapopulation through provision of crucial genetic, reproductive and socioecological connectivity. Our findings suggest removing these individuals through translocations weakens overall metapopulation health. All necessary efforts must be made to maintain individuals in isolated forest patches or mosaic landscapes in order to support healthy metapopulations. Improved orangutan population outcomes will require addressing habitat connectivity at the landscape level, incorporating both non-forested and anthropogenically modified areas, and developing efficient management strategies for human and orangutan co-existence within these multiple-use landscapes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 501-524
Author(s):  
E Siong Tee ◽  
◽  
Rodolfo F Florentino ◽  
Hardinsyah Hardinsyah ◽  
Ismail Mohd Noor ◽  
...  

This review describes national plans of action for nutrition (NPANs) in six Southeast Asia countries (Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam) in order to provide an understanding of the approach and framework undertaken by these countries in the formulation and implementation of NPANs, as well as the similarities and differences in various NPAN components. The six countries recognised the persistent undernutrition and escalating rates of obesity and other diet-related chronic diseases as the key drivers for nutrition action plan implementation. The prioritisation of nutrition interventions outlined in these NPANs are based on respective country context and needs. Although differing in strategies and targets set, these countries show similarities in several components including objectives, stakeholder involvement, nutritional issues to be addressed, implementation, monitoring and evaluation mechanism, programme/ activities identified and challenges in implementing NPANs. Countries have recognised that effective implementation, monitoring and evaluation are essential to successfully address both extremes of the challenging nutrition situation. Several important similarities in the NPANs studied suggest that closer collaboration among countries and stakeholders on NPANs would be beneficial. Opportunities should be created for periodic exchanges to enable sharing of experiences in the development and implementation of NPANs among the countries. Recommendations and conclusions drawn from this review could serve as useful reference for nutrition policy and planning in the future.


Author(s):  
Mahaveer Golechha ◽  
Dileep Mavalankar ◽  
Subhash Chander Bhan

2020 ◽  
pp. 221-234
Author(s):  
Volodymyr KOROL ◽  
Oksana NEBYLTSOVA

The article comprises comparative law analysis findings of the tax legislation of Ukraine novelties relating to controlled foreign companies coming into effect on January 1, 2021 in the context of provisions of the Council Directive (EU) 2016/1164 of 12 July 2016 laying down rules against tax avoidance practices that directly affect the functioning of the internal market which is effective as of January 1, 2019. The special consideration is given to the types and levels of control necessary and sufficient for qualifying foreign companies as controlled by residents, respectively, Ukraine or EU Member States required by the Tax Code of Ukraine and above-mentioned EU legislative act. In particular, it’s discovered that Ukrainian lawmakers introduced not just legal and economic control but also factual to be provided by residents-related persons. Alongside with that, the peculiarities of concentrated ownership concept, implemented within Ukrainian tax legislation modernized, are examined in depth. It’s highlighted key differences from two models described within OECD Final Report on Action 3 BEPS Project the most commonly used in the world resulting from accepting and integrating just separate elements of each of them. It’s researched both common aspects and differences between Ukrainian and EU’ approaches with regard to passive income which shall be attributed to controlled foreign companies’ controlling parties proportionally to their shares as well as substantive analysis allowing CFC rules non-application. Attention is focused on de-minimis requirements reasonableness and fairness stipulating non-inclusion of CFC’s certain share of income to the taxable income of the residents of Ukraine under the condition that the total revenues of all of the controlled foreign companies from all sources of one controlling party, either legal or physical person, are within limits of 2 million Euro per year. Comparative analysis provided affords ground for conclusion that legislative model relating to controlled foreign companies implemented by Ukraine is stricter significantly then EU’s one. It determines the risks of tax avoidance new tactics and strategies implementation by domestic taxpayers. Keywords: tax avoidance, controlled foreign company, tax burden, passive income, substantial activity, BEPS.


Author(s):  
Douglas Pritchard ◽  
Thomas Rigauts ◽  
Francesco Ripanti ◽  
Marinos Ioannides ◽  
Raffaella Brumana ◽  
...  

Following the action plan implementation of the Virtual Multimodal Museum (ViMM) project, which finished in March 2019, the European Commission issued a Declaration on Cooperation on Advancing Digitisation of Cultural Heritage during the Digital Day in April 2019. One year later, in April 2020, the European Commission (EC) launched a call for tenders to develop a Study on quality in 3D digitisation of tangible cultural heritage (the Study), thus responding to the increasing demand for internationally recognised standards for the holistic 3D documentation of Europe’s rich cultural heritage (CH). To address this lack of standards, the Study aims to map parameters, formats, standards, benchmarks, methodologies and guidelines, relating to 3D digitisation of tangible cultural heritage, to the different potential purposes or uses, by type of tangible cultural heritage, and by degree of complexity of tangible cultural heritage. A team of researchers at the Cyprus University of Technology (CUT) is leading a consortium of partners from industry and academia across Europe to conduct this unique Study. This work in progress paper introduces the objectives and methodology of the Study, as well as presenting some of its first results.


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