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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 203 on page 1 of 9
Marked
Mark
'Stuck between a Rock and a Hard Place?: How Mental Health Nurses? Experience Psychosocial interventions in Irish Mental Health Care Settings
(2020)
De Vries, Jan; Mc Cann, Edward
'Stuck between a Rock and a Hard Place?: How Mental Health Nurses? Experience Psychosocial interventions in Irish Mental Health Care Settings
(2020)
De Vries, Jan; Mc Cann, Edward
Abstract:
Traditionally, the focus for mental health service delivery in Ireland has involved a medically orientated approach. This research has taken place at a time when mental health professionals are now assumed to provide recovery-orientated care by statute as well as policy. Within a recovery practice, psychosocial interventions (PSI) are recognised and recommended internationally as they primarily focus on improving a client?s mental health and preventing relapse, thus adopting a biopsychosocial approach. This study explored trained MHNs? experiences of using PSI in their care of persons with a mental health problem. Consistent with the goal of understanding experience, a multiple case study methodology guided the study and situated within an interpretive paradigm. Data were gathered using semi-structured interviews with 40 PSI-trained MHNs and analysed thematically. Three overarching themes emerged: PSI-trained MHNs? understandin...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/92922
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'Working away in that Grey Area...' A qualitative exploration of the challenges general practitioners experience when managing behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia
(2017)
Jennings, Aisling A.; Foley, Tony; McHugh, Sheena M.; Browne, John P.; Bradley, Colin P.
'Working away in that Grey Area...' A qualitative exploration of the challenges general practitioners experience when managing behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia
(2017)
Jennings, Aisling A.; Foley, Tony; McHugh, Sheena M.; Browne, John P.; Bradley, Colin P.
Abstract:
Background: general practitioners (GPs) have identified the management of behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) as a particularly challenging aspect of dementia care. However, there is a paucity of research on why GPs find BPSD challenging and how this influences the care they offer to their patients with dementia. Objectives: to establish the challenges GPs experience when managing BPSD; to explore how these challenges influence GPs’ management decisions; and to identify strategies for overcoming these challenges. Design: qualitative study of GPs experiences of managing BPSD. Methods: semi-structured interviews were conducted with 16 GPs in the Republic of Ireland. GPs were purposively recruited to include participants with differing levels of experience caring for people with BPSD in nursing homes and in community settings to provide maximum diversity of views. Interviews were analysed thematically. Results: three main challenges of managing BPSD were identifie...
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/5213
Marked
Mark
‘It’s just everyone understands’: How adults with an acquired brain injury navigate stigma to create meaningful relationships in their communities
(2014)
Brennan, Joanne
‘It’s just everyone understands’: How adults with an acquired brain injury navigate stigma to create meaningful relationships in their communities
(2014)
Brennan, Joanne
Abstract:
Background: Individuals with an Acquired Brain Injury (ABI), a leading cause of disability, are particularly vulnerable to mental health difficulties and frequently experience stigma. This places them at high risk of social exclusion. Social relations are a key indicator of quality of life after an ABI yet current literature fails to identify successful strategies to navigate stigma. Objectives: 1.) To discover what factors enhance relationship maintenance and formation post ABI. 2.) To understand how positive relationships promote wellness by acting as a buffer to the effects of stigmatisation. Methods: Semi-structured interviews with two male participants were completed and transcribed. An Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) was conducted. Analysis of an initial descriptive layer of what participant is saying is enriched by an additional layer of the deeper interpretative work of the researcher. The themes emerged from this commentary. Results: IPA produced three themes. ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3956
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"It comes from you": agency in adult asylum seekers' language learning through Process Drama
(2019)
Piazzoli, Erika; Dalziel, Fiona
"It comes from you": agency in adult asylum seekers' language learning through Process Drama
(2019)
Piazzoli, Erika; Dalziel, Fiona
Abstract:
In this paper, we present a study of adult asylum seekers learning Italian as a Second Language through Process Drama. Adopting an ecology of language approach, we first set the scene by examining some of the most salient issues regarding the language learning needs of asylum seekers and refugees, including the challenge of fostering both language proficiency and a sense of autonomy and agency. We then introduce the topic of performative, or dramabased pedagogy, focussing on how this has been adopted for second-language learning, presenting the main features of Process Drama. We go on to evaluate a number of drama-based projects aimed specifically at adult asylum seekers and refugees before presenting the specific context of this study. The Process Drama sessions, organised in the 2016/2107 year, were part of a project called ?Cultura e Accoglienza?, which allowed for the enrolment of 30 asylum seekers as ?guest students? at the University of Padova in Northern Italy. In particular,...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/91419
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“Man the fisher”: salmon fishing and the expression of community in a rural Irish settlement
(1981)
Taylor, Lawrence J.
“Man the fisher”: salmon fishing and the expression of community in a rural Irish settlement
(1981)
Taylor, Lawrence J.
Abstract:
This paper analyzes the significance of the summer salmon fishery of Teelin, a small coastal settlement in county Donegal, Ireland. Although not of great economic importance to most Teelin families, the salmon pursuit is the subject of considerable cultural attention, providing a source of communal and personal identity. An explanation for the disproportionate cultural strength of the fishery is sought in its contribution to the maintenance of the local community as a bounded social entity in a region where historical disincorporations have made the existence and nature of such communities problematic. The ways in which the interactional and experiential aspects of this fishery contribute to Teelin’s “local culture” are examined as a sample case of the relation between any such socially definitive activity and the structure of a local system of social relations or ideology.
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/2015/
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Mark
“Will you meet me on Clare Island?”: Music-making, islandness and ethnography in a small island community
(2021)
McCabe, Rory
“Will you meet me on Clare Island?”: Music-making, islandness and ethnography in a small island community
(2021)
McCabe, Rory
Abstract:
This dissertation presents an ethnographic account of music and social life on Clare Island, a small community off the west coast of Ireland. Focusing on the structures and settings of music-making, the research details the interactions between island environment and performance in the expression of island life in the twenty-first century. This original research demonstrates music-making as a fundamental process in island community life and an important measure of island health or vitality. Along with examining music-making on Clare Island, the work also explores representations of island life within Irish cultural discourse and suggests dissimilarities between popular narrative and islander experience. The ethnography centres on fieldwork conducted in 2017 but includes an historical perspective in the analysis. Grounded through ethnographic detail and living memory, this history examines the changing contexts of music-making and island life since the 1940s. Through this modern his...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/16522
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A burning issue? Governance and anti-incinerator campaigns in Ireland, North and South
(2009)
Leonard, Liam; Doran, Peter; Fagan, Honor
A burning issue? Governance and anti-incinerator campaigns in Ireland, North and South
(2009)
Leonard, Liam; Doran, Peter; Fagan, Honor
Abstract:
The decades of conflict in Northern Ireland created divisions between communities, with few opportunities for cooperation. However, in the 1990s opposition to a proposed cross-border incinerator brought the divided communities together. The 1990s economic boom in the Republic of Ireland generated a waste management crisis as the by-products of rampant consumerism overwhelmed the state’s rudimentary waste disposal system. Three Irish anti-incinerator campaigns which have pitted local communities against the Irish state or the Northern Ireland Department of the Environment are examined. Community attempts to gain leverage within the political governance frameworks in operation on both sides of the border are examined and the various ways in which environmental movements respond to the crisis of waste management under different governance regimes are illuminated.
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/2895/
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A case study of collecting dynamic social data: The pro-ana twitter community
(2017)
Wood, Ian
A case study of collecting dynamic social data: The pro-ana twitter community
(2017)
Wood, Ian
Abstract:
The study of social processes in on-line social media content is a relatively new and rapidly growing endeavour. Many social media platforms provide a public API (Application Programming Interface) which can be used for the targeted collection of data from perceived communities, however existing software for this purpose focusses on a â snapshotâ of the community and its communications, and ignores im- portant aspects of its dynamics. We present a data collection system designed to capture tweets and the dynamics of Twitter user profile and friend/follower lists, and an approach to identify a set of tags or keywords that define an on-line community. This approach and system were used to collect a data set spanning 2 years and 7 months (including 3 Christmas periods) from the â pro-anaâ (pro-anorexia) and eating disorder Twitter community.
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/6907
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A community approach to suicide and mental ill-health : the role of stigma, help-seeking and group identification
(2017)
Kearns, Michelle
A community approach to suicide and mental ill-health : the role of stigma, help-seeking and group identification
(2017)
Kearns, Michelle
Abstract:
Our lives, and the events that punctuate them, do not play out within a vacuum. Rather, we are all part of an intrinsically connected network of people that cumulatively influence our thoughts, feelings and behaviours. Even the seemingly individualistic act of taking one’s own life is irrefutably linked to the social environment in which it occurs. With over 800,000 lives lost each year, the equivalent of one death every 40 seconds (World Health Organisation (WHO), 2014), suicide is recognised as a major global health issue. A dominant research theme across multiple disciplines is thus the prevention and prediction of future suicidal behaviour. The research outlined in this thesis will add to this growing body of literature by exploring, through the lens of the social identity approach, how social determinants may enhance or exacerbate protective and risk factors linked to suicidal behaviour in community settings. For the purpose of this thesis, these factors are stigma of mental il...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/9011
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A community art therapy group for adults with chronic pain
(2015)
O'Neill, Aimee; Moss, Hilary
A community art therapy group for adults with chronic pain
(2015)
O'Neill, Aimee; Moss, Hilary
Abstract:
This paper describes a community art therapy group for people living with chronic pain. Nine adults were offered 12 weekly group art therapy sessions that included art therapy activities such as guided imagery focusing on body scans followed by art responses and artistic expressions of the pain experience. This pilot group art therapy program is original in offering a short-term, focused art therapy group to support people living with chronic pain. This model of art therapy is replicable and may be of use to practitioners working with people living with chronic pain conditions.
Accepted
peer-reviewed
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/5356
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A Community Dietetics Intervention to Improve the Use of Oral Nutritional Supplements in the Community Setting
(2012)
Kennelly, Sharon
A Community Dietetics Intervention to Improve the Use of Oral Nutritional Supplements in the Community Setting
(2012)
Kennelly, Sharon
Abstract:
Evaluation of a community dietetics intervention to improve oral nutritional supplement prescribing practices in the community. Background: Healthcare professionals working in the community do not always prescribe oral nutritional supplements (ONS) according to best practice guidelines and expenditure on ONS has increased. The aim of this study was to investigate ONS prescribing practices and to determine the impact of a community dietetics intervention on these practices and expenditure one year later. Methods: At baseline ONS prescribing practices were investigated by patient interview with a community dietitian. The intervention involved an education programme for general medical practitioners (GPs), practice nurses, nurses in nursing homes and community nurses together with the provision of a new community dietetics service. Changes in healthcare professionals‟ practices and knowledge were determined by selfadministered questionnaires immediately after and six months after the i...
https://arrow.dit.ie/sciendoc/126
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A multilevel analysis of trimethoprim and ciprofloxacin prescribing and resistance of uropathogenic escherichia coli in general practice
(2018)
Vellinga, A.; Murphy, A. W.; Hanahoe, B.; Bennett, K.; Cormican, M.
A multilevel analysis of trimethoprim and ciprofloxacin prescribing and resistance of uropathogenic escherichia coli in general practice
(2018)
Vellinga, A.; Murphy, A. W.; Hanahoe, B.; Bennett, K.; Cormican, M.
Abstract:
Objectives: A retrospective analysis of databases was performed to describe trimethoprim and ciprofloxacin prescribing and resistance in Escherichia coli within general practices in the West of Ireland from 2004 to 2008. Methods: Antimicrobial susceptibility testing was performed by disc diffusion methods according to the CLSI methods and criteria on significant E. coli isolates (colony count >10(5) cfu/mL) from urine samples submitted from general practice. Data were collected over a 4.5 year period and aggregated at practice level. Data on antimicrobial prescribing of practices were obtained from the national Irish prescribing database, which accounts for similar to 70% of all medicines prescribed in primary care. A multilevel model (MLwiN) was fitted with trimethoprim/ciprofloxacin resistance rates as outcome and practice prescribing as predictor. Practice and individual routinely collected variables were controlled for in the model. Results: Seventy-two general practi...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/14292
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A new tomorrow for travellers? a study of education, accommodation, and health issues in north Cork. 2001. (a picture in time with recommendations for the future)
(1995)
Brosnan, Elizabeth Gary; Le Cheile. Family Resource Centre (Mallow) Ltd.; North Cork Tr...
A new tomorrow for travellers? a study of education, accommodation, and health issues in north Cork. 2001. (a picture in time with recommendations for the future)
(1995)
Brosnan, Elizabeth Gary; Le Cheile. Family Resource Centre (Mallow) Ltd.; North Cork Traveller Group.
Abstract:
In October 1997, women from the Traveller community in North Cork identified the need to form a women's group and approached Le Cheile Family Resource Centre to facilitate its establishment. With the provision of a varied programme the group moved from strength to strength and expanded in number. As a result of the commitment shown by the group, FAS, Le Cheile Family Resource Centre (Mallow) Ltd and Avondhu Development Group Ltd. further facilitated their development. The North Cork Traveller Forum was established in 2000 by Avondhu Development Group Ltd and the North Cork Traveller Group. Its aim is to facilitate the inclusion of the North Cork Traveller community in the decision making processes which affect their lives. The North Cork Traveller Forum hopes to develop integrated responses to Traveller needs, through encouraging the engagement of statutory agencies, community groups and voluntary groups in addressing Traveller issues. From the outset the Travellers were encour...
http://hdl.handle.net/10147/560424
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A Reflective Conversation: Community and HEI Perspectives on Community-Based Research.
(2014)
O'Reilly, Niamh; Bates, Catherine
A Reflective Conversation: Community and HEI Perspectives on Community-Based Research.
(2014)
O'Reilly, Niamh; Bates, Catherine
Abstract:
This paper is a reflective correspondence between a community partner and a community-based research coordinator in a higher education institute (HEI). We asked each other questions about our experience of collaborating on two community-based research (CBR) projects, in order to share our learning from our collaboration, and to relate this to the wider context in order to develop recommendations for others – community partners and HEI staff – who would like to initiate CBR projects in the future.
https://arrow.dit.ie/comlinkart/18
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Acting for the Future – A Model of Best Practise for using drama workshops and professional theatre performances to promote positive mental health and to raise awareness of issues surrounding suicide and suicide prevention
(2006)
Moynihan, Mary
Acting for the Future – A Model of Best Practise for using drama workshops and professional theatre performances to promote positive mental health and to raise awareness of issues surrounding suicide and suicide prevention
(2006)
Moynihan, Mary
Abstract:
This booklet contains a documentation of the first round of Acting for the Future which uses participative drama workshops and a professional theatre performance to promote positive mental health and suicide prevention. The first round was implemented by Smashing Times Theatre Company from January to December 2005 and funded by Area Development Management and Dormant Account Fund Disbursement Board. The project is still on going. The booklet also contains a full curriculum for two drama workshop models used to promote positive mental health and suicide prevention, along with terms of reference and lists of recommended reading and support organisations. The booklet is a guide only for professional drama facilitators and other suitably qualified personnel wishing to carry out drama workshops to promote positive mental health and suicide prevention and it is recommended that drama facilitators undergo training in how to conduct the drama workshop models.
https://arrow.dit.ie/aaconmusbk/16
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Agent Mediation and Management of Virtual Communities : A Redefinition of the Traditional Community Concept
(2013)
O'Hare, G. M. P. (Greg M. P.); Sas, Corina; Byrne, C. A.
Agent Mediation and Management of Virtual Communities : A Redefinition of the Traditional Community Concept
(2013)
O'Hare, G. M. P. (Greg M. P.); Sas, Corina; Byrne, C. A.
Abstract:
Symposium on Technology, Economic and Social Applications of Distributed Intelligence (TESADI01) in IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics (SMC01), Tucson, Arizona, 07-10 October 2001
This paper explores the evolution of the concept of community in the light of computer mediated immersive virtual environments. The traditional concept of community has become strained it its attempts to capture the evolving virtual community. We believe the concept of the virtual community is of paramount importance and examine the extent to which this is being redefined to cater for it. We examine the management and mediation of such environments and specifically the social process associated with the cohabited users. We advocate the use of multi-agent systems in delivering this functionality.
8.7.2013 SB.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/4420
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An Exploration into the Impact of Drama and Theatre on Policy
(2005)
Moynihan, Mary
An Exploration into the Impact of Drama and Theatre on Policy
(2005)
Moynihan, Mary
Abstract:
An Exploration into the Impact of Drama and Theatre on Policy aims to determine the influence, if any, that drama and theatre can have on policy for example in relation to social policy and issues such as marginalization, disadvantage, poverty and social exclusion. The booklet explores national and international models of drama and theatre practice for influencing policy including work from Smashing Times Theatre Company.
https://arrow.dit.ie/aaconmusbk/9
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An investigation of clinical and sensor-based fall-risk assessment in community-dwelling older adults
(2014)
Power, Valerie
An investigation of clinical and sensor-based fall-risk assessment in community-dwelling older adults
(2014)
Power, Valerie
Abstract:
Accurate, efficient methods of assessing fall-risk are required to identify at-risk community-dwelling older adults and implement timely falls prevention interventions. Sensor-based fall-risk assessment (SBFRA) methods have been developed to objectively assess and quantify fall-risk by analysing functional task performance, but research exploring their clinical applications is lacking. The current research aimed to investigate if SBFRA could perform clinically-meaningful fall-risk assessment in community-dwelling older adults (i.e. could it accurately classify older adults according to their level of fall-risk), and to explore its use among high-risk older adults participating in a community-based falls prevention intervention. Following thorough examination of current evidence and issues of feasibility, clinical and SBFRA was carried out among High-Risk (n=38) and Low-Risk (n=33) groups of older adults in the community, the High-Risk group being participants in a community-based fa...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/4238
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Archaeological Excavations at the Monastic Complex, Sevenchurches or Camaderry Townland, Glendalough: 2017 Stratigraphical Report
(2018)
Seaver, Matthew; McDermott, Conor; Warren, Graeme
Archaeological Excavations at the Monastic Complex, Sevenchurches or Camaderry Townland, Glendalough: 2017 Stratigraphical Report
(2018)
Seaver, Matthew; McDermott, Conor; Warren, Graeme
Abstract:
This document outlines the results of excavations undertaken in August 2017 in the immediate surrounds of the main Monastic Complex at Glendalough, Co. Wicklow. This project forms part of a long term UCD School of Archaeology research and teaching project in the Glendalough Valley and includes work undertaken at the behest of the National Monuments Service.
Heritage Council
Wicklow County Council
University College Dublin
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/9417
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Autonomous Tracking For Volumetric Video Sequences
(2021)
Smolic, Aljosa
Autonomous Tracking For Volumetric Video Sequences
(2021)
Smolic, Aljosa
Abstract:
As a rapidly growing medium, volumetric video is gaining attention beyond academia, reaching industry and creative communities alike. This brings new challenges to reduce the barrier to entry from a technical and economical point of view. We present a system for robustly and autonomously performing temporally coherent tracking for volumetric sequences, specifically targeting those from sparse setups or with noisy output. Our system will detect and recover missing pertinent geometry across highly incoherent sequences as well as provide users the option of propagating drastic topology edits. In this way, afford-able multi-view setups can leverage temporal consistency to reduce processing and compression overheads while also generating more aesthetically pleasing volumetric sequences.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/94749
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Beyond the four walls: community based learning and languages
(2016)
O'Connor, Anne
Beyond the four walls: community based learning and languages
(2016)
O'Connor, Anne
Abstract:
At a time when languages in universities are under pressure, community-based learning language courses can have many positive benefits: they can increase interest in language learning, they can foster greater engagement with learning, and they can encourage active learning, creativity and teamwork. These courses, which link the classroom and the community, help address needs in the community, share resources and make languages more visible. By giving students the opportunity to engage in practical work, their transferable skills are enhanced. The gap between the university and community is closed and positive attitudes towards language learning are fostered. This paper examines research into community-based learning and language courses and the effect that the approach has on students. Using an example of such a course in NUI Galway, the author gives voice to the student experience of a CBL course and its impact on their motivation, their style of learning and their attitudes toward...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/5792
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Biking, Buying and Belonging: An Exploration of how an Irish Subculture of Consumption’s Socialisation Process Equips its Members to Critically Filter Marketing Messages
(2005)
Sherlock, Roger; Weller, Geoffrey
Biking, Buying and Belonging: An Exploration of how an Irish Subculture of Consumption’s Socialisation Process Equips its Members to Critically Filter Marketing Messages
(2005)
Sherlock, Roger; Weller, Geoffrey
Abstract:
This paper identifies how members of an Irish biker subculture of consumption critically decode marketing messages, brands and products using a subcultural filter (peculiar to the subculture) learnt through localised socialisation. This critical filter develops through prolonged subcultural immersion and is influenced by the word-ofmouth purchase advice and product judgement of other members of the subculture of consumption; with a parallel between its development and use, and the development of the subcultural identity, from experimentation, to identification and conformity, to mastery and internalisation of both filter and identity (Schouten and McAlexander, 1995). It is internally utilised by the members to allow them to achieve a personally harmonious and socially acceptable subcultural identity at a local group level. The findings suggest that marketers’ attempts to encode their offerings with appropriate symbolic meanings and messages are distorted due to the decoding process ...
https://arrow.dit.ie/buschmarcon/46
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Brand tribalism and self-expressive brands: social influences and brand outcomes
(2016)
Ruane, Lorna; Wallace, Elaine
Brand tribalism and self-expressive brands: social influences and brand outcomes
(2016)
Ruane, Lorna; Wallace, Elaine
Abstract:
Purpose - This study aims to examine the relationship between social influence and consumers' self-expression through brands. It considers susceptibility to interpersonal influence and social network influence on self-expressive brands and brand tribalism. The study examines whether self-expressive brands and brand tribalism influence brand loyalty and word of mouth (WOM).Design/methodology/approach - A cross-sectional online survey was carried out with members of Generation Y in Ireland. Data from 675 complete responses were analysed using SPSS 20 and AMOS 20. A structural model tested nine hypothesised relationships.Findings - Findings indicate that both online social network influence and susceptibility to interpersonal influence are antecedents of tribalism and self-expressive brands. Consumers of self-expressive brands are loyal and offer positive WOM. By contrast, those who seek tribal membership have less brand loyalty and offer less WOM than other consumers. Findings su...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/5918
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Cancer, Ireland and the EC
(1991)
Herity, Bernadette; Hynes, Mary; Barry, Joseph
Cancer, Ireland and the EC
(1991)
Herity, Bernadette; Hynes, Mary; Barry, Joseph
Abstract:
Cancer accounts for about 20% of all deaths in industrialised countries as well as considerable ill health; it is therefore essential that each country. of the European Community (EC) should undertake educational initiatives to provide sound scientifically based information on common cancers which occur in the Community. It is also important to give advice on preventive measures which if heeded will reduce illness and death from the disease, in order to try to meet the target of the European Committee of Cancer Experts to achieve a reduction in deaths from cancer of about 15% by the year 2000
http://hdl.handle.net/10147/337305
Marked
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Chairpersons as effective leaders
(2007)
Disability Federation of Ireland
Chairpersons as effective leaders
(2007)
Disability Federation of Ireland
Abstract:
As a means of assisting DFI to identify the key developmental, training and support needs of voluntary Boards of Directors and Management Committees, we set up the project entitled ‘Chairpersons as Effective Leaders’ in 2006. The aim of the project was to work with a cross-section of Chairpersons from DFI member organisations and, following a signifi cant consultation period with these Chairpersons, to develop a range of proposals and recommendations which would serve to enhance governance and management arrangements within voluntary disability organisations in Ireland.
http://hdl.handle.net/10147/335900
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