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Displaying Results 226 - 250 of 3977 on page 10 of 160
Marked
Mark
Widow(er)'s pensions: newsletter for pensioners.
(1999)
Pensions Services Offices, Sligo. Department of Social, Community and Family Affairs.
Widow(er)'s pensions: newsletter for pensioners.
(1999)
Pensions Services Offices, Sligo. Department of Social, Community and Family Affairs.
Abstract:
As we head towards the new Millennium, the UN International Year of Older Persons is an important milestone in celebrating the contribution that older people have made to society in general. The Government in its Action Programme for the new Millennium recognised the tangible contribution and sacrifices made by older people in building the strong and vibrant economy that we have in Ireland today and also the equally important contribution made by older people in the community in passing on those values which give us such a stable and caring society in this country. The principles of the UN Year, based on independence, participation, care, self-fulfilment and dignity, are fully in accordance with this Government's programme of improvements in the social welfare code for older people. Within my Department, the Pension Services Office (PSO) is the operational hub of our services and schemes for older people. The PSO celebrates its 10th year of operation this year. It is entirely a...
http://hdl.handle.net/10147/560436
Marked
Mark
Governed by Marriage Law
(2016)
McGowan, Deirdre
Governed by Marriage Law
(2016)
McGowan, Deirdre
Abstract:
Marriage law links the private and the political, connecting the aspirations of individuals to the regulatory ambitions of the state. Marriage has significant social and cultural importance, but the assumptions of stability and care it entails are also useful to government. As a result, marriage law has, both historically and in the present, been offered as the solution to a range of social problems. Using Ireland as a case study example, this essay focuses on the problems which marriage law reform has attempted to address and the political frameworks within which reform took place. It suggests that marriage law is a technique of government that aims to encourage marriage performance in the interests of economic and social stability.
https://arrow.dit.ie/aaschlawbk/3
Marked
Mark
National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016
(2015)
Department of Health (Ireland)
National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016
(2015)
Department of Health (Ireland)
Abstract:
14.5.2015 Drugs misuse continues to be one of the most significant challenges facing our country.  It is highly destructive and has devastating effects on individuals, relationships, families, communities and society in general. Implementation of the National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016, which sets out Government policy in dealing with the drugs problem, is being pursued across a range of Government Departments and Agencies. Solid progress is being made across the 63 Actions of the Strategy, which are based around the five pillars of supply reduction, prevention, treatment, rehabilitation and research. The Oversight Forum on Drugs, which will be Chaired by Minister Ã" RÃÂordáin, meets on a quarterly basis and reviews the implementation of the Strategy. The 2014 Annual Progress Report on the implementation of the actions of the National Drugs Strategy is available here.
http://dx.doi.org/10.14655/11971-870294
Marked
Mark
The Public Health (Alcohol) Bill 2015
(2015)
Department of Health (Ireland)
The Public Health (Alcohol) Bill 2015
(2015)
Department of Health (Ireland)
Abstract:
15.12.2015 The Public Health (Alcohol) Bill was approved by Government on 8th December. The bill aims to reduce alcohol consumption in Ireland to 9.1 litres per person per annum by 2020 and to reduce the harms associated with alcohol. The Bill consists of 29 sections and includes five main provisions. These are: minimum unit pricing; health labelling of alcohol products; the regulation of advertising and sponsorship of alcohol products; structural separation of alcohol products in mixed trading outlets; and the regulation of the sale and supply of alcohol in certain circumstances. The General Scheme of the Bill can be viewed here, the Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) can be read here. Read the Press release where the Government approves groundbreaking legislation to tackle alcohol misuse here. Â
http://dx.doi.org/10.14655/11971-946317
Marked
Mark
National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016 Progress Report 2015
(2016)
Department of Health (Ireland)
National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016 Progress Report 2015
(2016)
Department of Health (Ireland)
Abstract:
6.4.2016 Drugs misuse continues to be one of the most significant challenges facing our country. It is highly destructive and has devastating effects on individuals, relationships, families, communities and society in general. Implementation of the National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016, which sets out Government policy in dealing with the drugs problem, is being pursued across a range of Government Departments and Agencies. Solid progress is being made across the 63 Actions of the Strategy, which are based around the five pillars of supply reduction, prevention, treatment, rehabilitation and research. The Oversight Forum on Drugs meets on a quarterly basis and reviews the implementation of the Strategy. The Forum is chaired by the Minister with responsibility for the National Drugs Strategy. 2015 Annual Progress Report on the implementation of the actions of the National Drugs Strategy
http://dx.doi.org/10.14655/11971-988602
Marked
Mark
Improving Government Service Delivery to Minority Ethnic Groups: key considerations for service providers
(2006)
National Consultative Committee on Racism and Interculturalism (NCCRI)
Improving Government Service Delivery to Minority Ethnic Groups: key considerations for service providers
(2006)
National Consultative Committee on Racism and Interculturalism (NCCRI)
Abstract:
The following are some guidelines and key considerations for improving government services for minority ethnic groups. A more detailed discussion of these issues was published in 2006 as a result of research carried out in Ireland, Scotland and Northern Ireland. The research was commissioned by the Office of First Minister and Deputy First Minister in Northern Ireland from the Centre for Cross Border Studies. The research was co-ordinated by the National Consultative Committee on Racism and lnterculturalism (NCCRI); working with the Institute for Conflict Research in Belfast, Piaras MacEinrf at University College Cork; and Organisation and Social Development Consultants Limited in Edinburgh.1 The objective of this booklet is to provide practical guidance to Government bodies, enabling them to deliver better access to and outcomes from their services for people from minority ethnic backgrounds. The booklet will also be used in delivering the NCCRl's Anti-racism and lntercultur...
http://hdl.handle.net/10147/622861
Marked
Mark
Smart City as a Service (SCaaS): A future roadmap for e-government smart city cloud computing initiatives
(2018)
Clohessy, Trevor; Acton, Thomas; Morgan, Lorraine
Smart City as a Service (SCaaS): A future roadmap for e-government smart city cloud computing initiatives
(2018)
Clohessy, Trevor; Acton, Thomas; Morgan, Lorraine
Abstract:
The concept of a smart city has been identified as not only representing a crucible for technological innovation, a medium for realising global integration but also as an exemplar response for addressing current and impending global issues (societal, environmental economic and governance). There is now general consensus that emerging information communication technologies (ICT) such as cloud computing can be deployed as a vehicle for catalysing smart city innovation. There is also evidence to suggest that cloud computing has become a strategic direction for many e-government initiatives as evidenced by the emergence of global government clouds (G Cloud). In this paper, we delineate the concept of a smart city and explore the propitious potential of cloud computing to enable the development of smart cities. We review the current state of art pertaining to a selection of cloud schemes currently being operationalized by international governments aimed at capitalising on the nascent inn...
http://hdl.handle.net/10379/7280
Marked
Mark
National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016 Progress Report 2015
(2016)
Department of Health (Ireland)
National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016 Progress Report 2015
(2016)
Department of Health (Ireland)
Abstract:
6.4.2016 Drugs misuse continues to be one of the most significant challenges facing our country. It is highly destructive and has devastating effects on individuals, relationships, families, communities and society in general. Implementation of the National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016, which sets out Government policy in dealing with the drugs problem, is being pursued across a range of Government Departments and Agencies. Solid progress is being made across the 63 Actions of the Strategy, which are based around the five pillars of supply reduction, prevention, treatment, rehabilitation and research. The Oversight Forum on Drugs meets on a quarterly basis and reviews the implementation of the Strategy. The Forum is chaired by the Minister with responsibility for the National Drugs Strategy. 2015 Annual Progress Report on the implementation of the actions of the National Drugs Strategy
http://dx.doi.org/10.14655/11971-988602
Marked
Mark
The Public Health (Alcohol) Bill 2015
(2015)
Department of Health (Ireland)
The Public Health (Alcohol) Bill 2015
(2015)
Department of Health (Ireland)
Abstract:
15.12.2015 The Public Health (Alcohol) Bill was approved by Government on 8th December. The bill aims to reduce alcohol consumption in Ireland to 9.1 litres per person per annum by 2020 and to reduce the harms associated with alcohol. The Bill consists of 29 sections and includes five main provisions. These are: minimum unit pricing; health labelling of alcohol products; the regulation of advertising and sponsorship of alcohol products; structural separation of alcohol products in mixed trading outlets; and the regulation of the sale and supply of alcohol in certain circumstances. The General Scheme of the Bill can be viewed here, the Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) can be read here. Read the Press release where the Government approves groundbreaking legislation to tackle alcohol misuse here. Â
http://dx.doi.org/10.14655/11971-946317
Marked
Mark
National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016
(2015)
Department of Health (Ireland)
National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016
(2015)
Department of Health (Ireland)
Abstract:
14.5.2015 Drugs misuse continues to be one of the most significant challenges facing our country.  It is highly destructive and has devastating effects on individuals, relationships, families, communities and society in general. Implementation of the National Drugs Strategy 2009-2016, which sets out Government policy in dealing with the drugs problem, is being pursued across a range of Government Departments and Agencies. Solid progress is being made across the 63 Actions of the Strategy, which are based around the five pillars of supply reduction, prevention, treatment, rehabilitation and research. The Oversight Forum on Drugs, which will be Chaired by Minister Ã" RÃÂordáin, meets on a quarterly basis and reviews the implementation of the Strategy. The 2014 Annual Progress Report on the implementation of the actions of the National Drugs Strategy is available here.
http://dx.doi.org/10.14655/11971-870294
Marked
Mark
Department of Health Statement of Strategy 2011-2014
(2012)
Department of Health (Ireland)
Department of Health Statement of Strategy 2011-2014
(2012)
Department of Health (Ireland)
Abstract:
The Programme for Government sets out an agenda of fundamental change for our health services. The Department of Health must lead the implementation of Government policy and, in the course of the coming years, must also remodel itself to meet the challenges inherent in these radical changes. This Statement of Strategy outlines the high-level aims and objectives of the overall health system for the period 2011 to 2014. Click here to download PDF 191kb
http://dx.doi.org/10.14655/771574-773854
Marked
Mark
Fit For The Future - Proposals (PDF 66KB)
(2000)
Department of Health; Social Services and Public Safety
Fit For The Future - Proposals (PDF 66KB)
(2000)
Department of Health; Social Services and Public Safety
Abstract:
This Government came to power committed to reforming and modernising the health and personal social services (HPSS) and returning them to their founding principles and core values. The momentous political change which has taken pl ace in Northern Ireland over the last year means that the new Assembly will now be taking up that challenge. This paper is not a blueprint. It signals the direction in which the Government wishes to move, but it will quite properly be for the Assembly to take final decisions on the way forward. There are many difficult issues to be addressed and change cannot happen overnight. That is the challenge which faces the Assembly and the HPSS. I wish them every success in meeting it. åÊ åÊ
http://dx.doi.org/10.14655/799178-801493
Marked
Mark
Local government, 2018
(2019)
Quinn, Bríd
Local government, 2018
(2019)
Quinn, Bríd
Abstract:
From the abolition of library fines and the creation of age-friendly communities to the completion of thousands of social housing units and the announcement of a ‘21st Century University Town’, 2018 proved a busy year for local authorities. It was a year in which much data on the performance of local authorities were disseminated. The Local Government Audit Service’s report for 2016 (published in 2018) noted an improvement in some local authorities in revenue-collection yields, budgetary control, procurement, capital balances and governance. The National Oversight & Audit Commission (NOAC) continued to oversee the implementation of national policy at local government level, producing reports on performance indicators and the Public Spending Code, as well as a report on customer satisfaction levels and three reports on auditing issues. NOAC also continued its profiling of local authorities, visiting councils to enable NOAC members to gather and interrogate data on topics such as ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/7746
Marked
Mark
Community and inclusion: The impact of new communications technologies
(2019)
Komito, Lee
Community and inclusion: The impact of new communications technologies
(2019)
Komito, Lee
Abstract:
Can new information and communications technologies increase citizen participation in civic life and promote community development? Worldwide studies of community information systems demonstrate that new technologies can enhance the effectiveness of activists, However, there has been little evidence that they bring in new participants. This article argues that e-government systems can, if properly designed and implemented, involve citizens who have not previously been active in local community life, and describes an Irish pilot project which has this capacity. The success of such systems depends not only on design issues, but also on the willingness of government to respond to the resulting policy inputs by citizens.
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/10192
Marked
Mark
Political opportunities for NGOs in hybrid regimes: systematic variation between policy networks in the women’s-rights and environmental domains in Iran
(2019)
Moheimany, Mohsen
Political opportunities for NGOs in hybrid regimes: systematic variation between policy networks in the women’s-rights and environmental domains in Iran
(2019)
Moheimany, Mohsen
Abstract:
The hybrid political system of Iran creates political opportunities for advocacy NGOs depending on the political ideology of the ruling elite, the issue of a policy domain, and the level of government. Variations in these factors create fundamentally different types of policy networks, which dynamically function as sub-polities of the political regime. They provide advocacy NGOs with different constraints and opportunities regarding their different structures, which are characterised by the composition of actors, the interrelations between them, and the institutions. In this study, the argument is that the public policy arena of Iran is differentiated, and accordingly, policy networks vary from one area to another, and therefore, the agency of advocacy NGOs in them vary. This argument is sustained by case studies of policy networks at provincial and national levels, in the women-rights and environmental policy domains, and across the politically liberal government of Khatami (1997-...
http://doras.dcu.ie/23437/
Marked
Mark
Institutional change in the Irish university 2008-2014: an examination through the lens of institutional logics
(2019)
Gannon, Anne Margaret
Institutional change in the Irish university 2008-2014: an examination through the lens of institutional logics
(2019)
Gannon, Anne Margaret
Abstract:
Institutional change is an important research area in the context of the evolution of the Irish university sector. 2008-2014 was an eventful period in bringing about changes within the sector. Drivers of transformation led by the state during this time arose from two distinct sources; developments in government policy within the university sector and the impact of the economic recession. This study focuses on institutional change within the Irish university at both the meso level where the academic discipline is located and the micro levels where the experiences of individual academic professionals are examined. Institutional logics comprise the theoretical lens used in this study. In analysing institutional change, three specific institutional logics are identified and examined; representing the societal sectors of the state (the government logic), the business corporation (the corporate logic) and the academic profession (the professional logic). The development of a theoretical f...
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/9539
Marked
Mark
The Market for Sociological Ideas in Early 1960s Ireland: Civil Service Departments and the Limerick Rural Survey, 1961- 64 (NIRSA) Working Paper Series No. 53.
(2009)
Murray, Peter; Feeney, Maria
The Market for Sociological Ideas in Early 1960s Ireland: Civil Service Departments and the Limerick Rural Survey, 1961- 64 (NIRSA) Working Paper Series No. 53.
(2009)
Murray, Peter; Feeney, Maria
Abstract:
Why, Joseph Lee asks, `was the market for ideas in independent Ireland so small? Why was it so stagnant?’ In attempting to answer these questions, Lee places most emphasis on demand side deficiencies, discussing in detail the ways in which the development of research in economics was stunted by the prevailing narrow-mindedness of the Department of Finance. Yet, he observes, `slowly though economics developed as a research discipline, it was exceptionally advanced compared with cognate subjects’ such as sociology. A prevalent disregard for research among government policy-makers and private entrepreneurs has more recently been noted by Tom Garvin who highlights `a general syndrome of unintellectual or even anti-intellectual thinking’ within which `a common reaction to academic commentary was “sure we knew all that anyway”’.. Widely accepted and influential as such broad critiques are, the response of the higher echelons of the civil service to early research produced by Irish sociolo...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/1905/
Marked
Mark
Observations and Recommendations: on the Republic of Ireland Open Data Strategy (Working Paper 3)
(2014)
Lauriault, Tracey P.
Observations and Recommendations: on the Republic of Ireland Open Data Strategy (Working Paper 3)
(2014)
Lauriault, Tracey P.
Abstract:
1. Introduction - Context The Republic of Ireland Department of Public Expenditures and Reform (DPER) launched its first Open Data Portal data.gov.ie on July 22nd. It also conducted three public consultations, one with public sector bodies on September 22nd, and later on September 8th with civil society organizations and the public, while also accepting responses and recommendations by email. Open Data in the Republic is being led and coordinated by the DPER Government Reform Unit and the Chief Information Officer. The new CKAN portal was created by Insight Galway and it marks an important milestone toward meeting the following government objectives to: • enhance openness and transparency, • strengthen public governance and • yield economic benefits. The following are the information products delivered by Insight at National University of Ireland at Galway (NUIG): 1. Best Practice Handbook 2. Data Audit Report 3. Roadmap 4. Evaluation Framework 5. Open Data Publication Handbook...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/5682/
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Modelling higher education financing reform for Ireland
(2019)
Chapman, Bruce; Doris, Aedin
Modelling higher education financing reform for Ireland
(2019)
Chapman, Bruce; Doris, Aedin
Abstract:
This paper examines the feasibility of various alternative student loan schemes for Ireland. Using data from a large employer survey, we model the life-cycle earnings distribution for Irish graduates. We then use these estimates to simulate the effects of alternative types of student loans, including mortgage-type loans and incomecontingent loans of various designs, incorporating participation and migration patterns into the simulations. The results show that mortgage-type loans entail unsustainably high repayment rates for low income graduates. Through the specification of several alternative income-contingent loan schemes, it is demonstrated that this approach to higher education financing is feasible both in terms of affordability for graduates and with respect to implied government subsidies. There are some important policy design issues to be addressed and we conclude with some recommendations for a future Irish schem
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/11362/
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Mark
A revision of our attitudes towards the natural world is required.
(2007)
Sweeney, John
A revision of our attitudes towards the natural world is required.
(2007)
Sweeney, John
Abstract:
From being a rather abstract academic concept as recently as a decade ago, climate change has now become an issue which has gripped the attention of society and mobilised the energies of the young. For them it has replaced the fear of nuclear conflagration which dominated the issue attention cycle of the last generation. As with all major environmental issues, a schism exists between the idealism of the young and the pragmatism, some would say cynicism, of their elders. In his book Global Wanning: the Complete Briefing, Sir John Houghton (2004) reports on a conversation with a senior administrator in the United States who is reported as saying: "We cannot change our lifestyle because of the possibility of climate change; we just need to fix the biosphere." In some ways, this comment epitomises the conviction of many that we can always repair damage done to the environment by some, as yet to be discovered, technological "fix". Nuclear fusion, deep geological stora...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/9973/
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Deploying governance networks for societal challenges
(2018)
Ojo, Adegboyega; Mellouli, Sehl
Deploying governance networks for societal challenges
(2018)
Ojo, Adegboyega; Mellouli, Sehl
Abstract:
Governments are increasingly engaging private sector organizations, civil society and citizens to tackle complex policy challenges through some forms of networked governance arrangements. These governance networks which in general facilitate flexibility, speed and innovation in government, when compared with traditional governance forms, are necessary to meaningfully govern smart societies characterised by many programs spanning policy domains and levels of governments. This article presents a conceptual framework for governance networks and applies the framework to describe and analyse six case studies presented as part of the Track on “Governing through Networks” of the International Conference on the Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance (ICEGOV2013) Conference. Insights from the analysis of these cases somewhat suggest that: 1) governance networks are still largely steered by government; 2) efficacy of governance networks is contingent on citizen’s inclusion in the govern...
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/13184/
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A way forward: the future of Irish and European Union financial regulation
(2019)
Ahuja, Rishi; Barrett, Sean; Corbet, Shaen; Larkin, Charles
A way forward: the future of Irish and European Union financial regulation
(2019)
Ahuja, Rishi; Barrett, Sean; Corbet, Shaen; Larkin, Charles
Abstract:
The Irish financial crisis through the period between 2008 and 2012 caused unprecedented damage to the national economy while generating substantial inequality and demographic issues through the austerity measures that followed. While large amounts of taxation has gone towards understanding the events leading up to the crisis, there has not been a concentrated effort to consolidate the lessons learned within the Irish context. This paper seeks to fill that gap, providing an overview of the key lessons learned from the Irish experience of the European financial crisis. First, we interrogate the domestic response and evaluate the immediate government intervention and longer-term investigation process through the national Banking Inquiry commissioned by the Irish government. Second, we focus on the broader domestic policy lessons learned from the crisis. Lastly, we briefly evaluate some of key changes in European policy that will in turn shape the future of Irish regulatory policy. We ...
http://doras.dcu.ie/25000/
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Coronavirus: in Ireland hundreds of thousands have applied for government support – but is it enough?
(2020)
Whelan, Joe
Coronavirus: in Ireland hundreds of thousands have applied for government support – but is it enough?
(2020)
Whelan, Joe
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/10603
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Census big data analytics use: International cross case analysis
(2018)
Chatfield, Akemi Takeoka; Ojo, Adegboyega; Puron-Cid, Gabriel; Reddick, Christopher G.
Census big data analytics use: International cross case analysis
(2018)
Chatfield, Akemi Takeoka; Ojo, Adegboyega; Puron-Cid, Gabriel; Reddick, Christopher G.
Abstract:
Despite the growing practices in big data and big data analytics use, there is still the paucity of research on links between government big data analytics use and public value creation. This multi-case study of Australia, Ireland, Mexico, and U.S.A. examines the state of big data and big data analytics use in the national census context. The census agencies are at varying stages in digitally transforming their national census process, products and services through assimilating and using big data and big data analytics. The cross-case analysis of government websites and documents identified emerging agency challenges in creating public value in the national census context: (1) big data analytics capability development, (2) cross agency data access and data integration, and (3) data security, privacy & trust. Based on the insights gained, a research model aims to postulate the possible links among challenges, big data/big data analytics use, and public value creation
http://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/13373/
Marked
Mark
Partisan politics in the southern cone: is there anything left for the left? Political institutions, privatisation and policy outcome
(2009)
Doyle, David
Partisan politics in the southern cone: is there anything left for the left? Political institutions, privatisation and policy outcome
(2009)
Doyle, David
Abstract:
This thesis examines the capacity of left-wing governments in Latin America to implement their policy preferences in the context of the current phase of globalisation. In particular, it focuses on the policy area of privatisation. It addresses the debate concerning the extent to which increasing economic globalisation is forcing governments, regardless of their partisanship, to ‘converge’ upon a similar set of market-friendly economic policies. The thesis focuses on the ability of the left wing governments in Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay to implement their preferences in the policy area of privatisation, and the role of domestic political institutions in either facilitating or impeding these governments from doing so, using a qualitative comparative case study methodology. It hypothesises that the configuration of political institutions is a significant factor in determining the capacity of a government to pursue distinct partisan policies. The thesis finds that although the three ...
http://doras.dcu.ie/2358/
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