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2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 78-79
Author(s):  
Elva Dolores Arias-Merino ◽  
Ma Guadalupe Díaz-González ◽  
Neyda Ma Mendoza-Ruvalcaba ◽  
Martha Elena Vazquez-Arias ◽  
José Rosario Gonzalez-Ulloa

Abstract Introduction In response to the COVID-19 pandemic older adults were called to lockdown and social isolation. Master in Gerontology (MAGE) in a social retribution action delivered a companion program called “I′m with you, You′re with me”. MAGE competencies encompass those proposed by AGHE. The aim is to analyze competencies acquired by students in gerontology in the companion program during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Method: Participated 16 students of MAGE and 16 older adults selected by their high vulnerability conditions reported by social workers from the Metropolitan Center of Older Adults from DIF-Zapopan city. The program was designed to provide emotional support, was delivered by telephone for 3 months (Ago-Nov 2020). Experiences were obtained through an online-questionnaire, data were analyzed qualitative and quantitatively. Results Students reported higher development in the competencies: 1) Interactional, that capture the process of knowing and doing across the fields of gerontology, related to stereotypes and discrimination, autonomy and self-determination, and the use of the technology to enhance the communication; 2) Fundamental, that represent the essential orientation to the field of gerontology, related to identify the impact of public policy and the application of intervention strategies and the use of technologies with older adults, families and caregivers; 3) Contextual, related to promote solid social networks for the wellbeing. The meaning of participating in this program was mainly centered in a gratifying professional experience, “small actions that make big gestures”. Conclusion Gerontologist promote social solidarity through the transference and applying of the knowledge to enhance social development.



2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (44) ◽  
pp. 84-97
Author(s):  
Luis Fernando Campos-Sánchez ◽  
Jesus A. Trevino

The purpose of the study is to identify areas that are possibly gentrified or in the process of being gentrified, through a localized typology of two components: youthification and an increase in the quality of life. This typology can be applied in similar investigations. Thisd paper addresses the case study of the Metropolitan Center of the City of Monterrey (CMM), Nuevo León, Mexico. The current urban regeneration plans and the increase of housing density in the CMM have caused a vertical real estate “boom” of apartment buildings and have strengthened the emergence of gentrification in the area, understood here as the decrease in social backwardness (increase in the quality of life) over time, with an increase in young adults (25 to 34 years-old), compared to older adults (60+ years-old). This article suggests a procedure to measure gentrification by overlapping the Index of Social Backwardness (ISB) at the Basic Geostatistical Area (AGEB) level, with a youthification index at the electoral section level between the 2010-2020 period. Both the decline of social backwardness (2010-2020) and youthification (2010-2020), are analytically articulated for successive census years, to generate a localized typology of the gentrification process.



Author(s):  
Uros Rakita ◽  
Trisha Kaundinya ◽  
Armaan Guraya ◽  
Kamaria Nelson ◽  
Brittany Maner ◽  
...  


2021 ◽  
Vol 116 (1) ◽  
pp. S371-S371
Author(s):  
Florence-Damilola Odufalu ◽  
Justin Sewell ◽  
Uma Mahadevan


2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Oscar E. Zazueta ◽  
Paige A. Armstrong ◽  
Adriana Márquez-Elguea ◽  
Néstor Saúl Hernández Milán ◽  
Amy E. Peterson ◽  
...  


2021 ◽  
Vol 195 ◽  
pp. 110808
Author(s):  
Ricardo Gomes Passos ◽  
Marina Bicalho Silveira ◽  
Jônatas Santos Abrahão


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 18-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eran Weinberg ◽  
Nir Cohen ◽  
Orit Rotem-Mindali

Interest in the role of large urban development (LUD) projects in regeneration efforts of cities has risen in recent years. Studies of their planning process have often focused on global cities, examining challenges associated with their joint (public–private) governance structure, as well as those emanating from the need to balance local and global needs and interests. With few exceptions, the ways in which these projects fit in with metropolitan aspirations of small and medium cities were largely overlooked. In this article, we explore how a large-scale project was used by local authorities to reposition a secondary city as a sub-metropolitan center. Using the case of the 1000-District (Mitcham HaElef) in the Israeli city of Rishon-Lezion, it argues that while the project was originally designed to resolve the city’s scarce employment problem, it was gradually used to endow it with higher-order urban qualities, re-situating it as a sub-metropolitan center in the Tel-Aviv area. To support our argument, we focus on the project’s housing and employment components, including changes they were subjected to along the planning process, as well as the marketing campaign, which sought to re-present the city as a viable sub-metropolitan alternative. Drawing on qualitative methods, including personal interviews and content analysis, the article illustrates how one city’s large project is instrumentalized to attain metro-scale objectives. In so doing, it contributes to a nuanced understanding of the complexity of LUD planning, its stated objectives at various scales, and implications for actors in and beyond metropolitan jurisdictions.



2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (12) ◽  
pp. 218-251
Author(s):  
María Fernanda Alle

This paper inquire the configuration of an area of communist poetics in the framework of the magazine Cuadernos de Cultura in the 1950s. It is argued that the literary program defined from Cuadernos gave a prominent place to the diffusion and promotion of the poetic genre, from the assiduous publication of reviews, notes, critical commentaries and poems, that influenced the conformation of a specific field of “communist poetics”, identified, according to the Soviet programs that the magazine adopts, for its realism and national character. This field gets together a broad group of poets who come from the metropolitan center and the interior of the country. In this direction, the politic “poetic” that the magazine put into play resulted in a reconfiguration of the central and peripheral spaces of the communist left’s sector of the poetic field.



2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (04) ◽  
pp. 430-435
Author(s):  
Talitha Bruney ◽  
Deborah Campbell ◽  
Abieyuwa Iyare

Objective This study aimed to describe the journey of obtaining Baby-Friendly designation as a large metropolitan center in an urban city and review the initial patient-related outcomes. Study Design Our medical center participated in the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene Breastfeeding Hospital Collaborative from 2012 to 2017. Monthly meetings were held to monitor data, and audits conducted among prenatal sites and maternity units. This hospital collaborative was established to help facilities through the designation process. Results Breastfeeding education in the prenatal setting was provided consistently at all outpatient sites. By 2017, 89.8% of patients had received appropriate education and support during their prenatal visits. There was a shift in feeding pattern from mostly formula feeding with some breastfeeding to primarily breastfeeding with fewer formula feeds. Baby-Friendly designation was achieved in June 2017 after a formal Baby-Friendly USA assessment. Conclusion Since embarking on this journey, there has been a consistent increase in antenatal patient education and a paradigm shift from some breastfeeding to mostly breastfeeding among the mother–baby dyads which combination feed. Our hospital center has continued to successfully maintain the workflow changes implemented during the Baby-Friendly process.



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