This document discusses alternatives to extractivism in Peru, which relies heavily on the export of minerals, gas, and oil for development. It argues that it is necessary to imagine other development proposals given the social, environmental, and citizen conflict impacts of the extractive sectors. While extractivism is expanding globally and nationally due to various economic factors, it has finite resources and is facing increasing resistance. The author explains that a gradual transition away from extractivism would require debate on not just economic strategies but also political and cultural dimensions. Alternatives must address global conditions driving demand for raw materials as well as domestic contexts and cultural factors supporting current development models.
This 4 page document appears to be a general report spanning multiple topics across 4 pages. It likely contains various details and information across a range of subjects discussed over the course of the 4 pages from June 10, 2012 at 11:04pm. The document covers general page 1 through general page 4 with no other identifiable information provided for further context.
Steven Jacksons Kartenspiel von 1995 hat die Zukunft der Antichristen- Geburt vorhergesagt und in seinem Kartenspiel präzise dargestellt. Im Jahre 2001 am 11.September starteten die Terroristen diese Auferstehung des Antichristen.
Mit Medientrainings ist es wie mit Erste-Hilfe-Kursen. Die vielen praktischen Übungen führen meist schnell zu Aha-Erlebnissen und sehr guten Lerneffekten. Doch ohne regelmäßige Erste-Hilfe-Einsätze beziehungsweise ständige Pressekontakte fehlt es schnell an der notwendigen Routine. Um auch nach dem Workshop fit für die Medien zu bleiben, muss man das Gelernte also selber auffrischen.
Zurück in die Zukunft - DNUG 2014 - Track 5.2panagenda
Zurück in die Zukunft: IBM/Notes Domino
Infrastrukturen verstehen und optimieren
Wohin womit und warum (nicht)?
- für Techniker *und* Manager!
presentation by Daniel Reimann
This document describes a peer review process established in Germany for community-based HIV/AIDS organizations. [1] It involved workshops to build skills in participatory methods, a methods handbook, and individual consulting. A key component was a Quality Colloquium where projects presented their work to a panel of peers for feedback. The goals were to promote quality development, fill a gap in quality assurance, and contribute to national structures. Guiding principles included action research, community-driven questions/methods, and developing practical and participatory quality assurance methods. The Colloquium provided a forum for new forms of evidence and diffusion of participatory norms. Issues discussed included balancing support vs judgment, incentives, and comparability across regions
This document introduces Participatory Quality Development (PQD), a new approach to HIV prevention that emphasizes participation, local expertise, and tailored processes. PQD was developed in Germany and involves stakeholders in all stages of project planning, implementation, and evaluation. It provides tools like a handbook, workshops, and consulting to support organizations. PQD has been adopted internationally through the IQhiv initiative and aims to help organizations improve quality and effectiveness of HIV prevention programs.
The document discusses levels of participation in HIV prevention. It defines participation as having influence over issues that affect one's life. Higher levels of participation grant more influence over decision making. The document outlines a ladder of participation with 9 levels, ranging from non-participation to community-owned initiatives. It emphasizes that participation is a process, and stakeholders can work to increase participation over time through shared decision making, delegation of authority, and empowering communities to take control.
The document introduces Participatory Quality Development (PQD), a new approach to HIV prevention. PQD emphasizes participation at all stages of HIV prevention work, from needs assessment to evaluation. It argues for PQD because it gives decision-making power to key groups and frontline staff. PQD also focuses on practice-based evidence and tailors processes to local conditions. The document outlines tools and methods to support PQD implementation, including a handbook, workshops, and consulting services. It discusses lessons learned from initial projects and argues PQD has advantages in supporting organizational change but also requires engagement with underlying theory.
Wright+lemmen et al quality in hiv-prevention-iq-hiv-berlin-meeting2010Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe
This document summarizes a meeting on participatory quality development in HIV prevention. It discusses:
1) Work in progress on quality development in HIV prevention in Germany. Key players include the federal ministry of health and NGOs.
2) A research project between the WZB and Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe on participatory quality development (PQD) as a new approach.
3) Achieving sustainability of PQD through certification. Components of certification include skills building, online support, consulting, and peer review through a quality colloquium.
Wright, lemmen et al peer review process-ccph-conference-toronto2007Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe
1. The document describes a project to establish a peer review process called a Quality Colloquium for community-based organizations (CBOs) doing HIV prevention work in Germany.
2. The Quality Colloquium aims to provide constructive feedback to CBOs to support quality improvement through a participatory review involving community members, service providers, funders, and researchers from outside the region of the presenting project.
3. The process involves a dialogue between the presenting project and reviewers to help answer a quality-related question defined by the project, with the goal of increasing transparency, setting shared norms, and diffusing participatory practices.
Wright et al participatory quality development-who-conference-berlin2008Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe
This document discusses establishing participatory models for quality assurance in community work. It describes national demonstration projects in Germany between Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe and Gesundheit Berlin, funded by the Federal Center for Health Education and Ministry for Education and Research. The projects focus on participatory quality development rather than evaluation. Key components include skill-building workshops, a methods handbook, individualized consulting, peer review processes, and criteria developed with community-based organizations. The goal is an ongoing process of improvement through participation of target groups and frontline workers in decision making.
This document discusses alternatives to extractivism in Peru, which relies heavily on the export of minerals, gas, and oil for development. It argues that it is necessary to imagine other development proposals given the social, environmental, and citizen conflict impacts of the extractive sectors. While extractivism is expanding globally and nationally due to various economic factors, it has finite resources and is facing increasing resistance. The author explains that a gradual transition away from extractivism would require debate on not just economic strategies but also political and cultural dimensions. Alternatives must address global conditions driving demand for raw materials as well as domestic contexts and cultural factors supporting current development models.
This 4 page document appears to be a general report spanning multiple topics across 4 pages. It likely contains various details and information across a range of subjects discussed over the course of the 4 pages from June 10, 2012 at 11:04pm. The document covers general page 1 through general page 4 with no other identifiable information provided for further context.
Steven Jacksons Kartenspiel von 1995 hat die Zukunft der Antichristen- Geburt vorhergesagt und in seinem Kartenspiel präzise dargestellt. Im Jahre 2001 am 11.September starteten die Terroristen diese Auferstehung des Antichristen.
Mit Medientrainings ist es wie mit Erste-Hilfe-Kursen. Die vielen praktischen Übungen führen meist schnell zu Aha-Erlebnissen und sehr guten Lerneffekten. Doch ohne regelmäßige Erste-Hilfe-Einsätze beziehungsweise ständige Pressekontakte fehlt es schnell an der notwendigen Routine. Um auch nach dem Workshop fit für die Medien zu bleiben, muss man das Gelernte also selber auffrischen.
Zurück in die Zukunft - DNUG 2014 - Track 5.2panagenda
Zurück in die Zukunft: IBM/Notes Domino
Infrastrukturen verstehen und optimieren
Wohin womit und warum (nicht)?
- für Techniker *und* Manager!
presentation by Daniel Reimann
This document describes a peer review process established in Germany for community-based HIV/AIDS organizations. [1] It involved workshops to build skills in participatory methods, a methods handbook, and individual consulting. A key component was a Quality Colloquium where projects presented their work to a panel of peers for feedback. The goals were to promote quality development, fill a gap in quality assurance, and contribute to national structures. Guiding principles included action research, community-driven questions/methods, and developing practical and participatory quality assurance methods. The Colloquium provided a forum for new forms of evidence and diffusion of participatory norms. Issues discussed included balancing support vs judgment, incentives, and comparability across regions
This document introduces Participatory Quality Development (PQD), a new approach to HIV prevention that emphasizes participation, local expertise, and tailored processes. PQD was developed in Germany and involves stakeholders in all stages of project planning, implementation, and evaluation. It provides tools like a handbook, workshops, and consulting to support organizations. PQD has been adopted internationally through the IQhiv initiative and aims to help organizations improve quality and effectiveness of HIV prevention programs.
The document discusses levels of participation in HIV prevention. It defines participation as having influence over issues that affect one's life. Higher levels of participation grant more influence over decision making. The document outlines a ladder of participation with 9 levels, ranging from non-participation to community-owned initiatives. It emphasizes that participation is a process, and stakeholders can work to increase participation over time through shared decision making, delegation of authority, and empowering communities to take control.
The document introduces Participatory Quality Development (PQD), a new approach to HIV prevention. PQD emphasizes participation at all stages of HIV prevention work, from needs assessment to evaluation. It argues for PQD because it gives decision-making power to key groups and frontline staff. PQD also focuses on practice-based evidence and tailors processes to local conditions. The document outlines tools and methods to support PQD implementation, including a handbook, workshops, and consulting services. It discusses lessons learned from initial projects and argues PQD has advantages in supporting organizational change but also requires engagement with underlying theory.
Wright+lemmen et al quality in hiv-prevention-iq-hiv-berlin-meeting2010Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe
This document summarizes a meeting on participatory quality development in HIV prevention. It discusses:
1) Work in progress on quality development in HIV prevention in Germany. Key players include the federal ministry of health and NGOs.
2) A research project between the WZB and Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe on participatory quality development (PQD) as a new approach.
3) Achieving sustainability of PQD through certification. Components of certification include skills building, online support, consulting, and peer review through a quality colloquium.
Wright, lemmen et al peer review process-ccph-conference-toronto2007Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe
1. The document describes a project to establish a peer review process called a Quality Colloquium for community-based organizations (CBOs) doing HIV prevention work in Germany.
2. The Quality Colloquium aims to provide constructive feedback to CBOs to support quality improvement through a participatory review involving community members, service providers, funders, and researchers from outside the region of the presenting project.
3. The process involves a dialogue between the presenting project and reviewers to help answer a quality-related question defined by the project, with the goal of increasing transparency, setting shared norms, and diffusing participatory practices.
Wright et al participatory quality development-who-conference-berlin2008Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe
This document discusses establishing participatory models for quality assurance in community work. It describes national demonstration projects in Germany between Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe and Gesundheit Berlin, funded by the Federal Center for Health Education and Ministry for Education and Research. The projects focus on participatory quality development rather than evaluation. Key components include skill-building workshops, a methods handbook, individualized consulting, peer review processes, and criteria developed with community-based organizations. The goal is an ongoing process of improvement through participation of target groups and frontline workers in decision making.