Academic literature on the topic 'Program of Sustainable Development (PDSA)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Program of Sustainable Development (PDSA)"

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Trenholm, J. "P151: Occupational therapy in the emergency department: sustaining results." CJEM 20, S1 (2018): S110—S111. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cem.2018.349.

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Introduction: An emergency department visit may represent a sentinel event for someone who is older and frail, signalling a slide into dependence and functional decline. The gold standard for the treatment of frail older adults is a comprehensive geriatric assessment, involving consideration of multiple domains including mobility and function in activities of daily living. Despite this, when a chart audit was conducted in a Canadian metropolitan emergency department, none of the patients age 65 and older had a documented assessment of their function or mobility. In response, an occupational therapy program was implemented. The goals of this program were to reduce the number of unnecessary hospital admissions related to patient functional impairments, and to increase function, safety, and independence for patients upon discharge from the emergency department. Methods: The pilot project, which was completed in 2013, was evaluated using a mixed methods approach. Positive patient outcomes at that time included a reduction in avoidable admissions and better support for patients upon discharge from the emergency department. A survey of emergency department staff indicated that occupational therapy consultation added value to the diagnostic and discharge planning processes. However, due to changes in administrative priorities, several service redesigns were required. Multiple PDSA cycles were completed, and the development of a logic model guided and focused program development. Results: A reassessment of program objectives was conducted using 2015 data, which found that the number of patients seen by the occupational therapist remained the same, as did the percentage of patients discharged with support of occupational therapy intervention, such as provision of adaptive equipment or referral to community rehabilitation referrals. The percentage of patients discharged due to occupational therapy as a primary contributing factor rose slightly, and staff satisfaction with the program remained high. Conclusion: This evaluation proves that the provision of occupational therapy services in the emergency department is sustainable, benefits patients, and can be incorporated into the emergency department workflow and culture.
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Kornushko, V. F., A. V. Panov, I. V. Bogunova, O. M. Nikolayeva, and A. A. Flid. "SYSTEM APPROACH TO INFORMATIONAL SUPPORT OF PHARMACEUTICAL DEVELOPMENT OF FINISHED MEDICINAL PRODUCTS." Fine Chemical Technologies 13, no. 2 (2018): 91–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.32362/2410-6593-2018-13-2-91-99.

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The article considers the application of the system approach for constructing informational support for the life cycle of the production of medicinal products. The principal difficulties of creating a single informational system of the entire life cycle are considered in this article. A brief analysis of the information and computer support of individual links in the life cycle is given. Particular attention is paid to the use of a systematic approach to the creation of information support for the pharmaceutical development of medicines. The principle of QbD - “Quality planned for development” - was taken as a basis. For the implementation the QbD principle on the basis of the system approach, it is proposed to use the Shewhart-Deming iteration cycle to create an information support for a sustainable search for the optimal version (the program) of the conducted studies. The possibility of combining the PDCA cycle and the methodology of the system approach is shown. On its basis, system-theoretic multiple models of nformation support for pharmaceutical development in the graphic-analytical nomination were constructed. The method of applying the criterial approach for the formation of global and local criteria for managing research and the construction of system management models in the Melentiev’s brackets nomination are presented. The information modeling of the stage of pharmaceutical development has been carried out. Functional models have been constructed in the IDEF0 nomination.
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Campbell, Grace, Michelle M. Boisen, Lauren Hand, Nora Lersch, Barbara Suchonic, and Heidi AS Donovan. "Integrating family caregiver identification into a gynecologic oncology practice: An ASCO quality training program project." Journal of Clinical Oncology 37, no. 27_suppl (2019): 177. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jco.2019.37.27_suppl.177.

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177 Background: Family caregivers (CGs) in gynecologic (gyn) cancer are essential members of the care team, but no formal systems exist to provide CGs with information and support. A needs assessment of family caregivers (CGs) in our clinic found 50% of CGs report > 9 distressing unmet needs, but chart reviews found only 19% of patients had a documented CG--the first step in mitigating unmet needs. Our ASCO QTP-supported project aim was to identify (ID) and document primary CGs for 85% of patients within 2 clinic visits of a gyn cancer diagnosis. Methods: An Interprofessional team reviewed baseline data, defined the problem and project aim, created process maps, and identified root causes of poor CG documentation. After securing stakeholder buy-in we implemented eight successive PDSA cycles to intervene on root causes. Biweekly team meetings were held to study results, troubleshoot, and plan each PDSA cycle. Primary outcome was the percentage of patients with a CG documented. Results: Root causes of poor CG ID were 1) no protocol for IDing CGs, 2) no designated EHR field for CGs, 3) no designated staff to “own” CG ID, and 4) lack of CG awareness of available support in clinic. Interventions to prepare for project launch (PDSA 1) included protocol development, staff training, spirit activities, and selection of staff ‘champions’. In PDSA 2 CGs were ID’d for 25.3% of all patients in the clinic. By PDSA 4, CG ID dropped to a low of 12.5%. Major changes to PDSA 5 sought to reduce staff burden by narrowing focus to newly diagnosed patients, with an increase in CG ID to 56% of new patients. PDSA cycles 6-8 focused on increasing process efficiency while broadening CG ID to other times of high CG stress (e.g. recurrence; inpatient stays); CG ID rate stabilized at 57-60% over the last 6 weeks. In total, 288 primary CGs were documented. Conclusions: Proportion of CGs ID’d increased initially and then again after PDSA 4 as process efficiency improved. Despite falling short of our benchmark, CG ID more than doubled and we are planning further PDSA cycles to continue this momentum. Our results demonstrate systematic CG ID is feasible in a high volume Gyn Onc clinc and sets the stage for CG assessment and intervention.
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Green, Jennifer, Alexandra Wills, Elizabeth Mansfield, Deepy Sur, and Ian S. Zenlea. "Welcoming Feedback: Using Family Experience to Design a Pediatric Weight Management Program." Journal of Patient Experience 6, no. 2 (2018): 142–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2374373518786505.

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Objective: To describe an approach using principles of experience-based codesign (EBCD) and quality improvement (QI) to integrate family experience into the development of a pediatric weight management program. Methods: Clinic development occurred in 3 plan, do, study, act (PDSA) cycles that were driven by family experience data. During these cycles, families were engaged in feedback sessions that informed program development. Staff reflected on feedback and designed and tested changes that would improve service delivery. Results: The first PDSA cycle resulted in the fundamental program parameters and a formalized patient engagement strategy. The second cycle focused on pilot programming, and feedback was used to develop the structured group program. During the third cycle, feedback sessions were embedded into the structured group programs. Program changes included focusing on health rather than weight-based outcomes, adjusting the timing of program offerings, increasing experiential learning opportunities, and providing more opportunities for peer support. Conclusions: Both EBCD and QI methodologies informed the process of family engagement and program development. This pragmatic approach might be useful for the development of other family-centered pediatric programs.
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Hensing, Thomas A., Tyler Bauer, Anna Palafox, Margaret Whalen, and George W. Carro. "Addressing risk of financial toxicity in an ambulatory oncology practice: Our institutional experience with the ASCO Quality Training Program." Journal of Clinical Oncology 35, no. 8_suppl (2017): 114. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jco.2017.35.8_suppl.114.

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114 Background: Due to escalating cost of cancer care, patients (PTs) with cancer are at increased risk for financial toxicity (FTOX) that can exacerbate disparities in care and lead to clinically relevant adverse PT outcomes; including quality of life; symptom burden; adherence; and survival. A review of our informed consent (IC) process demonstrated that PTs were not routinely informed of financial risks of high-cost (HC) cancer therapies at the time of IC. Methods: A multidisciplinary team was formed to conduct a rapid-cycle quality improvement project with the aim of reducing FTOX through improvement in patient education at the time of IC. Because of HC and increased utilization, the initial pilot focused on treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI). A cause and effect diagram identified the potential causes that FTOX was not addressed during the IC process. Diagnostic data were obtained through staff surveys and querying our EMR from June to August, 2016. A Pareto chart identified lack of educational (ED) tools at the time of IC and a poorly understood prior authorization (PA) process as the most common causes for not addressing risk of FTOX during IC. Plan-do-study-act (PDSA) #1 began with development of a PT ED tool to be used during IC. The tool was approved by the Patient Advisory Board. Staff from clinical teams utilizing ICI for approved indication completed training on its use and a pilot study was initiated. PDSA#2 focused on optimizing the PA process and PDSA#3 focused on PT distress and FTOX monitoring through the NCCN distress and a validated patient-reported-outcome tools (COST), respectively. Results: The utilization of the PT ED tool reached the project aim (administer to > 65% of pts during IC) during initial phase of PDSA#1, although accrual is ongoing. A revised PA process (PDSA#2) was developed, staff were educated and the updated PA process was initiated. Work on PDSA#3 is ongoing. Conclusions: This QI project suggests that it is feasible to address FTOX through PT ED during IC for HC cancer therapies. However, the impact of this intervention on PT distress, overall FTOX and treatment disparities will need to be monitored closely.
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Kurnia, Afdal, Amanda Shaura, Santoso Tri Raharjo, and Risna Resnawaty. "SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT DAN CSR." Prosiding Penelitian dan Pengabdian kepada Masyarakat 6, no. 3 (2020): 231. http://dx.doi.org/10.24198/jppm.v6i3.26211.

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ABSTRAK Program CSR adalah sebuah investasi dari perusahaan perusahaan untuk pertumbuhan dan keberlanjutan (sustainability) perusahaan dan tidak hanya dilihat sebagai sarana mencari keuntungan/biaya (cost centre) melainkan sebagai sarana mencapai keuntungan (profit centre). Program CSR merupakan komitmen perusahaan untuk mendukung terciptanya pembangunan berkelanjutan (sustainable development). Dalam konsep CSR yang menggunakan pembangunan berkelanjutan (sustainable development ) masuk pada ethical theory, karena menyebutkan bahwa pembangunan berkelanjutan bertujuan untuk menjawab kebutuhan di masa kini tanpa mengancam kemampuan untuk melindungi generasi penerus untuk memenuhi kebutuhannya. Dengan penerapan program CSR pada konsep sustainable development dalam perusahaan, maka akan memudahkan bisnis dalam sebuah perusahaan guna mengimplementasikan program-program untuk dimasukkan sebagai bagian strategi bisnis. Hal ini juga guna untuk pertumbuhan dan pembangunan keberlanjutan untuk kesejahteraan. ABSTRACT CSR programs are an investment of companies for the company's growth and sustainability and are not only seen as a means of seeking profit (cost center) but as a means of achieving profit (profit center). The CSR p rogram is a company's commitment to support the creation of sustainable development. In the concept of CSR that uses sustainable development (ethical sustainable development) entered the ethical theory, because it states that sustainable development aims to answer the needs of the present without threatening the ability to protect future generations to meet their needs. With the implementation of CSR programs in the concept of sustainable development in the company, it will facilitate business in a compan y to implement programs to be included as part of a business strategy. It is also used for growth and sustainable development for welfare
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Dyakov, M. Yu, and E. G. Mikhaylova. "National Far East Development Program and Sustainable Development Prospects." Voprosy regionalnoj ekonomiki 40, no. 3 (2019): 33–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.21499/2078-4023-2019-40-3-33-40.

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The article contains some comments on the project of the National Program for the Development of the Far East until 2025 and for the future till 2035. It is noted that the project does not meet the formal requirements of the program document, has a number of unreasonable proposals and measures, the implementation of which may threaten the sustainable development of the region. The authors believe that in the development process it is necessary to take into account the principles of environmental and economic balance. The conclusion is made about the feasibility of developing a methodological framework for evaluating such documents as a tool for achieving sustainable development goals.
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Widi Irsanti, Shilvina. "Program “Happy HAKI” for Sustainable Economics Development." Bappenas Working Papers 2, no. 1 (2019): 94–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.47266/bwp.v2i1.32.

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Pokhrel, Ram Prasad, and Suzanne S. Gilbert. "Sustainable Program Development for Blindness Prevention: Nepal." Seminars in Ophthalmology 8, no. 3 (1993): 177–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/08820539309060230.

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Mokhov, V. G., and M. I. Ryabukhin. "Sustainable development program «COCA-COLA HBC RUSSIA»." Investment and innovation management journal, no. 4 (2018): 68–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.14529/iimj170410.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Program of Sustainable Development (PDSA)"

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Brondízio, Luciana Sonnewend. "Gestão de recursos pesqueiros no âmbito do programa de desenvolvimento sustentável do Amapá." Universidade de São Paulo, 2003. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/90/90131/tde-07112011-111826/.

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Apesar do consenso sobre a necessidade de uma evolução substancial nos sistemas existentes de uso dos recursos pesqueiros, em especial nos países em desenvolvimento, para dar suporte ao manejo sustentável deste recurso, não há um senso comum sobre quais seriam as instituições que poderiam alcançar este objetivo. Uma nova filosofia de manejo seria aquela onde os usuários dos recursos pesqueiros fossem envolvidos no processo de gestão e onde o objetivo de sustentabilidade não se referisse apenas à dimensão ecológica, mas também às dimensões: social, econômica, política e cultural. A iniciativa do Governo do Estado do Amapá, eleito em 1994 e reeleito em 1998, em adotar o Programa de Desenvolvimento Sustentável do Amapá -PDSA, como política pública, representa uma valiosa oportunidade de se avaliar a viabilidade de um modelo alternativo de desenvolvimento para a Amazônia e de levantar elementos e condições que favorecem e que possam limitar este modelo. Esta pesquisa foi desenvolvida com o objetivo de analisar o processo de implantação do PDSA no setor pesqueiro, focando por um lado, as interações entre as mudanças institucionais, trazidas pelo programa, e a participação dos agentes e setores envolvidos, e por outro, os fatores e elementos que interferem na performance desse sistema. Foram coletados dados primários através de entrevistas semi-estruturadas e diagnósticos participativos junto a pescadores, lideranças das organizações que os representam e agentes do governo. Dados secundários foram levantados a partir de documentos e literatura disponível. A análise dos dados indica que através de fóruns de discussão, da descentralização e da co-gestão na execução de projetos o governo do PDSA aumentou as oportunidades de participação dos pescadores no manejo dos recursos pesqueiros. Verificou-se que a falta de costume destes agentes, com este tipo sistema, limitou o processo. Além da necessidade de maior fortalecimento organizacional, os atributos dos recursos pesqueiros e dos grupos de usuários e questões estruturais como representação, domínio e comunicação também influenciam a perfomance deste sistema. Conclui-se que não há uma solução simples de manejo que integre todas as diferentes necessidades, demandas e interesses existentes dentro do setor. Além de considerar a importância do envolvimento dos usuários, o modo pelo qual as instituições são criadas e o contexto no qual os arranjos são organizados são determinantes nos resultados que serão obtidos.<br>There is a consensus on the need for improvements in the current fisheries resources use and their sustainability, particularly in the developing countries. There is no consensus, however, on strategies and institutions necessary to achieve this goal. A new resource management philosophy calls for the participation of users in all steps of the process. It also points that the goals of resource sustainability include social, economic, political and cultural dimensions. The Program of Sustainable Development (PDSA) implemented by the government of the state of Amapa (elected in 1994 and re-elected in 1998) represents an opportunity to evaluate the viability of an alternative model of development to the Amazon region. This research analyzes the process of implementation of PDSA in the fishing sector. It focuses on the institutional changes brought by the program itself, the participation of agents and groups involved, and on the factors that interfere in the success of the program. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews and participant observation with fishermen, community and union leaders, and government officials. Secondary data were used when available. The study shows that the PDSA increased the participation of fishermen and their organizations in the management of fishing resources. However, fishermen\'s lack of previous experience on participatory policy implementation limited the program\'s achievements. In addition to social organization, user groups attribute, political representation, domain and communication also affected the participatory program. Given the needs and demands of different user groups, there is no simple management solution. In addition to co-management, a participatory program needs to consider the available institutional arrangements in order to achieve its goals.
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Yodha, Aditya. "Sustainable development in Indonesia : holistic assessments and pathways." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/118620.

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Thesis: S.M. in Engineering and Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, System Design and Management Program, 2018.<br>This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.<br>Cataloged from student-submitted PDF version of thesis.<br>Includes bibliographical references (pages 57-69).<br>This thesis assesses the status of sustainable development in Indonesia, identifies the systemic barriers, and offers holistic development pathways toward sustainability. The framework employed in this research looks at the interactions between the economy, employment, and environment while taking into account the forces of technology and globalization. It concludes that the development in Indonesia is not yet on a sustainable path. The economy is performing well and unemployment is low, but inequality is very high, capacity to adapt is low, and the environment is quickly degrading. The major barrier towards sustainability are fundamentally politics: messy decentralization, pervasive corruption, and persistent elite capture. Other systemic barriers are the low level of education, fragmented innovation system, and low awareness of sustainability issues. To make progress towards sustainability, the systemic barriers must be cleared. Local governments need to be made clean and competent; lifelong learning systems established; local innovations boosted; pollutions prevented at the source using technological or organizational innovations; and awareness of sustainability issues raised. The findings in this thesis are summarized and mapped to the UN Sustainable Development Goals in the concluding chapter.<br>by Aditya Yodha.<br>S.M. in Engineering and Management
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Sayfayn, Nabil. "Sustainable development in Saudi Arabia, past, present and future." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/120892.

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Thesis: S.M. in Engineering and Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, System Design and Management Program, 2018.<br>Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.<br>Includes bibliographical references (pages 102-113).<br>This thesis examines the status of sustainable development in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. It seeks to analyze the various factors supporting or hindering the progress of the Kingdom towards sustainable development. It will apply the framework developed by Ashford & Hall (2011) to assess the performance and interaction between economy, employment and environment while considering the forces of technology and globalization. The first part of the thesis will look at the current status of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Then, the three dimensions of sustainable development will be analyzed in great details followed by a short analysis of technology and trade. The analysis will then shift to the ambitious Saudi vision 2030 that aims to transform the Kingdom from an oil-dependent economy into a leading exporter of sustainable energy that has a diverse economy. The last part of the thesis will explore the focus areas which are limiting the Kingdom from progressing towards a greater degree of sustainable development. The major limitations include rapidly degrading environment, increasing unemployment rate, rising income inequality, endemic corruption, and minimal awareness about sustainable development. The thesis then concludes by summarizing the major points.<br>by Nabil Sayfayn.<br>S.M. in Engineering and Management
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Braun, Nicholas, Thomas Hutle, and Milan Alexander Vonk. "The Sustainable City Year Program Public Scholarship for Community Development." Thesis, Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, Institutionen för strategisk hållbar utveckling, 2016. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:bth-12910.

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By 2050, an estimated 6.3 billion people or 66% of the world population will live in cities. Therefore, cities are in a high impact position regarding sustainability. The question is, how do we increase awareness of the sustainability challenge among these populations and gain citywide buy-in and multi-stakeholder collaboration to address this challenge? The Sustainable City Year Program (SCYP) at the University of Oregon offers one approach to tackle this issue by matching higher education institutions (HEI’s), with local and regional cities to address their sustainability related needs through publicly engaged scholarship. The objective of this research was to examine how SCYP contributes to strategic sustainable development (SSD). Our research methods included a peer-reviewed literature review, semi-structured interviews, surveys and further document review. Our sources included SCYP co-founders, partner city program managers, strategic sustainable development experts, and municipal planners from around the world. Our research suggests that SCYP creates a subtle paradigm shift towards sustainability among partner city staff and community members while accelerating practical implementation of sustainability related projects. Furthermore, the added layer of SSD concepts can increase the efficacy of this approach and allow the model to embrace a larger systems level perspective over time.
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Yuen, Kevin Ka-Chun. "New sustainable models of open innovation to accelerate technology development in cellular agriculture." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/113537.

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Thesis: S.M. in Engineering and Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, System Design and Management Program, 2017.<br>Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.<br>Includes bibliographical references (pages 96-103).<br>Cellular agriculture is an emerging field to develop in-vitro agricultural products. Despite overwhelming public attention towards the field's trajectory, there are significant research hurdles to overcome in order to validate scalable applications. These challenges, referring to the translational development of cell lines, serum-free media, cell-scaffolds, and bioreactor designs with regulatory and market assessment efforts, require new models for industry collaboration. The Open-Innovation Network Map was used to prioritize key collaboration networks to address the translational challenges of cellular agriculture, and three in-depth case studies from open-source models, big-science collaborations, and pre-competitive consortia were evaluated. Nine best practices to support open innovation across translational development were surfaced: Open-Source Models I OpenCompute Foundation, a community for open-source data center hardware designs, highlights the focus on: (1) the modularization of biological parts, equipment and protocols to encourage reproducibility, (2) the scalability of proof-of-concepts through industry participation, and (3) the self-assembly of industry clusters to initiate standardization. Big-Science Collaborations I The Human Genome Project, a large-scale collaboration to complete the sequencing of the human genome, exhibits attributes of successful research-intensive organizations, such as: (4) the centralization of leadership in distributed networks, and (5) policies to increase data-sharing frequency. Pre-competitive Consortia I SEMATECH, a semi-conductor manufacturing consortium established to address bottlenecks in the product development process, reveals that: (6) a crisis is critical for industry cohesion, (7) investment in innovation hubs increases translatability across stakeholders, (8) 'honest brokers' should be created to promote trust, and (9) feedback loops with end-users are critical to test market applications for new scientific advancements. The building of cellular agriculture's communities, channels, and technologies with appropriate open innovation models can enable stakeholders to collaborate and maintain a competitive edge. The conclusions of the thesis represent a convergence point among industry, academia and policy to discuss how to best shape and execute open innovation efforts in the future.<br>by Kevin Ka-Chun Yuen.<br>S.M. in Engineering and Management
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Karim, Sanaz. "Applying Systems Approach to Educational- Organizational Change - Improvment of an Interdisciplinary Program: : Master Program in Sustainable Development." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för geovetenskaper, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-150791.

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After the introduction of the term, sustainable development, a variety of academicians fromdifferent disciplines tried to conceptualize it in their own way, drawing on these views, manydifferent degrees but with similar titles have been established in many universities all around theworld.Masters program in Sustainable Development (MSD) at Uppsala University and the SwedishUniversity of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) is one the most recent ones. Before starting this study, itwas investigated that the expectations of the different actors in this program are not fulfilledcompletely. Presence of many different ideas and perspectives in addition to the high number ofactors involved in the situation made the situation too complex to be fixed easily. Therefore, theSoft Systems Methodology (SSM), as an appropriate approach for improving complex problematicsituations, is used to reform the organization of the MSD in coming years. The process ofidentifying the challenges of this program and then improving some of them in practice aredescribed in this thesis. Alongside the action phase, the applications of Systems Approach intransformation of Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) are explored.It is investigated that three levels of learning, i.e. basic, meta- and epistemic learning, andaccordingly three levels of organizational change, i.e. the first, second and third order, need to berecognized, if an ESD program is to be different from the unsustainable trends of education.
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Thigpen, Andrew(Andrew C. )., and Benjamin Masselink. "Sustainable Value Creation Through Mass Timber Development in North America." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2020. https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/129095.

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Thesis: S.M. in Real Estate Development, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Program in Real Estate Development in conjunction with the Center for Real Estate, September, 2020<br>Cataloged from student-submitted PDF of thesis.<br>Includes bibliographical references (pages 81-87).<br>Commercial real estate is at a crossroads; continued global population growth will necessitate significant additions to the current building stock, and new commercial space, if delivered using traditional construction methods and materials, will further increase the embodied carbon emissions of the built environment. However, there is an opportunity to mitigate the environmental impact of new development while also increasing value by employing new mass timber technology to meet the growing demand for new buildings. At the same time, approved changes to the 2021 International Building Codes (IBC) and increased investment in new production facilities will improve the scale and usability of mass timber, further reducing costs and environmental impacts. This dynamic presents developers with a unique opportunity to capitalize on changing tides and revolutionize the building industry.<br>This paper will explore the similarities and differences between mass timber and traditional timber construction before discussing the best ways to leverage mass timber's advantages over traditional steel and concrete building systems and how to apply lessons learned from existing projects to reduce costs in the context of an evolving industry. In order to prove the viability of mass timber, this paper will utilize construction cost analyses from an existing case study that compared mass timber development to traditional cast-in-place concrete development, and it will analyze these total cost estimates on a time-adjusted returns basis. Subsequently, it will analyze consumer and corporate trends based on demographics and sustainability preferences in order to demonstrate the proven willingness of individuals and companies to pay a premium for sustainability.<br>Based on that demand, it will then utilize leasing and valuation figures from LEED and Energy Star buildings as a basis of analyzing the superior returns mass timber delivers. Finally, a discussion of the current limitations to wide-spread adoption of mass timber will be identified, as well as means for owners to mitigate those limitations and identify the best potential markets for mass timber. With an understanding of the products, market, and existing challenges, this paper concludes with views on how the mass timber industry will evolve to facilitate wider use..<br>by Andrew Thigpen [and] Benjamin Masselink.<br>S.M. in Real Estate Development<br>S.M.inRealEstateDevelopment Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Program in Real Estate Development in conjunction with the Center for Real Estate
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Campbell, Carol L. "Teachers Teaching Teachers: A Sustainable and Inexpensive Professional Development Program to Improve Instruction." PDXScholar, 2014. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/2072.

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School districts face tremendous budget challenges and, as a result, professional development has been "trimmed" from many school budgets. (Habegger & Hodanbosi, 2011). School administrators responsible for planning professional development face a daunting task and often focus on PowerPoints, district mandated training, one-shot presentations, and workshops that are delivered by expensive experts. These types of activities lack teacher collaboration, time for sharing of ideas and opportunity for reflection and analysis (Torff & Byrnes, 2011, Coggins, Zuckerman & Mckelvey, 2010). The problem addressed in this study is that teacher professional development is usually planned by school administrators who are provided little support or training. This study used the problem-based learning approach designed by Bridges and Hallinger (1995) to determine the usefulness of a handbook for principals to utilize as they plan professional development. The handbook was developed, field tested and revised using Borg and Gall's (2003) research and development cycle. This qualitative study included surveys, observations, interviews and workshops to determine the usefulness of the handbook. The study consisted of preliminary field testing and product revision followed by the main field testing. The main field test was a workshop for K-12 school and district level administrators on how to use the handbook in planning meaningful, ongoing teacher professional development. The data collected in this study determined that the handbook,Teachers Teaching Teachers: Designing Successful Teacher Professional Development on a Shoestring Budget, is a useful tool for school administrators responsible for planning teacher professional development.
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Tinker, Audrey Kristen. "The Austin Green Building Program: an analysis of the program's effectiveness." Diss., Texas A&M University, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1492.

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Current water shortages in the United States and Texas are expected to only worsen so that by 2050, approximately 40% of both U.S. and Texas residents will live in areas of water scarcity (U.S. House Committee, 2003; Texas Water Development Board, 2003). In response to these grim projections, both lawmakers and environmentalists are calling for conservation measures so that future shortages or costly new supply initiatives are avoided. One area where substantial consumption decreases could be made is the municipal sector, which is projected to account for 35% of all water consumed in Texas by 2050 (Texas Water Development Board, 2002). Both organizations and voluntary programs have been established to reduce water consumption in this area. One of the largest and most innovative programs in the state is the Austin Green Building Program (AGBP). It was the first program of its kind in the U.S. that rates new homes and remodels in regards to five categories related to sustainability: energy efficiency, water efficiency, materials efficiency, health and safety and community (City of Austin, 2001). This research identified the factors (weather, home size, lot size, appraised value, and existence of a pool) that effect water consumption for residences qualifying as "Austin Green Homes", and identified those green features or designs that had the greatest effect on water consumption, that were most commonly included, and the reasons why contractors incorporated them. Non-green features such as temperature, rainfall, home and lot size, appraised value and a pool seemed to have the greatest impact on water consumption, from an analysis of R2 values, albeit a positive relation for each variable. When green features were investigated, findings showed that different features were effective in reducing water consumption for different builders and in many cases, water-conserving features actually led to increased use. Finally, results showed that large builders incorporated fewer water-related green features in their homes and achieved lower star ratings in general than small green builders.
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Sievers, Eric. "Sustainable development and comprehensive capital : The post-Soviet decline of Central Asia." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/8670.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Program in Science, Technology and Society, 2001.<br>Includes bibliographical references.<br>The general post-Soviet decline of the states of Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan) mirrors specific declines in the robustness of these states' stocks of financial, physical, natural, human, organizational, and social capital assets. This loss of various kinds of capital assets over the past decade reduces the current potential and capacity of the region to implement reforms for sustainable development. While Central Asia entered the 20th century as a comparatively marginal and underdeveloped area of the world, during the Soviet period it amassed appreciable stocks of capital, especially human, physical, and social capital. The emergence of a vibrant scientific community in Central Asia during the middle of the century marked one of the most rapid expansions of scientific prestige, talent, and institutions in the developing world. With the disassembly of the Soviet Union, development and reform projects within Central Asia and funded by foreign donors have failed to achieve their development and reform goals. Within the environmental sphere, the post-Soviet period, despite a massive investment in environmental aid to the region from the West and Japan, has yielded few environmental benefits and seen the worsening of several environmental conditions, captured in the desiccation of the Aral Sea and the collapse of Caspian Sea fisheries.<br>(cont.) Paralleling this trend, democracy and rule of law have not taken strong root in Central Asia; rather authoritarianism and corruption are the norm in national governments. While processes of globalization (especially the free movement of human and financial capital) suggest that Central Asia could not have avoided decline in the 1990s, the severity of declines could have been mitigated by a more robust Western appreciation of the unique endowments of the Soviet era in human (the scientific community) and organizational (Perestroika public dialogues on rule of law, civil society, and democracy) capital.<br>by Eric Wilhelm Sievers.<br>Ph.D.
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Books on the topic "Program of Sustainable Development (PDSA)"

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Brazil. Secretaria de Políticas de Desenvolvimento Regional. Plano Estratégico de Desenvolvimento Sustentável do Semi-Árido--PDSA: Versão preliminar para discussão. Ministério da Integração Nacional, Governo Federal, 2005.

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Sustainable program management. CRC Press, 2014.

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Victoria. Office of the Auditor-General. Sustainable farm families program. Victorian Government Printer, 2010.

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Fostering sustainable development: The sector investment program. World Bank, 1997.

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Kikin, Kokusai Kōryū. Industrial development and environment: The Japan Foundation Middle East Group Study Program 2009 : program report : November 1-November 21, 2009. The Japan Foundation, 2010.

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Ajia Keizai Kenkyūjo (Japan). Kaihatsu Sukūru. Sustainable development in Asian countries: IDEAS follow-up program in November 2008. Institute of Developing Economies Advanced School, Japan External Trade Organization, 2009.

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World Wide Fund for Nature Indonesia. WWF-Indonesia conservation program, 2004-2009. WWF-Indonesia, 2004.

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Gaur, Mahesh K. Socio-economic & impact study of Malunga watershed for sustainable development program. Grameen Vikas Vigyan Samiti, 1997.

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Bank, Asian Development. Environment program: Greening growth in Asia and the Pacific. Asian Development Bank, 2011.

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Kiribati. National adaptation program of action (NAPA). [s.n., 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Program of Sustainable Development (PDSA)"

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Yudelson, Jerry. "The Ten-Point Program for Retail Sustainability." In Sustainable Retail Development. Springer Netherlands, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-2782-5_13.

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Rodrigues, Roberto. "PRODECER: An Innovative International Cooperation Program." In Development for Sustainable Agriculture. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137431356_10.

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Mohd Nor, Radieah, and Normaliza Abdul Manaf. "Poverty Reduction Program." In Encyclopedia of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69625-6_72-1.

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Mohd Nor, Radieah, and Normaliza Abdul Manaf. "Poverty Reduction Program." In Encyclopedia of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69625-6_72-2.

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Mohd Nor, Radieah, and Normaliza Abdul Manaf. "Poverty Reduction Program." In Encyclopedia of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-95714-2_72.

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Blamont, Jacques, and Morgane Leprince. "Formation of Schoolteachers in Haïti: The TEH Program." In Children and Sustainable Development. Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-47130-3_24.

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Zweers, A., and H. te Riele. "The Dutch Ecodesign Program." In Cleaner Technologies and Cleaner Products for Sustainable Development. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-79672-2_17.

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Nyerere, Jackline, Farai Kapfudzaruwa, Olushola Fadairo, Alice Odingo, James Manchisi, and Shogo Kudo. "Case Study: Higher Education and the Education for Sustainable Development in Africa (ESDA) Program." In Sustainable Development in Africa. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-74693-3_11.

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Giambruno, Mariacristina, and Sonia Pistidda. "Cultural Heritage for Urban Regeneration. Developing Methodology Through a Knowledge Exchange Program." In Sustainable Urban Development and Globalization. Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61988-0_19.

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Zuo, Chen, Bing Liu, Jialun Chen, et al. "Space Program SJ-10 on Coal Combustion Research at Microgravity." In Clean Coal Technology and Sustainable Development. Springer Singapore, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-2023-0_16.

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Conference papers on the topic "Program of Sustainable Development (PDSA)"

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Kong, Young Tae. "Implementation of STEAM Sustainable Development Program." In Education 2014. Science & Engineering Research Support soCiety, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.14257/astl.2014.59.10.

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van Timmeren, A. "Assessment criteria and Program of Possibilities (P.o.P.): integration of new technologies in architecture and urban planning." In SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 2007. WIT Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sdp070832.

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Carpintero, S., and R. Barcham. "The second Mexican toll road program: learning from the experience." In SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND PLANNING 2011. WIT Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sdp110621.

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Gkarakis, K. "An analysis of the Greek Special Program for roof-mounted photovoltaic systems." In SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND PLANNING 2015. WIT Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sdp150411.

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"Program Committee." In 2016 3rd International Conference on Green Technology and Sustainable Development (GTSD). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/gtsd.2016.7.

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Wilkie, J. H. "The role of PV in sustainable development." In National center for photovoltaics (NCPV) 15th program review meeting. AIP, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.57946.

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Crowley, Lisa, Philip Jennings, Goen Ho, Kuruvilla Mathew, and C. V. Nayer. "Sustainability Victoria's Solar Innovation Program." In RENEWABLE ENERGY FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN THE ASIA PACIFIC REGION. AIP, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2806083.

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Chen, Z., and Y. Ren. "Research Program on Design and Construction for 500kV Underground Substation." In International Conference on Sustainable Development of Critical Infrastructure. American Society of Civil Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784413470.040.

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Boonda, P., and A. Preedeekul. "Developing a training program to develop the competency of regional operating officers (ROO) in a virtual service provider office (VSPO) in Thailand." In SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND PLANNING 2016. WIT Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sdp160331.

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Sarwanto, P. "“PIRAMIDA TINGGI, A State of the Art to Fulfill Obligation of Forestry Permit on Watershed Rehabilitation at PT Pertamina Hulu Mahakam”." In Digital Technical Conference. Indonesian Petroleum Association, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.29118/ipa20-g-263.

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Among other obligations imposed under the forestry permit, watershed rehabilitation planting is perceived by the upstream oil and gas sector as the most complex challenge to conquer. Despite its poor track in fulfilling timeline and required result, there are also other challenges to consider, for instance lack of critical location, weather, fire, land tenure, community habit and capability, and cost optimization. In attempt to respond these challenges, an innovation in management system is constructed at PT Pertamina Hulu Mahakam, embracing and tailoring all related challenges, difficulties, and complexities, escalating the activity to be beyond compliance. So that it will be able to deliver more than merely avoid the identified potential risks towards company. The management system, called PIRAMIDA TINGGI (Pemberdayaan Masyarakat untuk Melestarikan Hutan di Dunia demi Ketahanan Energi Nasional), actively involves government, community, and business sector as equilateral triangle that work together to perform watershed rehabilitation planting. Developed using ISO 9001:2015 process approach namely PDCA (Plan-Do-Check-Act), the PIRAMIDA TINGGI system is in line as well with NAWACITA (President Joko Widodo’s vision, mission and program). To encounter other issue found during field work, this system is equipped as well with another innovation tool named PARIDA, a geospatial mobile-desk top-web application that easily able to map and identify vegetation in real time for further geo-analyzing multi-purposes, to be operated by local community. Full set implementation of this system has benefitted all parties. To Company in form of significant cost efficiency around 13.9 MUSD and 7 days’ faster result delivery besides obligation fulfillment, for others in form of broader advantage of proven sustainability project that has gave contribution to 5P (People, Planet, Prosperity, Partnership and Peace), objectives required by UN Sustainable Development Goals 2030.
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Reports on the topic "Program of Sustainable Development (PDSA)"

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Campbell, Carol. Teachers Teaching Teachers: A Sustainable and Inexpensive Professional Development Program to Improve Instruction. Portland State University Library, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.2071.

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Shinkevich, A. I., and D. R. Baigildin. Stages of program implementation of the integrated assessment model for digitalization and sustainable development of the oil and gas complex. OFERNIO, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12731/ofernio.2020.24501.

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Miller, James, John Vavrin, and Samuel Stidwell IV. Study of maintenance of High Performance Sustainable Buildings (HPSB). Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/40080.

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A study was performed by the Energy Branch of the US Army Engineer Research and Development Center, Construction Engineering Research Laboratory, on behalf of the US Army Installation Management Command under the Installation Technology Transition Program. The focus of the study was related to maintainability and operability issues associated with High Performance Sustainable Buildings (HPSBs). This study was conducted primarily based on information gleaned from telephone and web conference discussions with installation Directorate of Public Works personnel including Operation and Maintenance (O&amp;M) Chiefs, energy managers, maintenance supervisors, and maintenance technicians. Experiences with HPSBs varied from installation to installation. For example, some installations had very positive experiences with photovoltaic (PV) arrays while other sites questioned their practicality due to maintainability problems. One site noted that PV technologies are changing so rapidly that procuring spare/repair parts becomes difficult or impossible when vendors discontinue supporting their older technologies or manufacturers go out of business. Based on discussions with the installation O&amp;M personnel, a table of pro and con recommendations for 25 technologies, which are commonly implemented on HPSBs, was prepared and is included in this report.
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Frazer, Sarah, Anna Wetterberg, and Eric Johnson. The Value of Integrating Governance and Sector Programs: Evidence from Senegal. RTI Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3768/rtipress.2021.rb.0028.2109.

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As the global community works toward the Sustainable Development Goals, closer integration between governance and sectoral interventions offers a promising, yet unproven avenue for improving health service delivery. We interrogate what value an integrated governance approach, intentionally combining governance and sectoral investments in strategic collaboration, adds to health service readiness and delivery using data from a study in Senegal. Our quasi-experimental research design compared treatment and control communes to determine the value added of an integrated governance approach in Senegal compared to health interventions alone. Our analysis shows that integrated governance is associated with improvements in some health service delivery dimensions, specifically, in aspects of health facility access and quality. These findings—that health facilities are more open, with higher quality infrastructure and staff more frequently following correct procedures after integrated governance treatment—suggests a higher level of service readiness. We suggest that capacity building of governance structures and an emphasis on social accountability could explain the added value of integrating governance and health programming. These elements may help overcome a critical bottleneck between citizens and local government often seen with narrower sector or governance-only approaches. We discuss implications for health services in Senegal, international development program design, and further research.
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Gender mainstreaming in local potato seed system in Georgia. International Potato Center, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4160/9789290605645.

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This report presents the study findings associated with the project “Enhancing Rural Livelihoods in Georgia: Introducing Integrated Seed Health Approaches to Local Potato Seed Systems” in Georgia. It also incorporates information from the results of gender training conducted within the framework of the USAID Potato Program in Georgia. The study had three major aims: 1) to understand the gender-related opportunities and constraints impacting the participation of men and women in potato seed systems in Georgia; 2) to test the multistakeholder framework for intervening in root, tuber, and banana (RTB) seed systems as a means to understand the systems themselves and the possibilities of improving gender-related interventions in the potato seed system; and 3) to develop farmers’ leadership skills to facilitate women’s active involvement in project activities. Results of the project assessment identified certain constraints on gender mainstreaming in the potato seed system: a low level of female participation in decision-making processes, women’s limited access to finances that would enable their greater involvement in larger scale potato farming, and a low awareness of potato seed systems and of possible female involvement in associated activities. Significantly, the perception of gender roles and stereotypes differs from region to region in Georgia; this difference is quite pronounced in the target municipalities of Kazbegi, Marneuli, and Akhalkalaki, with the last two having populations of ethnic minorities (Azeri and Armenian, respectively). For example, in Marneuli, although women are actively involved in potato production, they are not considered farmers but mainly as assistants to farmers, who are men. This type of diversity (or lack thereof) results in a different understanding of gender mainstreaming in the potato seed system as well. Based on the training results obtained in three target regions—Akhalkalaki, Akhaltsikhe, and Marneuli—it is evident that women are keen on learning new technologies and on acquiring updated agricultural information, including on potato production. It is also clear that women spend as much time as men do on farming activities such as potato production, particularly in weeding and harvesting. However, women are heavily burdened with domestic work, and they are not major decision-makers with regard to potato variety selection, agricultural investments, and product sales, nor with the inclusion of participants in any training provided. Involving women in project activities will lead to greater efficiency in the potato production environment, as women’s increased knowledge will certainly contribute to an improved production process, and their new ideas will help to improve existing production systems, through which women could also gain confidence and power. As a general recommendation, it is extremely important to develop equitable seed systems that take into consideration, among other factors, social context and the cultural aspects of local communities. Thus, understanding male and female farmers’ knowledge may promote the development of seed systems that are sustainable and responsive to farmers’ needs and capacities.
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