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Al-Qalam ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 119
Author(s):  
Taufani Taufani ◽  
Muh. Natsir ◽  
Nurman Said ◽  
Andi Aderus

<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>This article aims to discuss dynamics of the Sunni and Shia relations in Manado. The data were collected from interviews, observation, and documentation. This study shows that the Sunni and Shia Muslim relations in Manado lived in harmony at the grassroots level. They lived next door, visited, and also helped each other in various matters. However, the relations between Sunni and Shia had been in tension due to anti-Shia campaigns by local Sunni elites and Salafi-Wahabi groups in the public sphere that took advantage of the momentum of the Sunni-Shia conflicts in the country and also the Middle East. They also took advantage of the particular political events deemed to benefit the Shia’s existence. Although the Shia groups had become the target of hatred, it did not result in physical violence. The abuse that occurred on the Shia was of verbal and symbolic. This study concludes that the minority status does not always lead to a harmonious relationship within its own internal group.</span></p></div></div></div>


2021 ◽  
pp. 053331642110254
Author(s):  
Juan Tubert-Oklander

There is usually more than one theoretical view of a hypercomplex situation, which may be cognitively complementary, but they bring about different results when used to orient our practice, on account of their underlying assumptions, values, and intentions. The authors compare two approaches to work with groups: Foulkes’s group analysis and Kaës’s psychoanalytic approach to groups, exploring their coincidences and differences, through their respective concepts of the matrix and the group psychic apparatus. Psychoanalysis starts from the assumption of an isolated individual subject, and then constructs the additional dimension of relations and collective life. Group analysis takes as its starting point the assumption of the primary and essential relational and social nature of the human being, and the subject is a secondary construction that emerges from the initial participatory existence. The concept of the internal group in Kaës is strictly intrapsychic and abstract, while in Pichon-Rivière it is experiential and introjective. Psychoanalysis and group analysis are based on two different conceptions of human existence, and this is clearly shown by the authors’ clinical vignette. Studies like this contribute to a better understanding among the various traditions and schools of analytic work with groups.


Author(s):  
Joakim Krantz ◽  
Lena Fritzén

AbstractWe analyse changes in the collective identity that Sweden’s largest labour union for teachers had during the period 1990–2017. The study is based on theory about how collective identity is constructed in adaptation and resistance to external categorical dimensions and internal group identification. We identify shifts in relation to how the union employ different aspects on teachers' recognition, emotional engagement, and evaluation. Two clear cut-off points can be identified. The first point, which is clearly related to the impact of political reforms, took place in 2000 and is about increased demands with respect to transparency, legality, equality, efficiency, and attainment results. The second point took place in 2015, a year when Sweden confronted a new set of social challenges. The teaching profession was re-launched as a moral agent and in need of a trust-based steering approach.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 08
Author(s):  
Roikhan Mochamad Aziz

Community service in Rabak Village, Bogor, Indonesia, was done for 30 days, involving 16 students from 7 faculties with an additional 1 lecturer as a supervisor. Activities were conducted from August until September 2017. The approach used the methodology of Hahslm with the ontology of Islam, comprehensiveness in epistemology, and axiology of balancing. This guidance method utilized the straight path theory that combines the three main factors, internal, external, and reflexivities such as academicians, regulators, and ulama. For the planning and implementation, the research had objectives to map community potential, increase people capacity and transfer education. There were problems with local culture and obstacles encountered such as lack of time, sort of consolidating and coordinating with various parties in internal group members and supervisors, external parties such as sponsors, as well as the reflexivity of ulama and religious leaders. From the results of the activities, there were several successes: increasing community participation in development programs in villages, increasing motivation to learners in elementary and junior high school to continue education to higher levels, and to educate public knowledge about Islamic universities, to increase public awareness of the importance of marriage books, and increase physical building or development rehabilitation of water reservoirs, and reading parks.


2021 ◽  
pp. 053331642199577
Author(s):  
Clarisse Vollon ◽  
Guy Gimenez

This article presents an epistemological reflection on two models of the group: S.H. Foulkes’ matrix model and René Kaës’ less well-known group psychic apparatus model. These two models are viewed as complementary, in the sense of George Devereux’s ‘complementarist’ approach, provided that each is conceived of as constituting a ‘vertex’, as Bion used this term. After showing that the two models are neither in competition nor coextensive, we explore their complementarity. The concepts of the ‘internal group’ and ‘unconscious alliances’ proposed by Kaës provide a way to understand how communication networks emerge and are structured in the matrix. Conversely, the concept of the network of communication can also be thought of as a metaphor for the psychic spaces of the group psychic apparatus. A clinical illustration involving a group supervision session is presented in support of these proposals.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 1058
Author(s):  
Kaiming Chen ◽  
Jiageng Chen ◽  
Jixin Zhang

Signal is the first application that applies the double ratchet for its end-to-end encryption protocol. The core of the double ratchet protocol is then applied in WhatsApp, the most popular messaging application around the world. Asynchronous Ratchet Tree (ART) is extended from ratchet and Diffie-Hellman tree. It is the first group protocol that applies Forward Secrecy (FS) with Post-Compromised Security (PCS). However, it does not consider protecting the privacy of user identity. Therefore, it makes sense to provide anonymous features in the conditions of FS and PCS. In this paper, the concepts of Internal Group Anonymity (IGA) and External Group Anonymity (EGA) are formalized. On the basis of IGA and EGA, we develop the “Anonymous Asynchronous Ratchet Tree (AART)” to realize anonymity while preserving FS and PCS. Then, we prove that our AART meets the requirements of IGA and EGA as well as FS and PCS. Finally, the performance and related issues of AART are discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. s251-s252
Author(s):  
Elisa Teixeira Mendes ◽  
s Bomediano Souza ◽  
Hadassa Louback Paranhos ◽  
Isabela Cristina Moreira Santos

Background: Acute viral bronchiolitis caused by respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) may be a manifestation of high severity in neonatal-ICU (NICU) patients, with high risk of in-hospital cross transmission and outbreaks. During the epidemic seasonal period, intense viral circulation occurs in community; thus, transmission in the NICU is difficult to control. Objective: We describe an outbreak that occurred in a NICU in a public hospital in So Paulo state, Brazil. We also discuss the role of admitting external newborns with community-acquired virus in the incidence of these outbreaks in the NICU. Methods: In 2017 in Campinas, an RSV epidemic occurred during the seasonal period, resulting in a outbreak at the Campinas maternity hospital. A retrospective investigation was performed, and patients were analyzed for clinical and epidemiological characteristics and for risk factors for poor prognosis. We included neonates admitted in NICU with positive nasal lavage for RSV from April to July 2017. Statistical analysis were performed with 2 test for the categorical variables and the Student t test for the continuous variables comparing the newborn group from the community (external) with infected newborns in the hospital (internal). P < .05 was considered significant. Results: Of 44 neonates with RSV during this period, 32 were external and 12 were internal (Fig. 1). The mean gestational age of the external neonates was 38 weeks and 2 days, whereas the mean gestational age of the internal neonates was 29 weeks and 1 day (P < .001). The hospitalization time was higher in the internal group (P < .001). Table 1. One death associated with infection occurred in the internal group. Community neonates (external group) were mostly term-born, with no comorbidities, and they had a more favorable clinical course. In the literature, neonates infected with RSV at the hospital have several risk factors for poor prognosis, with a 13.5% mortality rate. Discussion: RSV outbreaks have great relevance in hospital settings, especially in the NICU, where there are a large number of vulnerable patients and a high risk of in-hospital cross transmission. Neonates infected with RSV at the hospital have several risk factors for poor prognosis, including high mortality. Therefore, it is important to discuss the exposure of this population to community-based infectious agents, mainly viral, and the risk of accepting patients from the community to be admitted to the NICU.Funding: NoneDisclosures: None


2020 ◽  
pp. 053331642095172
Author(s):  
Michael Scott ◽  
John Walshe

In this article we describe dynamic structures and relationships that arise in the internal space of groups, a space which materializes from the unconscious internal world of each group member and within the group as a whole. We use keys and doors as metaphors to explicate our understanding of the internal dynamics. We give examples of how these metaphors can be used to understand the structure, the function and the relationships within the group. The possible connections of these ideas to other theoretical frameworks are discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 2661-2675 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Zumkeller ◽  
Philipp Gerke ◽  
Volker Knoop

Abstract The occurrence of group II introns in plant mitochondrial genomes is strikingly different between the six major land plant clades, contrasting their highly conserved counterparts in chloroplast DNA. Their present distribution likely reflects numerous ancient intron gains and losses during early plant evolution before the emergence of seed plants. As a novelty for plant organelles, we here report on five cases of twintrons, introns-within-introns, in the mitogenomes of lycophytes and hornworts. An internal group II intron interrupts an intron-borne maturase of an atp9 intron in Lycopodiaceae, whose splicing precedes splicing of the external intron. An invasive, hypermobile group II intron in cox1, has conquered nine further locations including a previously overlooked sdh3 intron and, most surprisingly, also itself. In those cases, splicing of the external introns does not depend on splicing of the internal introns. Similar cases are identified in the mtDNAs of hornworts. Although disrupting a group I intron-encoded protein in one case, we could not detect splicing of the internal group II intron in this ‘mixed’ group I/II twintron. We suggest the name ‘zombie’ twintrons (half-dead, half-alive) for such cases where splicing of external introns does not depend any more on prior splicing of fossilized internal introns.


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