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marquezfrf

The City of the Dead: The Place of Cultural Identity and Environmental Sustainability i... - 1 views

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    Mount Auburn Cemetery in Baltimore, Maryland is more than a place of rest and reflection. It is a place of environmental and cultural sustainability and an expression of an attitude toward nature and environment unique to African-American culture. Through the more than hundred-year cultivation of an African-American cultural overlay, the Cemetery has been transformed from graveyard to a unique burial ground. Founded in 1872, Mount Auburn Cemetery is the last remaining African-American burial space in Baltimore, and it celebrates this transformative layering. Holding the remains of some 43,000 Baltimoreans, the cemetery represents the paradoxes of a culture defined by a century of interaction with the sacred as defined by rural experience, and that has favored the urban landscape as a necessary post-slavery gesture. In addition to its cultural and historic burial functions, Mount Auburn creates an ecological balance by providing designed green spaces, a cultural connection to nature and landscapes of memory, and a respite from the urban setting in which it is consciously located. This paper proposes that the African-American expression of form visible in Mount Auburn is marked by improvisation and an often superficial, chaotic appearance. This expression of form contributes to the sustainability and preservation of a uniquely diverse urban landscape, creating an attitude and perspective about place. This complex environmental attitude is defined by both positive and negative feelings toward the natural surroundings of humankind, including air, water, land, wildlife, and the systems existing between the natural environment and human society (Parker, 1999).
Sarah Lannon

Modeling the adoption and use of social media by nonprofit organizations - 0 views

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    This study examines what drives organizational adoption and use of social media through a model built around four key factors - strategy, capacity, governance and environment. Using Twitter, Facebook, and other data on 100 large US nonprofit organizations, the model is employed to examine the determinants of three key facets of social media utilization: (1) adoption, (2) frequency of use and (3) dialogue. We find that organizational strategies, capacities, governance features and external pressures all play a part in these social media adoption and utilization outcomes. Through its integrated, multi-disciplinary theoretical perspective, this study thus helps foster understanding of which types of organizations are able and willing to adopt and juggle multiple social media accounts, to use those accounts to communicate more frequently with their external publics, and to build relationships with those publics through the sending of dialogic messages.
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    This study examines what drives organizational adoption and use of social media through a model built around four key factors - strategy, capacity, governance and environment. Using Twitter, Facebook, and other data on 100 large US nonprofit organizations, the model is employed to examine the determinants of three key facets of social media utilization: (1) adoption, (2) frequency of use and (3) dialogue. We find that organizational strategies, capacities, governance features and external pressures all play a part in these social media adoption and utilization outcomes. Through its integrated, multi-disciplinary theoretical perspective, this study thus helps foster understanding of which types of organizations are able and willing to adopt and juggle multiple social media accounts, to use those accounts to communicate more frequently with their external publics, and to build relationships with those publics through the sending of dialogic messages.
patelrh3

Community Gardening: A Parsimonious Path to Individual, Community, and Environmental Re... - 0 views

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    The goal of this paper is to introduce community gardening as a promising method of furthering well-being and resilience on multiple levels: individual, social group, and natural environment. We exami
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    The goal of this paper is to introduce community gardening as a promising method of furthering well-being and resilience on multiple levels: individual, social group, and natural environment. We exami
sconzy

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/15575330809489660 - 0 views

    • sconzy
       
      'It provides opportunities for everyone involved to develop skills in leadership,  community organizing, cultural competency, program planning, implementation, and  evaluation" (para. 3) Having community gardens helps community member to interact with each other. It builds relationship among neighbors and also help individual develop skills like leadership, interpersonal and working in teams. Also it helps individual learn about different culture. Also it becomes a network.
    • sconzy
       
      "addressing the need of green spaces and appearance; and decreased crime in urban neighborhoods" (para. 1) Research have shown that urban agriculture can help reduce crime rates within urban communities because people become familiar with each other and strangers and people new society.
    • sconzy
       
      "the public health benefits of urban agriculture as providing food security, personal Wellness, community betterment, and environmental health"  "provide a more livable physical environment through control of temperature, noise and pollution; create a positive community image" (para. 2) Community garden is more than a piece of land or space that provides foods. In addition to it providing food security it also provides fresh and healthy food for people who live in urban cities.  It can also help create a healthy environment because plants filter the air which will reduce air pollution 
britt311

Social Media for Environmental Action - 3 views

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    Social media and the movement of activism towards the maintenance of the environment.
britt311

Environmental Activism and the Internet [eScholarship] - 3 views

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    The impact of the Internet and other forms of technologies can make an impact and support organizations who work on maintaing the environment.
npooler

From the Myth of Formal Equality to the Politics of Social Justice: Race and the Legal ... - 2 views

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    This article examines how the conservative legal movement's successful countermobilization of the politics of rights enables U.S. Supreme Court outcomes that exacerbate racial and ethnic inequities while solidifying the privileged position of others in the name of equality. A comparison of two pivotal Supreme Court cases involving native entitlements-Morton v. Mancari (1974) and Rice v. Cayetano (2000)-illustrates how appeals to formal, as opposed to substantive, equality work in effect to support existing hierarchies. At the same time, the conservative legal movement's success provides progressive social actors with opportunities to reframe the discourse. We suggest that a critical questioning of strategies predicated on appeals for equal rights may be necessary to advance the interests of native populations in the current environment, and we identify an alternative way of working for native interests, one that escapes the constraints of equality doctrine by appealing to broader claims of social justice.
britt311

Technology and Communication in the Environmental Movement [eScholarship] - 3 views

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    The incline of technology can help activists spread their word on environmental movements, through efficient ways to connect and communicate with others.
sconzy

Developing 'community' in community gardens.: EBSCOhost - 0 views

    • sconzy
       
      "community gardens have positive community building outcomes, creating a variety of benefits for both individuals and communities" (p. 555 para. 1) Community gardens does not benefit just an individual because of the food it brings forth but also helps make a better community. It increases social capital with the community, skills and training. 
    • sconzy
       
      Activities such as growing, cooking and eating of food are all sociable and allow people of all ages, ethnicity and socio-economic backgrounds s to interact informally" (p. 565, para 1)  Urban gardening can bring people from various cultures and social circumstances together. It promotes a sense of unity and togetherness among people that live in urban environments.
    • sconzy
       
      " The local health authority valued the community  garden as a health promotion resource" (p. 564 para. 2) Community garden does not only produce fresh and nutritious but also help reduce stresses that can impact people' s health.
kariannyo

The restorative outcomes of forest school and conventional school in young people with ... - 3 views

  • Firstly, this research extends restorative environment research by showing that the effects of nature extend to positive outcomes in young people; secondly, it shows restoration potentially extends to reflection on personal goals; and thirdly, it indicates that the amount of restoration can vary depending on behaviour state.
  • forest school
  • amount of change
    • kariannyo
       
      Outdoor education can have a positive change on behavior (as compared to a conventional indoor school setting). 
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  • psychological restoration
    • kariannyo
       
      Different settings have the ability to promote recovery of cognitive and emotional resources in young people with varying behavior states. 
britt311

Pollution and perception: Social visibility and local environmental mobilization - Spri... - 4 views

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    Awareness of environmental problems through the eyes of social visibility and political mobilizations.
britt311

Environmental Activism, Social Networks and the Internet - 5 views

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    The diversity of the Internet/ Social media and its contributions toward environmental activism
kariannyo

Social Dynamics and Sustainable Urban Design - Springer - 5 views

  • improve human well-being, understanding that such well-being depends on a healthy ecosystem
    • kariannyo
       
      Improving the state of East End cemetery may postively affect the community.
  • increases opportunities for experiencing happiness and beauty
  • Quality of life is enhanced
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  • understanding current social dynamics of cities so that designs are sensitive to the broad demographic and economic trends of urbanization. Urban design has the power to help societies move toward a more just and sustainable future.
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    The designed, built environment is the most obvious expression of urbanization, but cities are made of people, too. Any efforts to design resilient or sustainable cities must therefore take into accou
Kyra Youngblood

Modeling the adoption and use of social media by nonprofit organizations - 2 views

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    This study examines what drives organizational adoption and use of social media through a model built around four key factors - strategy, capacity, governance and environment. Using Twitter, Facebook, and other data on 100 large US nonprofit organizations, the model is employed to examine the determinants of three key facets of social media utilization: (1) adoption, (2) frequency of use and (3) dialogue.
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