The role of the primary caregiver with girls’ participation in sport and leisure in socially vulnerable communities in Colombia

Author(s):  
Sarah Oxford
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristhian David Morales-Plaza

Guarantee better clinical practices among clinicians who attend NTDs in developing countries as well as provide education in vector control in hotspot vulnerable communities


Author(s):  
Munmun De Choudhury

Social media platforms have emerged as rich repositories of information relating to people’s activities, emotions, and linguistic expression. This chapter highlights how these data may be harnessed to reason about human mental and psychological well-being. It also discusses the emergent role of social media in providing a platform of self-disclosure and support to distressed and vulnerable communities. It reflects on how this new line of research bears potential for informing the design of timely and tailored interventions, provisions for improved personal and societal well-being assessment, privacy and ethical considerations, and the challenges and opportunities of the increasing ubiquity of social media.


2005 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karla Lever ◽  
Jennifer J. Wilson
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
pp. 329-350
Author(s):  
Douglas Jutte

This chapter introduces the community development sector, an extensive network of financially skilled institutions and members that work collectively to reduce poverty in underserved and under-resourced communities by addressing social and structural determinants of health. Offering innovative and sizeable financial opportunities to invest and improve vulnerable communities, this sector shares a common mission to improve health, generates economic growth, and catalyzes and sustains multi-sector partnerships for population health improvements. The chapter adds some narrative on personal expertise as a funder at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and describes how they have gotten involved with Community Development Financial Institutions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebastian Aparicio ◽  
David Audretsch ◽  
David Urbano

AbstractBuilding upon institutional economics, we examine how social progress orientation (SPO) affects inclusive growth through innovative and opportunity entrepreneurship. Hypotheses about civic activism, voluntary spirit, and the inclusion of minorities as proxies of SPO that affect entrepreneurship directly and inclusive growth indirectly have been suggested. Using unbalanced panel data of 132 observations (63 countries) and the three-stage least-squares method (3SLS), we provide empirical evidence that these three measures of SPO significantly affect innovative and opportunity entrepreneurship. Interestingly, our endogenous measures of entrepreneurial activity have served to explain inclusive growth, which is observed through poverty reduction across countries. Public policies should focus on social values oriented to progress in order to stimulate valuable entrepreneurial activity and hence facilitate economic development that also embraces vulnerable communities.


Author(s):  
LAURA EPHRAIM

Drawing critical resources from Hannah Arendt, this article argues for a revaluation of the appearances of nature in environmental political theory and practice. At a time when pervasive anthropogenic contamination threatens the very survival of vulnerable communities and species, it would be wrong to revive the timeworn mythos of nature as an untrammeled beauty. Instead, with Arendt’s help, I advocate an environmental politics rooted in an alternative aesthetic of nature, one that respects and seeks to protect earth’s diverse lifeforms for the sake of their strange, disquieting appearances of otherness. Earth’s living displays of alterity are valuable, I argue, for their propensity to upset the destructive logic of mass production and consumption and spur political action. In an Arendtian frame, we can better recognize interdependence between biological and political life and appreciate the role of nonhuman lifeforms in constituting spaces of appearance where human freedom and plurality may flourish.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 646-676
Author(s):  
Alexandra Tegart

This paper journeys into the aesthetics of silence in nature-based expressive arts practice and research. Explored is how nature-based expressive arts (EXA) therapy can help cultivate an embodied sense of silence to nourish and support frontline mental health workers in the Vancouver Downtown Eastside, easing the stresses of assisting a population in the midst of an opioid and overdose crisis. The transformational effects of EXA are discussed as they relate to a short series of workshops with frontline mental health workers from Vancouver’s PHS Community Services Society. We collectively experienced how the phenomenon of silence can help provide a rich resource to care providers and, in turn, inform the nature of our research in vulnerable communities.  


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