Results for 'Elderly clients'

989 found
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  1.  23
    Demand-based Provision of Housing, Welfare and Care Services to Elderly Clients: From Policy to Daily Practice Through Operations Management. [REVIEW]Carolien de Blok, Bert Meijboom, Katrien Luijkx & Jos Schols - 2009 - Health Care Analysis 17 (1):68-84.
    Practical implementation of notions such as patient-orientation, client-centredness, and demand-driven care is far from straightforward in care and service supply to elderly clients living independently. This paper aims to provide preliminary insights into how it is possible to bridge the gap between policy intent, which reflects an increasing client orientation, and actual practice of care and service provision. Differences in personal objectives and characteristics generate different sets of needs among elderly clients that must have an appropriate (...)
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  2.  22
    Client involvement in home care practice: a relational sociological perspective.Stinne Glasdam, Nina Henriksen, Lone Kjaer & Jeanette Praestegaard - 2013 - Nursing Inquiry 20 (4):329-340.
    ‘Client involvement’ has been a mantra within health policies, education curricula and healthcare institutions over many years, yet very little is known about how ‘client involvement’ is practised in home‐care services. The aim of this article is to analyse ‘client involvement’ in practise seen from the positions of healthcare professionals, an elderly person and his relative in a home‐care setting. A sociologically inspired single case study was conducted, consisting of three weeks of observations and interviews. The study has a (...)
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  3.  28
    Elder Abuse and Mistreatment in Residential Settings.Radka Bužgová & Kateřina Ivanová - 2009 - Nursing Ethics 16 (1):110-126.
    Older people living in a residential setting have the right to respectful care based on professional ethics. The aim of this study was to describe employees' and clients' lived experiences of elder abuse. A qualitative phenomenological method was used with 26 employees and 20 residents from four homes for elderly people in the town of Ostrava, Czech Republic, and two managers from outside these institutions. All complaints about elder abuse (n 5 11) received by Ostrava Municipal Authority during (...)
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  4.  66
    Tineke A. Abmais professor of client participation in elderly care at the Department of Medical Humanities and the EMGO+ Institute for Health and Care Research, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam. She has published extensively in the fields of program evaluation and qualitative methods, patient participation, and (nursing) ethics. Elderly care, chronic, care and psychiatry are her main practice fields. [REVIEW]Gwen Adshead - 2011 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 4 (1).
  5.  25
    Elder abuse and lawyers’ ethical responsibilities: incorporating screening into practice.Nola M. Ries - 2018 - Legal Ethics 21 (1):23-45.
    ABSTRACTElder abuse is a serious and under-detected problem. Law reform agencies and legal profession regulatory authorities have called for action to ensure that lawyers meet their ethical obligations to older clients, including identifying and acting on risk factors for abuse. Screening tools to detect situations of elder abuse exist, but they are targeted mainly at health and social care practitioners. Drawing on international literature, this article identifies and discusses screening tools that could be adapted for use by legal professionals. (...)
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  6.  44
    “I Stand Alone.” An Ethnodrama About the (dis)Connections Between a Client and Professionals in a Residential Care Home.Vivianne Baur, Tineke Abma & Ingrid Baart - 2012 - Health Care Analysis (3):1-20.
    Client participation in elderly care organizations requires shifting traditional power relations and establishing communicative action that involves the lifeworlds of clients and professionals alike. This article describes a particular form of client participation in which one client was part of a team of professionals in a residential care home. Their joint remit was to plan the implementation of a new personal care file for residents. We describe the interactions within this team through an ethnodrama, based on participant observations (...)
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  7.  13
    “I Stand Alone.” An Ethnodrama About the (dis)Connections Between a Client and Professionals in a Residential Care Home.Ingrid Baart, Tineke Abma & Vivianne Baur - 2014 - Health Care Analysis 22 (3):272-291.
    Client participation in elderly care organizations requires shifting traditional power relations and establishing communicative action that involves the lifeworlds of clients and professionals alike. This article describes a particular form of client participation in which one client was part of a team of professionals in a residential care home. Their joint remit was to plan the implementation of a new personal care file for residents. We describe the interactions within this team through an ethnodrama, based on participant observations (...)
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  8.  31
    Mind the gaps: ethical representation of clients with questionable mental capacity.Margaret Castles - 2015 - Legal Ethics 18 (1):24-45.
    ABSTRACTLawyers play an important role in protecting the interests of the vulnerable in society. Increasingly those engaged in working with clients who are mentally ill, elderly, or experiencing fluctuating mental capacity, are called upon to make decisions and protect interests of clients who struggle to understand the legal consequence and meaning of their decisions. Ethical principles that prohibit lawyers acting on anything other than competent instructions, and disapprove of acting ‘in the best interests’ of clients in (...)
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  9.  52
    ‘He was wearing street clothes, not pyjamas’: common mistakes in lawyers’ assessment of legal capacity for vulnerable older clients.Lise Barry - 2018 - Legal Ethics 21 (1):3-22.
    ABSTRACTLawyers are increasingly called upon to deal with older clients and have ethical responsibilities to attest to their capacity for legal decision-making. As witnesses to enduring documents, the making of wills and other significant advance planning transactions, lawyers play a role in preventing elder abuse and in upholding the rights of older people. To date however, there has been very little empirical research examining how lawyers assess an older person’s legal decision-making capacity. This article presents research examining three years (...)
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  10.  87
    Exercising restraint: autonomy, welfare and elderly patients.S. Dodds - 1996 - Journal of Medical Ethics 22 (3):160-163.
    Despite moves to enhance the autonomy of clients of health care services, the use of a variety of physical restraints on the freedom of movement of frail, elderly patients continues in nursing homes. This paper confronts the use of restraints on two grounds. First, it challenges the assumption that use of restraints is necessary to protect the welfare of frail, elderly patients by drawing on a range of data indicating the limited efficacy of restraints. Secondly, it argues (...)
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  11.  14
    Autonomy on the horizon: comparing institutional approaches to disability and elder care.Guillermina Altomonte & Adrianna Bagnall Munson - 2021 - Theory and Society 50 (6):935-963.
    This article asks how people come to interpret themselves and others as autonomous given their multiple dependencies. We draw on a cross-case comparison of ethnographic studies with two populations for whom autonomy is both central and problematic: elderly patients in post-acute care, and young adults with disabilities in an independent living program. Analyzing the institutional efforts to make their clients “as independent as possible,” we find that staff members at each organization formulate autonomy as a temporal project through (...)
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  12. Conversation from Beyond the Grave? A Neo‐Confucian Ethics of Chatbots of the Dead.Alexis Elder - 2020 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 37 (1):73-88.
    Digital records, from chat transcripts to social media posts, are being used to create chatbots that recreate the conversational style of deceased individuals. Some maintain that this is merely a new form of digital memorial, while others argue that they pose a variety of moral hazards. To resolve this, I turn to classical Chinese philosophy to make use of a debate over the ethics of funerals and mourning. This ancient argument includes much of interest for the contemporary issue at hand, (...)
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  13. Forgiveness and Philosophy - Volume 1: Explorations of Forgiveness: Personal, Relational, and Religious.Alexis Elder (ed.) - 2016 - Wilmington, DE: Vernon Press.
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  14.  38
    Real Natures and Familiar Objects.Crawford Elder - 2004 - Cambridge, Mass.: Bradford.
    In _Real Natures and Familiar Objects_ Crawford Elder defends, with qualifications, the ontology of common sense. He argues that we exist -- that no gloss is necessary for the statement "human beings exist" to show that it is true of the world as it really is -- and that we are surrounded by many of the medium-sized objects in which common sense believes. He argues further that these familiar medium-sized objects not only exist, but have essential properties, which we are (...)
  15. Why Bad People Can't be Good Friends.Alexis Elder - 2013 - Ratio 27 (1):84-99.
    Must the best friends necessarily be good people? On the one hand, as Aristotle puts it, ‘people think that the same people are good and also friends’. But on the other hand, friendship sometimes seems to require that one behave badly. For example, a normally honest person might lie to corroborate a friend's story. What I will call closeness, which I take to include sensitivity to friends' subjective values and concerns as well as an inclination to take their subjective interests (...)
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  16.  9
    The Metaphysics of Being of St. Thomas Aquinas: In a Historical Perspective.Leo J. Elders - 1950 - New York: Brill.
    Metaphysics, formerly the queen of science, fell into oblivion under the onslaught of empiricism and positivism and its very possibllity came to be denied. Professor Elders traces the history of this process and shows how St. Thomas innovated in determining both the subject of metaphysics and the manner in which one enters this science, particularly in the framework of his Aristotle commentaries. The work then considers being and its properties, its divisions into being in act and being in potency, into (...)
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  17.  59
    The metaphysics of being of St. Thomas Aquinas in a historical perspective.Leo J. Elders (ed.) - 1992 - New York: E.J. Brill.
    Finally the causes of being are considered. The work also introduces and surveys the extensive literature of Thomas interpretation of the past 50 years.
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  18.  82
    From an Ontological Point of View.Crawford L. Elder - 2004 - Mind 113 (452):757-760.
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  19.  4
    Au cœur de la philosophie de saint Thomas d'Aquin.Leo Elders - 2009 - Paris: Presses universitaires de l'IPC.
    Les écoles qui, dans un passé récent, avaient la haute main dans le domaine philosophique, ont désormais perdu du terrain et, face aux nombreux problèmes auxquels nous sommes confrontés, la pensée de saint Thomas jouit d'une grande actualité. Partout dans le monde, on peut voir un intérêt croissant pour l'étude de sa pensée. Toutefois, sur plusieurs points importants, les présentations qu'on fait de sa philosophie sont divergentes. En suivant au plus près les textes eux-mêmes, l'auteur de cet ouvrage se penche (...)
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  20. Forgiveness and Friendship.Alexis Elder - 2016 - In Forgiveness and Philosophy - Volume 1: Explorations of Forgiveness: Personal, Relational, and Religious. Wilmington, DE: Vernon Press. pp. 17-38.
     
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  21. Zhuangzi on Friendship and Death.Alexis Elder - 2014 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 52 (4):575-592.
    Zhuangzi suggests that death is a transformation that we commonly and mistakenly think means the end of someone but really just marks a new phase of existence. This metaphysical thesis is presented at several points in the text as an explanation of distinctively Daoist responses to death and loss. Some take a Daoist response to death, as presented by Zhuangzi, to indicate dual perspectives on friendship and death. But I argue that the metaphysical view sketched above is consistent with a (...)
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  22. Proprioception, Anosognosia, and the Richness of Conscious Experience.Alexis Elder - 2013 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 20 (3-4):3-4.
    Proprioception, a sense of bodily position and movement, is rarely the focus of conscious experience. If we are ordinarily conscious of proprioception, we seem only peripherally so. Thus, evidence that proprioception is present in the periphery of at least some conscious experiences seems to be good evidence that conscious experience is fairly rich. Anosognosia for paralysis is a denial of paralysis of one's limbs, usually in the wake of brain damage from stroke. Because anosognosic patients overlook their paralysis, anosognosia seems (...)
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  23. Relativity and reality.Elder Gaul Barter - 1953 - London,: Watts.
     
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  24. George Grant on the Transcendence of the Beautiful and the Good.R. Bruce Elder - 2008 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 31 (4):260-283.
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  25. Reflections on the Violence of Art.R. Bruce Elder - 2009 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 32 (2-4):119-143.
  26. The interpersonal is political: unfriending to promote civic discourse on social media.Alexis Elder - 2020 - Ethics and Information Technology 22 (1):15-24.
    Despite the initial promise of social media platforms as a means of facilitating discourse on matters of civic discourse, in practice it has turned out to impair fruitful conversation on civic issues by a number of means. From self-isolation into echo chambers, to algorithmically supported filter bubbles, to widespread failure to engage politically owing to psychological phenomena like the ‘spiral of silence’, a variety of factors have been blamed. I argue that extant accounts overlook the importance of interpersonal relationships to (...)
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  27. ’How could you even ask that?’ Moral considerability, uncertainty and vulnerability in social robotics.Alexis Elder - 2020 - Journal of Sociotechnical Critique 1 (1):1-23.
    When it comes to social robotics (robots that engage human social responses via “eyes” and other facial features, voice-based natural-language interactions, and even evocative movements), ethicists, particularly in European and North American traditions, are divided over whether and why they might be morally considerable. Some argue that moral considerability is based on internal psychological states like consciousness and sentience, and debate about thresholds of such features sufficient for ethical consideration, a move sometimes criticized for being overly dualistic in its framing (...)
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  28. Partv tube feeding in elderly care.Tube Feeding in Elderly Care - 2002 - In Chris Gastmans (ed.), Between Technology and Humanity: The Impact of Technology on Health Care Ethics. Leuven University Press.
     
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  29.  18
    What versus how in naturally selected representations.Elder Cl - 1998 - In Daniel N. Robinson (ed.), The Mind. Oxford University Press. pp. 107--426.
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  30.  28
    Code.Client Ben Chapman, Q. Merseyside & Ch62 Sbh - forthcoming - Think.
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  31. Friendship and Social Media.Alexis Elder - 2022 - In Diane Jeske (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Friendship. New York, NY: Routledge. pp. 358-370.
    Evaluations of social media’s impact on friendship have often focused on risks and drawbacks. In this chapter, both empirical and philosophical resources are surveyed and a more nuanced conclusion is defended. While social media platforms and users are too diverse to support simplistic conclusions, investigating the details of shared activity and influence on character in the context of social media interactions, we can find evidence of genuine benefits as well as hazards, and the evolving and emerging details of social media (...)
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  32.  74
    Conventionalism and realism-imitating counterfactuals.Crawford L. Elder - 2006 - Philosophical Quarterly 56 (222):1–15.
    Historically, opponents of realism have argued that the world’s objects are constructed by our cognitive activities—or, less colorfully, that they exist and are as they are only relative to our ways of thinking and speaking. To this realists have stoutly replied that even if we had thought or spoken in ways different from our actual ones, the world would still have been populated by the same objects as it actually is, or at least by most of them. (Our thinking differently (...)
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  33.  32
    A Challenge to Neurasthenia. By Doris Mary Armitage. (London: Williams & Norgate, Ltd.1931. Pp. 64).A. E. Elder - 1932 - Philosophy 7 (27):368-.
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  34.  84
    Science, Religion and Reality. By Various Authors. Edited by Joseph Needham.A. E. Elder - 1926 - Philosophy 1 (1):105.
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  35.  1
    No Title available: PHILOSOPHY.A. E. Elder - 1944 - Philosophy 19 (74):282-283.
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  36. No Title available.A. E. Elder - 1932 - Philosophy 7 (27):368-369.
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  37.  26
    Diálogo com O sagrado: Narrativas Das benzedeiras E rezadeiras de santo amaro.Elder Pereira Ribeiro, Márcio Luis Moreira De Sena & Liverson Ferreira Santos Oreste - 2018 - Odeere 3 (6):366.
    Este relato de experiência apresenta resultados da pesquisa sobre a Saúde em Santo Amaro: a partir dos saberes tradicionais das rezadeiras/benzedeiras que teve por objetivo analisar as práticas medicinais e espirituais com o sagrado. A pesquisa etnográfica foi realizada com as rezadeiras, dessa forma, estabelecendo fronteiras com os rituais de cura, fé e devoção, nos processos de aprendizagem, aos mais variados tipos de doenças, as rezas e as curas, sendo assim, realizadas por elas. As rezadeiras/benzedeiras são mulheres cujo valor histórico, (...)
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  38.  14
    The Religions of Tibet.George R. Elder - 1982 - Philosophy East and West 32 (1):117-118.
  39.  46
    Why some Jehovah's Witnesses accept blood and conscientiously reject official Watchtower Society blood policy.L. Elder - 2000 - Journal of Medical Ethics 26 (5):375-380.
    In their responses to Dr Osamu Muramoto Watchtower Society spokesmen David Malyon and Donald Ridley ,1–3 deny many of the criticisms levelled against the WTS by Muramoto.4–6 In this paper I argue as a Jehovah's Witness and on behalf of the members of AJWRB that there is no biblical basis for the WTS's partial ban on blood and that this dissenting theological view should be made clear to all JW patients who reject blood on religious grounds. Such patients should be (...)
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  40.  9
    The ethics of St. Thomas Aquinas: happiness, natural law and the virtues.Leo Elders - 2019 - Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press.
    The far reaching changes in man's social and personal life taking place in our lifetime underline the need for a sound ethical evaluation of our rights and duties and of human behaviour both on the individual level and in the political society. On many issues judgments of value vary widely and a consultation of the thought of Thomas Aquinas on the basic questions will be helpful, the more since he is not only one of the greatest philosophers but also succeeded (...)
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  41.  32
    ‘Materially social’ critical realism: an interview with Dave Elder-Vass.Dave Elder-Vass & Jamie Morgan - 2022 - Journal of Critical Realism 21 (2):211-246.
    In this wide-ranging interview, Dave Elder-Vass discusses his main contributions to critical realist theory over two decades. In the first half, he explains his early work on emergence, agency, str...
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  42.  32
    The Causal Power of Social Structures: Emergence, Structure and Agency.Dave Elder-Vass - 2010 - Cambridge University Press.
    The problem of structure and agency has been the subject of intense debate in the social sciences for over 100 years. This book offers a solution. Using a critical realist version of the theory of emergence, Dave Elder-Vass argues that, instead of ascribing causal significance to an abstract notion of social structure or a monolithic concept of society, we must recognise that it is specific groups of people that have social structural power. Some of these groups are entities with emergent (...)
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  43. The Parable of the Sower Beneath the Surface of Multicultural Issues The Narrow Neck of Land.Elder Paul V. Johnson, Blair G. Van Dyke, Jared M. Halverson, Sidney R. Sandstrom, Eric-Jon K. Marlowe, John Hilton Iii, Jordan Tanner, Nick Eastmond, Clyde L. Livingston & A. Paul King - 2008 - The Religious Educator 9 (3).
     
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  44.  29
    A Conspectus of Poetry: Part I.Elder Olson - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 4 (1):159-180.
    Is there an alternative course to one which sets up hypotheses as to the nature of poetry and then proceeds to illustrate them? Happily, there is. Rather than beginning with the hypothesis we may begin with the fact, and let what may emerge. That is, rather than beginning with some notion of the nature of poetry, we may begin with individual poems and discover what we may of their nature or form. This procedure evidently involves four phases: examination of the (...)
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  45.  23
    A Conspectus of Poetry: Part II.Elder Olson - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 4 (2):373-396.
    When the activity depicted in a poem involves a succession of moments, it may take one of two possible forms: simple or complex. A simple activity is like a straight line; that is, it involves progression in a single direction, then in another. This changing of course, so to speak, is called a turning point or reversal. Every complex activity contains at least one such turning point; and it is possible to have a good many turning points if the action (...)
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  46.  14
    A Conspectus of Poetry: Part I.Elder Olson - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 4 (1):159-180.
    Is there an alternative course to one which sets up hypotheses as to the nature of poetry and then proceeds to illustrate them? Happily, there is. Rather than beginning with the hypothesis we may begin with the fact, and let what may emerge. That is, rather than beginning with some notion of the nature of poetry, we may begin with individual poems and discover what we may of their nature or form. This procedure evidently involves four phases: examination of the (...)
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  47.  20
    On Value Judgments in the Arts.Elder Olson - 1974 - Critical Inquiry 1 (1):71-90.
    When we discuss the value of a work of art we are confronted immediately with two difficulties: the terms we use, and the peculiar character of art. No one, to my knowledge, has ever doubted that an artist produces a form of some kind, and that in any discussion of art as art that form must somehow be considered; but the terms we use generally have no reference to form. We miss the form in various ways We use terms that (...)
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  48.  22
    The Poetic Process.Elder Olson - 1975 - Critical Inquiry 2 (1):69-74.
    In general, discussions of the poetic process have tended to fall into one of three classes. The first of these, generalizing the process, analyzes the faculties or the activities supposedly involved and arranges these in their logical order, to produce distinct stages or periods of the process. The second kind describes the working habits of an individual poet in terms of characteristic external or internal circumstances or conditions. The third kind gives us, in the same terms, the history of the (...)
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  49.  13
    Explaining poverty and business with network concepts analysis.Elder Semprebon, Melody de Campos Soares Porsse, Elis Cristina Gurak & Flavia Dameto - 2020 - Business and Society Review 125 (3):311-327.
    Poverty observed from business in the academic field has evolved in some publications and is characterized as a multidimensional phenomenon, having several theoretical strands that add their attention to this problem. The objective of this study is to identify and cluster the variables of poverty in the business area through the network analysis. There were 1,745 keywords mentioned in 566 papers about the theme present in the Scopus database between 2000 and 2016. The results demonstrate a network with four clusters: (...)
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  50.  25
    The Scotch metaphysics: a century of enlightenment in Scotland.George Elder Davie - 2001 - New York: Routledge.
    Focusing on the works of Thomas Reid, Dugald Stewart, Sir William Hamilton, Thomas Brown and James Frederick Ferrier, this book offers a definitive account of an important philosophical movement, and represents a ground-breaking contribution to scholarship in the area. Essential reading for philosophers or anyone with an interest in the history of philosophical thought.
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