Sentences with phrase «as institutional cultures»

As it turns out, the approaches are as varied as the institutional culture.

Not exact matches

In particular, referring to applicants and petitioners for immigration benefits, and the beneficiaries of such applications and petitions, as «customers» promotes an institutional culture that emphasizes the ultimate satisfaction of applicants and petitioners, rather than the correct adjudication of such applications and petitions according to the law.
Others were groping down false paths toward the reform of an institutional Church that, for all its integration with culture and society, was becoming evangelically flaccid and sluggish, perhaps in the complacent conviction (not unlike that of the recent past) that the faith could be transmitted by cultural osmosis, as a kind of ethnic heritage.
Leanne Van Dyk explores as an institutional model her seminary's decision to orient its teaching to «the newly emerging missionary encounter of the gospel in the cultures of North America.»
The changes which fostered, accompanied, and were produced by the industrial revolution — such as urbanism and all that it implied — put to stringent test the practices and institutional patterns of a Protestantism which had been closely identified with rural society and culture.
As to the Roman Catholic community, it has been buffeted by the same social and cultural forces, especially since Vatican II (probably inevitably) greatly weakened the institutional defenses against the overall culture.
In so far as people in our culture act in segmentalized roles are defined and required by organized groups able to apply social and economic power, the church that makes no demands upon its members, gives them no stronghold from which to fight, and is afraid to use its own institutional power when it is necessary is simply eliminated from the struggle.
These needs may be linked (but are not limited) to drug or alcohol dependencies; severe mental health problems; experiences of domestic violence, institutional experiences, particularly local authority care and prison); involvement in sex work; and participation in «street culture» activities, such as begging, street drinking, and street - level drug dealing or migrant status.
The story highlights a major shift in how academic communities deal with sexual harassment, as they strive to change the culture at the institutional level.
Our team included several «insiders,» postdocs who had been grad students at the University of Chicago and, as a result, could provide the benefit of their experiences with administrative practices and institutional culture.
All three awards share the same general objective as the POWRE program — increasing the participation and advancement of women scientists and engineers in academia — but the ADVANCE Institutional Transformation Awards target policy and programs with the potential to change the culture of science.
Researchers said that their study has some limitations because it does not contain information about other school factors that may affect students» well - being during a transition, such as changes in school cultures or institutional heritage or traditions, or changes in available extracurricular activities.
As Gary Bowden puts it, «science has an unrivalled institutional coherence that allows it to be transported from one culture to another virtually intact.
As Hansen observes, though, equally necessary is a change in institutional culture to ensure that committees more directly consider benefit - harm issues.
As a part of the Commission's recommendations, institutions are urged to implement 10 «Child Safe Standards» which includes «child safety is embedded in institutional leadership, governance and culture»; «families and communities are informed and involved»; «staff are equipped with the knowledge, skills and awareness to keep children safe through continual education and training»; and «policies and procedures document how the institution is child safe».
In his most recent position as director general of CIMO at the Finnish Ministry of Education and Culture in Helsinki, Sahlberg worked with the Finnish government to promote internationalization and tolerance, creativity, and global ethics in Finnish society through mobility and institutional cooperation in education, culture, youth, andCulture in Helsinki, Sahlberg worked with the Finnish government to promote internationalization and tolerance, creativity, and global ethics in Finnish society through mobility and institutional cooperation in education, culture, youth, andculture, youth, and sport.
In schools where these lessons and principles are integrated into daily life and institutional culture, teachers and administrators learn to approach students as whole people who need skills training and a supportive environment to truly flourish.
Members of the selection panel were impressed by how Dr. Ross embraces the principal's primary role as, in his words, «the number - one driver for institutional change» who consistently builds a culture that promotes social justice while preparing students to lead productive lives.
Throughout, comparative analyses of data from countries as France, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Germany, Belgium, Sweden, Switzerland, Hungary, and Australia help portray how lone parenthood varies between regions, cultures, generations, and institutional settings.
He is committed to community collaborations, with a focus on arts education and outreach programming, and consistently strives to create an institutional culture he describes as «artist - centric.»
As a result, nearly all institutional support fell away from his work, and when President Charles de Gaulle appointed André Malraux, a staunch supporter of abstraction, Minister of Culture in 1959, state support for Buffet's work vanished.
Looking beyond individual accountabilities, it is clear that Iniva's current fate is as a result of institutional forces outside of its control, forces that continually push susceptible organisations in the art world towards homogeneity in structure, culture and output.
While the artists allied with this understanding of institutional critique were certainly central to our thinking, we recognized that those dedicated to appropriation as a strategy — to borrowing forms and images in order to reveal how they operate within our culture — were making similar calls for changes to the structures and definitions of art.
Examining the role that African art and culture plays in the genesis of Rythm Mastr's main storylines — particularly as a gateway to this alternative reality — this paper posits Marshall's project as a revisionist history in graphic form that offers a world of possibilities outside of the commonly accepted narrative constructed around African art and modernism and its institutional legacy.
These cultures (their tactics and strategies) return control to the users and remodels relationships between the individual and the institutional edifice: in academia, in the arts, technological fields of practice, and as part of everyday life.
In these anachronous displays, Gates seems interested in how culture is nonlinear, approaches to institutional critique double back, and embracing decontextualization as art may be another type of progress.
His apparently split art - world identity between member and opposer is better understood if his work is viewed not as institutional critique, though it contains a heavy dollop of that, but rather as a dissection of society's deep - set use and abuse of art and culture.
Art as a fully engaged institutional critique, capable of extending its frame of reference directly into the political sphere is, if not a purely historical phenomenon, then one that is now associated, almost exclusively, with contexts outside Western centers of culture and commerce.
Casey Jane Ellison's work invokes pop culture tropes, concepts of the «self», and institutional critique to probe and parody art and fashion as systems of signification and market driven economies.
The now - old story of the infinitely capacious co-optation of aesthetic subversion by the culture industry has been similarly updated, as the strategically deployed pessimism of institutional critique is absorbed into the alterna - worlds of individual agency.
As the affable ambassador of serious institutional critique, Fred Wilson has been warmly invited into fortresses of culture since the early»90s to take on the task of exposing the racially and...
No less a figure than the artist Hans Haacke — whose long - standing commitment to rendering transparent economic, social, and aesthetic structures throughout culture has led him to be immanently associated with the paradigm — used the phrase «consciousness industry» as early as the mid-1980s to describe the sophisticated networks of institutional support necessary to make visible ostensibly adversarial avant - garde artistic gestures.4 Works seeking to emphasize the moral, political, and intellectual forces that determine and enforce culture, he observed, were nevertheless dependent on a museum or gallery platform designed to privilege aesthetic experience.
However, the risk of falling foul of the regulatory regime — and the consequent damage to reputation, personal or institutional, as well as potential sanctions — should provide the clearest incentive to seek to promote greater awareness and a compliance culture.
Some of the costs and disruptions that occur as a result of these high levels of attrition include project delays, loss of institutional knowledge, dilution of team culture and morale and the related domino effects that can also kick in when attrition rates spike.
The Aboriginal health expert at the inquest described institutional racism as «manifested in our political and social institutions and can result in the collective failure of an organisation to provide an appropriate and professional service to people because of their colour, culture or ethnic origin».
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