Results 241 to 250 of about 48,042 (301)
ABSTRACT Displacing people to make way for development projects is contentious. Empirical research demonstrates that neither human rights guidelines nor multilateral lenders' standards guarantee positive, sustainable outcomes for displaced people. With multiple new displacing projects proposed globally, including for renewable energy, we propose a new ...
Eddie Smyth +2 more
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ABSTRACT The Social and Solidarity Economy (SSE) offers strong potential for sustainable development in low‐income regions, yet its enterprises often operate with scarce resources, weak monitoring systems, and limited visibility. These constraints hinder both their capacity to demonstrate contributions to sustainable development (SD) and their own ...
Maria‐del‐Mar Magallón +1 more
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Toward Sustainable Healthcare: Examining ESG‐Readiness in Austrian Regional State‐Owned Hospitals
ABSTRACT Reporting on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues is now an essential part of responsible corporate governance, including in the healthcare sector. This study investigates the ESG reporting practices of Austrian regional state‐owned hospitals (rSOHs), contributing to the growing sustainability literature. Thirteen interviews with
Philumena Bauer +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Putting the involvement of Indigenous Australians back into Indigenous Australian archaeology
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Glaucoma in indigenous Australians
British Journal of Ophthalmology, 2011We read with interest the recent article by Chua et al .1 They present an estimation of glaucoma prevalence in indigenous Australians using an ‘epidemiological definition of glaucoma’. It has been found in several previous studies2 3 that this is a group which has a lower prevalence of glaucoma than any other race.
John, Landers +2 more
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Prion disease in Indigenous Australians
Internal Medicine Journal, 2021AbstractBackgroundIndigenous Australians are at increased risk of developing dementia – Alzheimer disease and mixed dementia diagnoses are the most common. While prion diseases have been reported in Indigenous peoples of Papua New Guinea and the United States, the occurrence and phenotype of prion disease in Indigenous Australians is hitherto ...
Peter K. Panegyres +4 more
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Australian Indigenous mental health
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Mental Health Nursing, 2001ABSTRACT: Understanding the complexity of another culture’s health concerns is fraught with difficulty, yet ‘ways forward’ abound. Many researchers, including Indigenous people, have recorded cultural understandings of health, and made recommendations that have influenced the planning of Indigenous peoples’ mental health care.
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Indigenizing Australian Theatre
2009Few local observers would debate the claim that Australian theatre has now confidently outgrown its anti-cosmopolitan foundations, although some might argue about the extent to which historical patterns of cross-cultural engagement continue to impact upon performing arts praxis within and beyond the nation.
Helen Gilbert, Jacqueline Lo
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TUBERCULOSIS IN INDIGENOUS AUSTRALIANS
Medical Journal of Australia, 1975A comparative study of tuberculosis in Aboriginal and white Australians is presented. There is a much higher prevalence of disease in the Aboriginal population than in the white. From a study of the clinical features and response to treatment in paired cases, disease in the Aboriginal is found to be more acute, more extensive and more frequently non ...
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