Results for 'working with distressed young people'

983 found
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  1.  16
    Working with children and young people: ethical debates and practices across disciplines and continents.Anne Campbell, Pat Broadhead & Avril Brock (eds.) - 2010 - Wien: Peter Lang.
    This book provides an interdisciplinary perspective on working with young people, focusing on education, health and social work, and draws on projects and perspectives from the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada and Australia. The volume highlights the ethical challenges and dilemmas as these and other services are integrated and addresses how ethical practices are confronted and shared across disciplines.<BR> The first section looks at professional practice; the second foregrounds children's and young people's voices (...)
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  2.  14
    Understanding animal abuse and how to intervene with children and young people: a practical guide for professionals working with people and animals.Gilly Mendes Ferreira & Joanne M. Williams (eds.) - 2023 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Understanding Animal Abuse and How to Intervene with Children and Young People offers a positive, compassion-based and trauma-informed approach to understanding and intervening in animal abuse. It provides an accessible cross-disciplinary synthesis of current international evidence on animal abuse, and a toolkit for professionals working with people and/or animals to help them understand, prevent, and intervene in cases of animal abuse. With contributions from experts in the field, this essential text offers ten user-friendly (...)
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  3.  14
    Working With Type 1 Diabetes: Investigating the Associations Between Diabetes-Related Distress, Burnout, and Job Satisfaction.Alexandra Cook & Alexander Zill - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The present study investigates the association between diabetes-related distress and work outcomes among employed people with type 1 diabetes. Employed adults with type 1 diabetes completed an online survey. Measures assessed emotional, social, food- and treatment-related DD, burnout, and job satisfaction, as well as the type of insulin treatment. We conducted multiple regression analyses to test our hypotheses. Emotional DD was significantly and positively associated with burnout. Social DD was significantly and negatively associated with job (...)
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  4.  29
    ‘It’s Why Young People Choose to Come Here’: Professional Love and the Ethic of Care in UK Youth Work Practice.Martin E. Purcell - 2024 - Ethics and Social Welfare 18 (2):149-163.
    This paper extends the discourse on the importance of the relationship between practitioner and young person as a defining tenet of effective youth work practice, recognising the privileged position occupied by Youth Workers in the social ecology of the young people with whom they work. Reflecting the ethical obligations inherent in this relationship, particularly its focus on enhancing young people’s agency and developmental outcomes, the paper outlines how youth work practice infused with professional (...)
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  5.  17
    Coping Mechanisms and Emotional Distress for Young People and Adults in Pandemic Context.Claudia Salceanu - 2022 - Postmodern Openings 13 (2):528-549.
    The COVID-19 pandemic context put to test all adaptive skills of human beings around the world. In this disruptive context, a sample of 401 respondents, aged between 19 and 65 years old, were assessed using the Unconditional Self-Acceptance Questionnaire, the Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire, the Emotional Distress Profile and the Autonomy Questionnaire, from Cognitrom Assessment System. The main objectives of the study aimed at identifying the significant differences in emotional distress, coping mechanisms, autonomy and self-acceptance based on gender and age (...)
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  6.  46
    Making Good: How Young People Cope with Moral Dilemmas at Work, by Wendy Fischman, Becca Solomon, Deborah Greenspan, and Howard Gardner. Harvard University Press, 2004.Barry L. Padgett - 2008 - Business Ethics Quarterly 18 (2):271-281.
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  7.  24
    Education and training for young people at risk of becoming NEET: findings from an ethnographic study of work‐based learning programmes.Robin Simmons & Ron Thompson - 2011 - Educational Studies 37 (4):447-450.
    This report provides a summary of findings from an ethnographic study of work?based learning provision for 16?18?year?olds who would otherwise fall into the UK Government category of not in education, employment or training (NEET). The research project took place in the north of England during 2008?2009, and investigated the biographies, experiences and aspirations of young people and practitioners working on Entry to Employment (E2E) programmes in four learning sites. The detailed research findings are reported in four papers (...)
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  8.  43
    Young People, Precarity and Global Grammars of Enterprise: Some Preliminary Provocations.Diego Carbajo Padilla & Peter Kelly - 2019 - Recerca.Revista de Pensament I Anàlisi 24 (1):61-91.
    At a time in which labour markets are becoming increasingly globalised and precarisation processes are altering young people’s working and living conditions, a whole network of public and private agencies are developing different entrepreneurship programmes as the main mechanism to deal with youth exclusion and unemployment. Grounded in two on-going research projects conducted in Europe and Australia, this article proposes a preliminary, thought-provoking engagement with the concept of global grammars of enterprise to examine how the (...)
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  9.  36
    Young people’s relationship to education: the case of Greek youth.Vasilis Koulaidis, Kostas Dimopoulos, Anna Tsatsaroni & Athanassios Katsis - 2006 - Educational Studies 32 (4):343-359.
    The aim of this study is to explore how Greek youth understands their relationship to education, and how this understanding might change as a result of the interplay between participation in different educational/social arrangements and structural factors such as gender, socio?economic background and area of residence. In total, 800 young people (i.e. four groups?students in upper?secondary school, tertiary education, vocational education and training and working young people) were surveyed. The results yield an impressive homogeneity of (...)
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  10. (1 other version)Being seen and heard? The ethical complexities of working with children and young people at home and at school.Gill Valentine - 1999 - Philosophy and Geography 2 (2):141 – 155.
    In the late 1980s and early 1990s a number of key writers within sociology and anthropology criticised much of the existing research on children within the social sciences as 'adultist'. This has subsequently provoked attempts by academics to define new ways of working with , not on or for, children that have been characterised by a desire to define more mutuality between adult and children in research relationships and to identify new ways that researchers can engage with (...)
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  11.  11
    Young people, education, and sustainable development: Exploring principles, perspectives, and praxis.Peter Blaze Corcoran & Philip M. Osano (eds.) - 2009 - Brill | Wageningen Academic.
    Young people have an enormous stake in the present and future state of Earth. Almost half of the human population is under the age of 25. If young people’s resources of energy, time, and knowledge are misdirected towards violence, terrorism, socially-isolating technologies, and unsustainable consumption, civilization risks destabilization. Yet, there is a powerful opportunity for society if young people can participate positively in all aspects of sustainable development. In order to do so, young (...)
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  12.  23
    (1 other version)Social Pedagogy and Working with Children and Young People: Where Care and Education Meet. Edited by C. Cameron and P. Moss: Pp 221. London: Jessica Kingsley. 2011.£ 24.95 (pbk). ISBN 9781849051194. [REVIEW]Chris Kyriacou - 2012 - British Journal of Educational Studies 60 (1):101-103.
  13.  18
    In the Eye of the Covid-19 Storm: A Web-Based Survey of Psychological Distress Among People Living in Lombardy.Emanuela Saita, Federica Facchin, Francesco Pagnini & Sara Molgora - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    In March 2020, the World Health Organization announced the Covid-19 outbreak a pandemic and restrictive measures were enacted by the Governments to fight the spread of the virus. In Italy, these measures included a nationwide lockdown, with limited exceptions including grocery shopping, certain work activities, and healthcare. Consistently with findings from previous studies investigating the psychological impact of similar pandemics [e.g., Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome ], there is evidence that Covid-19 is associated with negative mental health outcomes. (...)
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  14.  21
    Some Ethical Limitations of Privatising and Marketizing Social Care and Social Work Provision in England for Children and Young People.Malcolm Carey - 2019 - Ethics and Social Welfare 13 (3):272-287.
    This article analyses the negative ethical impact of privatisation, alongside the ongoing marketisation of social care and social work provision for children and young people in England. It critically appraises the implications of a market-based formal social care system, which includes the risk-averse and often detached role of social workers within ever more fragmented sectors of care. Analysis begins with a discussion of background policy and context. The tendency towards ‘service user’ objectification and commodification are then detailed, (...)
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  15.  10
    Using allegory to think about youth work in rich countries that fail some young people.Michael Emslie - 2019 - Journal of Youth Studies 22 (3):363-379.
    This article explores the opportunities afforded by Ursula Le Guin’s allegory ‘The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas’ for thinking about the role of youth work in modern cities and societies that are deemed to be successful but at the same time fail some young people. Using Melbourne and Australia as examples and following Le Guin the case is made that the prosperity of ‘liveable’ cities and ‘lucky’ countries coincides with the neglect and mistreatment of some (...) people. The same cultural, economic and political practices and processes that produce the beauty and abundance also produce the inequalities and hardships, and these include policies inspired by neoliberalism, processes of individualisation, and utilitarianism. Unlike the ones who walk away from Omelas youth workers can stay and fight adversity and injustice, however alleviating problems young people experience is more complex than it is often thought to be. One reason this is the case is because youth work is entangled with the same range of ethical, emotional, intellectual, political, and economic circumstances that generate thriving places and disadvantaged young lives, and inadvertently youth workers can reproduce the challenging and limiting conditions faced by some young people. (shrink)
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  16.  87
    Power Games and Moral Territories: Ethical Dilemmas when Working with Children and Young People.Hugh Matthews - 2001 - Ethics, Place and Environment 4 (2):117-118.
    . Power Games and Moral Territories: Ethical Dilemmas when Working with Children and Young People. Ethics, Place & Environment: Vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 117-118.
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  17.  20
    Multiple Professional Perspectives in Direct Work with Young People: A Case Example.Sharon Rodie - 2008 - Ethics and Social Welfare 2 (3):293-298.
  18.  41
    How are we to work with conflict of moral standpoints in the therapeutic relationship?Robert M. Young - manuscript
    I want to begin by saying that the terms of reference of this series of lectures grated on me, in particular, the word ‘power’. One thing it conjured up was the criticism made by people who say we use our power over our patients to brainwash them, that the psychotherapeutic relationship is inescapably authoritarian, domineering, coercive. This was widely said in the sixties by leftist and feminists and others who sought a therapeutic relationship that was more equal, co-counselling, for (...)
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  19. The Ethical and Methodological Complexities of Doing Research with 'Vulnerable' Young People.Gill Valentine, Ruth Butler & Tracey Skelton - 2001 - Ethics, Place and Environment 4 (2):119-125.
    In discussing methodological and ethical codes for working with children there is a danger that young people can become homogenised as a social category. In this paper we examine the way in which c...
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  20.  15
    Education of children and young people in Pope Francis’ Amoris Laetitia and Laudato Si’.Grzegorz J. Pyźlak - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 79 (2):6.
    The issues concerning education of children and young people are deeply inscribed into Pope Francis’ profound experience, as he gained knowledge and practised educating in Buenos Aires. He worked there in support of the universal education of children and young people who lived in the so-called barrios and villas miseria, which were the districts of poverty in the suburbs of this metropolis. This and other experiences of Jorge Mario Bergoglio contributed to his decisions to discuss the (...)
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  21.  59
    Touching the soul? Exploring an alternative outlook for philosophical work with children and young people.Gert Biesta - 2017 - Childhood and Philosophy 13 (28).
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  22.  62
    Finding and fostering the philosophical impulse in young people: A tribute to the work of Gareth B. Matthews.Sara Goering - 2008 - Metaphilosophy 39 (1):39–50.
    This article highlights Gareth Matthews's contributions to the field of philosophy for young children, noting especially the inventiveness of his style of engagement with children and his confidence in children's ability to analyze perplexing issues, from cosmology to death and dying. I relate here my experiences in introducing philosophical topics to adolescents, to show how Matthews's work can be successfully extended to older students, and I recommend taking philosophy outside the university as a way to foster critical thinking (...)
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  23.  15
    Learning to Be Employable Through Volunteering: A Qualitative Study on the Development of Employability Capital of Young People.Maria Luisa Giancaspro & Amelia Manuti - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12:574232.
    Over the last decades, consistent research showed that voluntary work could be considered as a tool for professional development and concrete employment: volunteering could be either experienced as a desire to improve career opportunities or to acquire new skills. The study aimed to investigate voluntary work as a context of informal and non-formal workplace learning and vocational guidance, useful to develop skills and abilities, namely the capital of personal and social resources, that could promote future employability. Participants were 38 (...) volunteers who experienced the Universal Civil Service, a national Italian program addressed to young people aged up to 28 years, giving them both the opportunity to engage in social activities useful for the community and have the first contact with a working context. In line with the objectives of the study, participants were invited to describe their volunteering experience in a diary, highlighting if and to what extent this context contributed to enhancing their employability capital, namely the asset of skills, knowledge, and networks acquired, that they could transfer to a future professional domain. The narrative data collected were examined through diatextual analysis, a specific address of discourse analysis designed to catch the relationship between enunciators, text, and context of the talk. This qualitative analysis allowed us to investigate the meanings young people attributed to these activities. In light of these results, the paper contributed to investigate volunteers’ perceptions about the conditions that could best foster this specific kind of workplace informal and non-formal learning and at proposing a qualitative perspective on the analysis of the employability capital they developed. (shrink)
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  24.  77
    Domestic Violence and Education: Examining the Impact of Domestic Violence on Young Children, Children, and Young People and the Potential Role of Schools.Michele Lloyd - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
    This article examines how domestic violence impacts the lives and education of young children, children, and young people and how they can be supported within the education system. Schools are often the service in closest and longest contact with a child living with domestic violence; teachers can play a vital role in helping families access welfare services. In the wake of high profile cases of child abuse and neglect, concerns have been raised about the effectiveness (...)
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  25.  13
    Ethical Research with Young People.Brian Goredema-Braid - 2010 - Research Ethics 6 (2):48-52.
    There is a belief among many from the wide field of Youth Work there is an increasing stress on the need for ethical approval to conduct empirical research with young people. The stress on ethical approval for research with young people includes issues of safeguarding, confidentiality, competency, consent and anonymity. The distinction needs to be made between a rules-based approach and a situated based approach. The rules-based approach is based upon a notion of ethical (...)
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  26.  13
    Ethical and Legal Aspects of Working with Children and Young People with Emotional and Psychiatric Health Needs.Tim McDougall - 2011 - In Gosia M. Brykczynska & Joan Simons, Ethical and Philosophical Aspects of Nursing Children and Young People. Wiley. pp. 112.
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  27.  75
    Threats to epistemic agency in young people with unusual experiences and beliefs.Joseph W. Houlders, Lisa Bortolotti & Matthew R. Broome - 2021 - Synthese 199 (3-4):7689-7704.
    A good therapeutic relationship in mental health services is a predictor of positive clinical outcomes for people who seek help for distressing experiences, such as voice hearing and paranoia. One factor that may affect the quality of the therapeutic relationship and raises further ethical issues is the impact of the clinical encounter on users’ sense of self, and in particular on their sense of agency. In the paper, we discuss some of the reasons why the sense of epistemic agency (...)
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  28.  29
    Identity, well-being and autonomy in ongoing puberty suppression for non-binary adults: a response to the commentaries.Lauren Notini, Brian D. Earp, Lynn Gillam, Julian Savulescu, Michelle Telfer & Ken C. Pang - 2020 - Journal of Medical Ethics 46 (11):761-762.
    We thank the commentators for their thoughtful responses to our article.1 Due to space constraints, we will confine our discussion to just three key issues. The first issue relates to the central ethical conundrum for clinicians working with young people like Phoenix: namely, how to respect, value and defer to a person’s own account of their identity and what is needed for their well-being, while staying open to the possibility that such an account may reflect a (...)
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  29.  77
    My character: enhancing future mindedness in young people: a feasibility study.J. Arthur, T. Harrison, K. Kristjánsson, I. Davidson, D. Hayes & J. Higgins - unknown
    The aim of the My Character project was to develop a better understanding of how interventions designed to develop character might enhance moral formation and futuremindedness in young people. Futuremindedness can be defined as an individual’s capacity to set goals and make plans to achieve them. Establishing goals requires considerable moral reflection, and the achievement of worthwhile aims requires character traits such as courage and the capacity to delay gratification. The research team developed two new educational interventions – (...)
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  30.  80
    An Emotion Regulation and Impulse Control (ERIC) Intervention for Vulnerable Young People: A Multi-Sectoral Pilot Study.Kate Hall, George Youssef, Angela Simpson, Elise Sloan, Liam Graeme, Natasha Perry, Richard Moulding, Amanda L. Baker, Alison K. Beck & Petra K. Staiger - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Objective: There is a demonstrated link between the mental health and substance use comorbidities experienced by young adults, however the vast majority of psychological interventions are disorder specific. Novel psychological approaches that adequately acknowledge the psychosocial complexity and transdiagnostic needs of vulnerable young people are urgently needed. A modular skills-based program for emotion regulation and impulse control addresses this gap. The current one armed open trial was designed to evaluate the impact that 12 weeks exposure to ERIC (...)
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  31.  27
    Ethical Practice in Disability Services: Views of Young People and Staff.Sally Robinson, Anne Graham, Antonia Canosa, Tim Moore, Nicola Taylor & Tess Boyle - 2022 - Ethics and Social Welfare 16 (4):412-431.
    In recent years there has been increased focus on supporting the safety and wellbeing of children and young people with disability. This paper reports on a study that asked children and young people with disability and adults who work with them about practices that support their wellbeing and safety, including barriers and enablers to ethical practice. We used the theory of practice architectures to unpack the practices. Findings point to a range of practices (...)
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  32.  30
    Disability Policy Meets Cultural Values: Chinese Families of Children and Young People with Developmental Disabilities in Taipei and Sydney.Qian Fang, Heng-Hao Chang, Karen R. Fisher, Ruixin Dong & Xiaoran Wang - 2024 - Ethics and Social Welfare 18 (1):37-53.
    Supporting families of people with developmental disabilities from culturally diverse backgrounds is receiving increased attention in the era of globalisation. However, there is little information about how disability policy and cultural values work together to support families. This article examined how disability policy and Chinese cultural values influence family care of children and young people with developmental disabilities. By comparing qualitative interview data from Chinese families in Taipei (15) and Sydney (10), we analysed how their (...)
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  33.  12
    The Cases of Death and Disappearance of Young People and Their Mothers in Popular Sectors (Córdoba, Argentina).Natalia Bermúdez - 2021 - Anthropos 116 (1):17-28.
    Within the framework of broader processes in Latin America Argentina has seen a progressive policing of the governance of security. Criminal policies in recent decades have focused on police militarization, increased incarceration, spatial segregation and judicial expansion that especially affect the sectors that are economically most impoverished. I am interested in showing, from ethnographic cases, how the dynamics of delinquency mainly affect young men from popular sectors, both residents and police. Each one of the deaths and disappearances with (...)
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  34.  21
    The Need for Robust Critique of Arts and Health Research: Young People, Art Therapy and Mental Health.Katarzyna Grebosz-Haring, Leonhard Thun-Hohenstein, Anna Katharina Schuchter-Wiegand, Yoon Irons, Arne Bathke, Kate Phillips & Stephen Clift - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    We describe work in progress to conduct a systematic review of research on effects of arts-based programs for mental health in young people. We are at the stage of searching for relevant studies through major databases and screening extant systematic reviews for additional research which meet our inclusion criteria. At this stage, however, concerns have arisen regarding both the quality of existing primary studies and of recently published systematic reviews in this area of arts and health. As a (...)
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  35.  28
    The Impact of Culture on Chinese Young People’s Perceptions of Family Responsibility in Hong Kong, China.Tabitha Ng - forthcoming - Intellectual Discourse:131-154.
    This is a quantitative research study with a cross-sectional designand a survey approach to address the views of a large sample of youngpeople in relation to family responsibility in a society where East meets West.The survey results suggest that the sample hold relatively positive attitudestowards Chinese cultural values and family responsibility. The traditional valueof importance of family, filial piety and harmony with others were still stronglysupported by many young people. The findings further revealed that the morethe (...)
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  36.  18
    Research ethics in practice: challenges of using digital technology to embed the voices of children and young people within programs for fathers who use domestic violence.Katie Lamb, Cathy Humphreys & Kelsey Hegarty - 2021 - Research Ethics 17 (2):176-192.
    There has been growing enthusiasm amongst those who undertake research with children, for the development of participatory and visual research methods. The greater availability and affordability of digital technology (such as digital cameras, tablets and smart phones) has meant that there has been greater scope for digital technology to support participatory research methods, or augment more traditional qualitative research methods. While digital technology provides new opportunities for qualitative researchers, they also come with a series of challenges – some (...)
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  37.  26
    Ethical issues in participatory arts methods for young people with adverse childhood experiences.Gabriella Pavarini, Lindsay Smith, Nicola Shaughnessy, Anna Mankee-Williams, Josita Kavitha Thirumalai, Natalie Russell & Kamaldeep Bhui - unknown
    Context: Participatory arts-based methods such as photovoice, drama and music have increasingly been used to engage young people who are exposed to psychosocial risks. These methods have the potential to empower youth and provide them with an accessible and welcoming environment to express and manage difficult feelings and experiences. These effects are, however, dependent on the way these methods are implemented and how potential ethical concerns are handled. Objective: Using the current literature on arts-based health research as (...)
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  38.  21
    The Limits of Resilience and the Need for Resistance: Articulating the Role of Music Therapy With Young People Within a Shifting Trauma Paradigm.Elly Scrine - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    A broad sociocultural perspective defines trauma as the result of an event, a series of events, or a set of circumstances that is experienced as physically or emotionally harmful or life threatening, with lasting impacts on an individual’s physical, social, emotional, or spiritual wellbeing. Contexts and practices that aim to be “trauma-informed” strive to attend to the complex impacts of trauma, integrating knowledge into policies and practices, and providing a sanctuary from harm. However, there is a body of critical (...)
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  39.  45
    Uses and Gratifications of Social Media: A Comparison of Facebook and Instant Messaging.Alyson L. Young & Anabel Quan-Haase - 2010 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 30 (5):350-361.
    Users have adopted a wide range of digital technologies into their communication repertoire. It remains unclear why they adopt multiple forms of communication instead of substituting one medium for another. It also raises the question: What type of need does each of these media fulfill? In the present article, the authors conduct comparative work that examines the gratifications obtained from Facebook with those from instant messaging. This comparison between media allows one to draw conclusions about how different social media (...)
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  40.  26
    Iris Marion Young: gender, justice, and the politics of difference.Iris Marion Young - 2022 - New York, NY: Routledge. Edited by Michaele L. Ferguson & Andrew Valls.
    Iris Marion Young (1949-2006) was one of the most influential and innovative political theorists of her generation who had a significant impact on a wide range of topics such as democratic theory, feminist theory, and justice. She bridged many longstanding divides among political theorists, engaging in Continental and critical theory, but also insisting on the importance of normative argument: her corpus stands as a testament to the fruitfulness of engaging in both abstract theory and the 'real world' of everyday (...)
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  41.  17
    The VOICE Children's Nursing Framework: Drawing on childhood studies to advance nursing practice with young people.Franco A. Carnevale - 2022 - Nursing Inquiry 29 (4):e12495.
    Nursing scholars have called for nursing approaches with children that ensure the promotion of their childhood, contesting dominant adult-based approaches that are adapted for practice with children. Although the nursing literature includes many important advances in the promotion of child-centered approaches, there are still significant gaps in fully recognizing the complexities of childhood within nursing. Within this paper, I (a) outline some key advances in nursing approaches with children, sometimes referred to as “Children's Nursing” (shifting away from (...)
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  42. Life and worship: worship services for young people.Erma Ferrari - 1943 - Cincinnati: The Standard publishing co..
  43.  25
    The Reason of Hospitalisation of Young People Between 1991–2000 in Ban.A. De Lucia - 2005 - Global Bioethics 18 (1):119-123.
    The causes of disease and stress affecting immigrants have been studied, in Apulia, by monitoring schedules directed to working people, in order to estimate the index of social-anthropological stress (A. De Lucia and Nuzzi 1999).The present research wants to evaluate the state of illness concerning the children of the immigrants.Thanks to the doctors working in the hospital structures in Ban, we have obtained some data relative to the years 1991–2000. However, they are completely anonymous and without any (...)
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  44.  21
    A Critique of the Stem Pipeline: Young People’s Identities in Sweden and Science Education Policy.Heather Mendick, Maria Berge & Anna Danielsson - 2017 - British Journal of Educational Studies 65 (4):481-497.
    In this article, we develop critiques of the pipeline model which dominates Western science education policy, using discourse analysis of interviews with two Swedish young women focused on ‘identity work’. We argue that it is important to unpack the ways that the pipeline model fails to engage with intersections of gender, ethnicity, social class and nationality, and their impact on science and with debates about science as elitist and implicated in neoliberalism.
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  45.  73
    Ethical Dilemmas in Social Work Practice with Disabled People: Young Adults with Autism.David Wilkins - 2012 - Ethics and Social Welfare 6 (1):97-105.
    This paper discusses ethical dilemmas related to social work practice with young adults with autism. It does so via the use of a case study taken from real life practice. The different viewpoints and ethical frameworks of the young person, the young person's parents and the Local Authority (or the Local Authority social worker) are considered and discussed. The competing rights of the 2006 United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (and (...)
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  46.  45
    Moral distress in nurses in oncology and haematology units.Michela Lazzarin, Andrea Biondi & Stefania Di Mauro - 2012 - Nursing Ethics 19 (2):183-195.
    One of the difficulties nurses experience in clinical practice in relation to ethical issues in connection with young oncology patients is moral distress. In this descriptive correlational study, the Moral Distress Scale-Paediatric Version (MDS-PV) was translated from the original language and tested on a conventional sample of nurses working in paediatric oncology and haematology wards, in six north paediatric hospitals of Italy. 13.7% of the total respondents claimed that they had changed unit or hospital due to moral (...)
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  47.  63
    Moral Distress: An Innovative and Important Subject to Study in Brazil: Commentary on “A Reflection on Moral Distress in Nursing Together With a Current Application of the Concept” by Andrew Jameton.Valéria Lerch Lunardi - 2013 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 10 (3):309-312.
    There have been recurrent reports of fragilities in the Brazilian health system, especially in public institutions. In this commentary, I argue that moral distress in nursing in Brazil can still be considered an innovative and important subject of study. I also highlight the relevance of engaging educational institutions in the development of policies about environmental sustainability. It is relevant to continue studying moral distress in nursing and in health care generally in order to contribute to the transformation of reality by (...)
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  48.  11
    Fixing Broken Doors: Strategies for Drafting Privacy Policies Young People Can Understand.Valerie Steeves, Jacquelyn Burkell & Anca Micheti - 2010 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 30 (2):130-143.
    The goal of this project is to identify guidelines for privacy policies that children and teens can accurately interpret with relative ease. A three-pronged strategy was used to achieve this goal. First, an analysis of the relevant literature on reading was undertaken to identify the document features that affect comprehension. Second, focus groups were conducted to examine their experience and practices in the interpretation of privacy policies found on sites that have been identified as favorite kids’ sites. Based on (...)
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  49.  47
    Examining the effect of moral resilience on moral distress.Mustafa Sabri Kovanci & Azize Atli Özbaş - 2023 - Nursing Ethics 30 (7-8):1156-1170.
    Aims The study aims to test the Turkish validity and reliability of the Rushton Moral Resilience Scale (RMRS) and examine the effect of moral resilience on moral distress. Background Moral distress is a phenomenon that negatively affects health workers, health institutions, and the person receiving care. In order to eliminate or minimize the negative effects of moral distress, it is necessary to increase the moral resilience of nurses. Moral resilience involves developing systems that support a culture of ethical practice in (...)
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  50.  23
    Looking for Asian America: An Ethnocentric Tour by Wing Young Huie.Wing Young Huie, Frank H. Wu, Anita Gonzalez & Tara Simpson Huie - 2007 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    “Looking for Asian America shows real people engaged in the full range of human activity. This is no small accomplishment for the photographer or his subjects. For Asian Americans it is extraordinary to be merely ordinary. To others, even if not to themselves, Asian Americans appear to be contradictions of identity—a Chinese-Yankee is a knockoff.” —Frank H. Wu, from the Foreword In search of contemporary Asian America, celebrated photographer Wing Young Huie—the only member of his family not born (...)
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