Results 261 to 270 of about 843,910 (299)
Essential work, invisible workers: The role of digital curation in COVID‐19 Open Science
Abstract In this paper, we examine the role digital curation practices and practitioners played in facilitating open science (OS) initiatives amid the COVID‐19 pandemic. In Summer 2023, we conducted a content analysis of available information regarding 50 OS initiatives that emerged—or substantially shifted their focus—between 2020 and 2022 to address ...
Irene V. Pasquetto +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract This review examines the role of open citations in fostering transparency, reproducibility, and accessibility in scholarly communication. Through a critical synthesis of diverse sources—articles, proceedings, presentations, datasets, and blog posts—it explores the motivations behind citing, the evolving meanings of citations, and key ...
Zehra Taşkın
wiley +1 more source
Valuing curation infrastructures
Abstract This study uses a theoretical lens of infrastructural dimensions to examine stakeholders' perceptions of the value of curation, focusing on the social science data repository, the Inter‐university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR).
Morgan F. Wofford +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Disadvantaged communities often face compounded infrastructural, social, and economic barriers to accessing and utilizing information. This study investigates the information ecosystem of small‐scale fishing communities in climate‐vulnerable regions of Bangladesh, examining their information needs, access practices, and systemic constraints ...
Md Khalid Hossain +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Many academic libraries aim to improve services for and interactions with patrons and stakeholders who are neurodivergent, that is, those who have neurocognitive functions that differ from what is considered normal. To support this aim, numerous scholarly works have focused on neurodivergence in academic libraries, but such works have yet to ...
Catharina Ochsner, Jesse Dinneen
wiley +1 more source
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Health Affairs, 2018
Many factors that affect health can have disproportionate effects on vulnerable groups, such as those with low socioeconomic status, women, racial and ethnic minorities, people who are disabled, and those who are LGBTQ. Factors such as educational opportunity, geography, food and housing security, safety, and environmental conditions are often beyond a
openaire +2 more sources
Many factors that affect health can have disproportionate effects on vulnerable groups, such as those with low socioeconomic status, women, racial and ethnic minorities, people who are disabled, and those who are LGBTQ. Factors such as educational opportunity, geography, food and housing security, safety, and environmental conditions are often beyond a
openaire +2 more sources
Health Affairs, 2017
Health disparities-differences in health status, treatment, or outcomes-exist between racial and ethnic minorities; people with low socioeconomic status; lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people; women; people with disabilities; and others, compared with majority populations. Improved insurance coverage and targeted efforts by health care systems
openaire +2 more sources
Health disparities-differences in health status, treatment, or outcomes-exist between racial and ethnic minorities; people with low socioeconomic status; lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people; women; people with disabilities; and others, compared with majority populations. Improved insurance coverage and targeted efforts by health care systems
openaire +2 more sources
Equity, capabilities and health
Social Science & Medicine, 2005This paper provides an introduction to a collection of articles concerning the relevance of Amartya Sen's work, the capability approach and related ethical claims, to health-care rationing.
Paul Dolan, Paul Anand
openaire +3 more sources
Health, development and equity [PDF]
Brazil, a country of continental proportions, shares this paradox along with other dynamics of a developing and dependent country. It is a country with great natural wealth, and major energy and raw material potential, each of which has not been properly exploited and used.
Márcia Faria Westphal, Nina Wallerstein
openaire +2 more sources
Promoting Equity in Health [PDF]
There is evidence that widening income gaps are a global phenomenon; that in many advanced industrialised countries unemployment rates are rising; that globalisation of the world economy has led to several countries becoming marginalised with a concomitant increase in poverty; and that the absolute number of poor has steadily increased over the last ...
Derek Yach +3 more
openaire +2 more sources

