6,415 research outputs found
Le contrat en travail social : fondements éthiques et opérationnalité
Alors que la pratique d'un contrat exigé par les dispositifs d'action sociale tend à se développer (aides au logement, jeunes majeurs, hébergement...), il n'est pas inutile de nous interroger sur les fondements du contrat en travail social et de nous rappeler les principes éthiques et l'intérêt opérationnel de cet outil. C'est le but de cet article qui se propose de définir ce qu'est le contrat, son intérêt et sa place dans la méthodologie professionnelle des travailleurs sociaux. Comme il s'agit d'une technique dont l'utilisation se révèle parfois peu aisée, nous traiterons des difficultés les plus courantes. Enfin, nous aborderons les fondements étiques du contrat en travail social et plus particulièrement les notions d'autonomie et d'acceptation du client, de confiance et d'engagement réciproques.While the practice of a contract as required by the mechanisms of social action tends to develop (housing support, help to young adults, sheltering…), it is worth asking ourselves about the foundation of the contract in social work and to recall the ethical principles as well as the operational interest of this tool. The purpose of the present article is to explain what a contract is, and what its interest and its place are within the social workers' professional methodology. Since the use of this technique is sometimes uneasy, we will concentrate on the more usual difficulties. Finally, we will tackle the ethical basis of a contract in social work, and more specifically the notions of autonomy and acceptance of a client, of mutual trust and involvement
CAPARRÓS CIVERA, Neus, RAYA DIEZ, Esther, LARRAZ ELORRIAGA, Irene y BRITT PEÑA CORREA, Giovanna (2012). [The Experience of Cooperation in Development: Fabricio’s World) “La experiencia de la cooperación al desarrollo - El mundo de Fabrizio”.
Estimating oil concentration and flow rate with calibrated vessel-mounted acoustic echo sounders
As part of a larger program aimed at evaluating acoustic techniques for mapping the distribution of subsurface oil and gas associated with the Deepwater Horizon-Macondo oil spill, observations were made on June 24 and 25, 2010 using vessel-mounted calibrated single-beam echo sounders on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ship Thomas Jefferson. Coincident with visual observations of oil at the sea surface, the 200-kHz echo sounder showed anomalously high-volume scattering strength in the upper 200 m on the western side of the wellhead, more than 100 times higher than the surrounding waters at 1,800-m distance from the wellhead, and weakening with increasing distance out to 5,000 m. Similar high-volume scattering anomalies were not observed at 12 or 38 kHz, although observations of anomalously low-volume scattering strength were made in the deep scattering layer at these frequencies at approximately the same locations. Together with observations of ocean currents, the acoustic observations are consistent with a rising plume of small (\u3c 1-mm radius) oil droplets. Using simplistic but reasonable assumptions about the properties of the oil droplets, an estimate of the flow rate was made that is remarkably consistent with those made at the wellhead by other means. The uncertainty in this acoustically derived estimate is high due to lack of knowledge of the size distribution and rise speed of the oil droplets. If properly constrained, these types of acoustic measurements can be used to rapidly estimate the flow rate of oil reaching the surface over large temporal and spatial scales
Signals and Power Distribution in the CMS Inner Tracker
\begin{abstract} This Note describes how the interconnection between the 3540 modules of the CMS Inner Tracker has been approached, focusing on the signal, high voltage and low voltage line distribution. The construction and tests of roughly a thousand interconnects called ``Mother Cables" is described. \end{abstract
The Role of Mergers in Early-type Galaxy Evolution and Black Hole Growth
Models of galaxy formation invoke the major merger of gas-rich progenitor
galaxies as the trigger for significant phases of black hole growth and the
associated feedback that suppresses star formation to create red spheroidal
remnants. However, the observational evidence for the connection between
mergers and active galactic nucleus (AGN) phases is not clear. We analyze a
sample of low-mass early-type galaxies known to be in the process of migrating
from the blue cloud to the red sequence via an AGN phase in the green valley.
Using deeper imaging from SDSS Stripe 82, we show that the fraction of objects
with major morphological disturbances is high during the early starburst phase,
but declines rapidly to the background level seen in quiescent early-type
galaxies by the time of substantial AGN radiation several hundred Myr after the
starburst. This observation empirically links the AGN activity in low-redshift
early-type galaxies to a significant merger event in the recent past. The large
time delay between the merger-driven starburst and the peak of AGN activity
allows for the merger features to decay to the background and hence may explain
the weak link between merger features and AGN activity in the literature.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. ApJ Letters, in press
Fresh Activity in Old Systems: Radio AGN in Fossil Groups of Galaxies
We present the first systematic 1.4 GHz Very Large Array radio continuum
survey of fossil galaxy group candidates. These are virialized systems believed
to have assembled over a gigayear in the past through the merging of galaxy
group members into a single, isolated, massive elliptical galaxy and featuring
an extended hot X-ray halo. We use new photometric and spectroscopic data from
SDSS Data Release 7 to determine that three of the candidates are clearly not
fossil groups. Of the remaining 30 candidates, 67% contain a radio-loud
(L_1.4GHz > 10^23 W Hz^-1) active galactic nucleus (AGN) at the center of their
dominant elliptical galaxy. We find a weak correlation between the radio
luminosity of the AGN and the X-ray luminosity of the halo suggesting that the
AGN contributes to energy deposition into the intragroup medium. We only find a
correlation between the radio and optical luminosity of the central elliptical
galaxy when we include X-ray selected, elliptically dominated non-fossil
groups, indicating a weak relationship between AGN strength and the mass
assembly history of the groups. The dominant elliptical galaxy of fossil groups
is on average roughly an order of magnitude more luminous than normal group
elliptical galaxies in optical, X-ray, and radio luminosities and our findings
are consistent with previous results that the radio-loud fraction in elliptical
galaxies is linked to the stellar mass of a population. The current level of
activity in fossil groups suggests that AGN fueling continues long after the
last major merger. We discuss several possibilities for fueling the AGN at the
present epoch.Comment: Accepted for publication in A
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