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Clear Policy (clear + policy)
Selected AbstractsINVESTIGATING RACIAL PROFILING BY THE MIAMI-DADE POLICE DEPARTMENT: A MULTIMETHOD APPROACHCRIMINOLOGY AND PUBLIC POLICY, Issue 1 2007GEOFFREY P. ALPERT Research Summary The perception and existence of biased policing or racial profiling is one of the most difficult issues facing contemporary American society. Citizens from minority communities have focused their concerns on the improper use of race by law enforcement officers. The current research uses a complex methodological approach to investigate claims that the Miami-Dade, Florida Police Department uses race improperly for the purposes of making traffic stops and conducting post-stop activities. The results are mixed in that the officer's aggregate actions do not show a pattern of discriminatory actions toward minority citizens when making a traffic stop, but results of post-stop activities do show some disparate treatment of minorities. Policy Implications Five specific policy recommendations are made to reduce the perception or reality of racial profiling by the police. First, police departments must have clear policies and directives explaining the proper use of race in decision making. Second, officers must be trained and educated in the overall impact of using race as a factor in deciding how to respond to a citizen. Third, the department must maintain a data-collection and analytic system to monitor the activities of their officers as it pertains to the race of the citizen. The fourth police recommendation involves the use of record checks in the field that can set in motion a process that results in the detention and arrest of citizens. Fifth, the completion of a record of interrogation for later intelligence has implications for the citizen. The use of this intelligence tool must depend on suspicion rather than on the race of the citizen. [source] Managing complex workplace stress in health care organizations: leaders' perceived legitimacy conflictsJOURNAL OF NURSING MANAGEMENT, Issue 8 2009LOTTA DELLVE RN, MScPH Aim, To conceptualize how health care leaders' strategies to increase their influence in their psychosocial work environment are experienced and handled, and may be supported. Background, The complex nature of the psychosocial work environment with increased stress creates significant challenges for leaders in today's health care organizations. Method, Interviews with health care leaders (n = 39) were analysed in accordance with constructivist grounded theory. Results, Compound identities, loyalty commitments and professional interests shape conditions for leaders' influence. Strategies to achieve legitimacy were either to retain clinical skills and a strong occupational identity or to take a full leadership role. Ethical stress was experienced when organizational procedural or consequential legitimacy norms were in conflict with the leaders' own values. Leadership support through socializing processes and strategic support structures may be complementary or counteractive. Conclusions, Support programmes need to have a clear message related to decision-making processes and should facilitate communication between top management, human resource departments and subordinate leaders. Ethical stress from conflicting legitimacy principles may be moderated by clear policies for decision-making processes, strengthened sound networks and improved communication. Implications for nursing management, Supportive programmes should include: (1) sequential and strategic systems for introducing new leaders and mentoring; (2) reflective dialogue and feedback; (3) team development; and (4) decision-making policies and processes. [source] The role of research for integrated management of invasive species, invaded landscapes and communitiesJOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, Issue 2 2008Yvonne M. Buckley Summary 1Invaded landscapes and ecosystems are composed of multiple interacting networks and feed-back loops, sometimes leading to unexpected effects of management actions. In order to plan management for invaded systems we need to explicitly consider management goals before putting actions in place. Actions taken must be justified in terms of their amelioration of impacts of invaders, contribution to the management goals and the costs incurred. 2This Special Profile brings together papers on the management of invasive plants, transgenes, animals and diseases, leading to conclusions with clear policy and management relevance and contributing to some of the hottest current topics in invasion ecology: unexpected impacts of invaders, restoration of invasion resistance, distribution mapping, spatial epidemiology, escape of transgenes, community interactions and complex effects of management. 3As papers in this Special Profile demonstrate, management for amelioration of the impacts of invasive species will include a wide range of manipulations, not just of the invader itself but of both abiotic and biotic components of the system. In fact, several papers in this Special Profile show that indirect management of the community may be more effective than removal of the invader alone. 4As little information is generally available at the beginning of a management programme, an adaptive approach should be taken and the management objectives/goals revised throughout the management process. New methods are emerging for adaptive management; an example is presented in this Special Profile where a Bayesian model used for assessing eradication goals can be updated throughout the management process leading to refinement of management. 5Synthesis and applications. Applied research should be directed at providing decision support for managers throughout the management process and can be used to provide predictive tools for risk assessment of new invaders. The science of invasion ecology has much to contribute to the new challenge of natural or enhanced movement of organisms in relation to climate change. Methods and information from invasion ecology can be used to assess management goals, management actions and the risks of potential translocations before they are put in place. [source] Competition or collaboration , the tensions within the purchaser provider relationship in nurse educationJOURNAL OF NURSING MANAGEMENT, Issue 3 2006LINDA M. BURKE BA Aims, To explore the nature of the relationship between purchasers and providers from the perspectives of the key individuals involved in healthcare education in the late 1990s. To discuss the lessons that can be learned for nursing from their experiences. Background, Although the findings illustrate experiences of individuals at a specific time, the issues that arise have implications for contemporary health care, as contract use is increasing and, with the introduction of foundation trusts, contracts may replace Service Level Agreements. Method, The design was qualitative and the methods used were policy analysis and interviews. Interviews were conducted with a national, purposive sample of 70 participants. Results, The key finding was the amount of variation in effectiveness of relationships. Many purchasers and providers formed strong partnerships but a number had fraught relationships , a situation perceived as detrimental to productive working. A significant issue for current healthcare was the reasons why relationships worked well in some institutions and were ineffective in others. Conclusions, There are a number of key lessons that can be learned about the nature of the relationship between purchasers and providers and applied to contemporary health care. Notably: ,,the value of clear policy aims; ,,the importance of context and history in shaping the relationship; ,,the necessity of ensuring that individuals involved have the ability and commitment to make the relationship work; ,,the need to view the contracting relationship as a dynamic ,project' that must be worked on; ,,the value of sharing good practice. [source] Reflection on a patient's airway management during a ward-based resuscitationNURSING IN CRITICAL CARE, Issue 5 2006Carolyn Shepherd Abstract Background: The bag-valve-mask (BVM) system is a common adjunct used during adult resuscitation to ventilate the lungs and deliver oxygen to patients in cardiopulmonary arrest. Gastric inflation, regurgitation and aspiration are well-documented complications of BVM ventilation, which can have serious consequences for patients. Aim: The aim of this paper is to review the cause of gastric inflation, regurgitation and aspiration during BVM ventilation and to consider techniques that have been suggested to reduce these problems.Method: Using a reflective model, the author revisits an actual cardiac arrest, and within a structured framework considers the event itself, the context of the event and looks at ways in which practice could be improved in future.Results: It is clear from the evidence that a reduction in peak airway pressure can reduce the risk of gastric inflation, regurgitation and aspiration. A review of the available research strongly suggests that in expert hands, the most effective means of reducing peak airway pressure is by reducing tidal volume by using a smaller bag.Conclusion: Although the evidence, as presented, for a reduction in bag size is convincing, there appears to be a problem that less regular users do not appear to be able to produce effective tidal volumes when using a smaller bag. If a reduced bag size is standardized, further research using a diverse group of health care workers with the BVM is required before a clear policy can be achieved. It is likely that training and practice will be shown to be important for nursing staff expected to use the smaller BVM. [source] Liability, Responsibility and Blame: British Ransom Victims in the Mediterranean Periphery, 1860,81AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF POLITICS AND HISTORY, Issue 3 2000Martin Blinkhorn Between 1865 and 1881 there occurred in southern Europe and the Balkans several cases of kidnapping in which British subjects were seized and held to ransom by brigands. Most ended peacefully (though expensively) with the negotiation and handing over of a substantial ransom, usually in gold, and the subsequent freeing of the hostage(s); one case, that of the so-called ,Marathon murders' of 1870 in Greece, ended in tragedy. Quite apart from the problems these incidents created for the victims and their families, some kidnappings also raised important questions for the governments involved, notably who was to blame for such incidents, who was formally responsible for them, and , crucially , who was ultimately liable for the cost involved? These questions and the responses of British governments to them, culminating in 1881 with the enunciation by Gladstone's administration of a clear policy on such matters, form the core of this article. [source] |