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ЗАХАРИ ЗОГРАФ И СЦЕНИТЕ ОТ ЖИТИЕТО НА СВ. НИКОЛА В СТЕНОПИСНАТА УКРАСА НА ЕДНОИМЕННАТА ЦЪРКВА В БАЧКОВСКИЯ МАНАСТИР
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ЗАХАРИ ЗОГРАФ И СЦЕНИТЕ ОТ ЖИТИЕТО НА СВ. НИКОЛА В СТЕНОПИСНАТА УКРАСА НА ЕДНОИМЕННАТА ЦЪРКВА В БАЧКОВСКИЯ МАНАСТИР

Author(s): Teodor Peev / Language(s): Bulgarian Issue: 23/2024

The church “St. Nicholas” in the Bachkovo Monastery is the first fully painted church by Zahariy Zograf. The mural ensemble includes 18 life scenes dedicated to the saint. A study of their iconography reveals interesting details about the composition and origin of the subjects. Zahariy Zograf, and later his brother Dimitar Hristov, used the well-known Svetogorsk stamp from 1793. There are also scenes he reinterpreted and incorporated the additional characters and details. The life cycle of St. Nicholas from the church in Bachkovo Monastery is an illustration of the creative possibilities of the young painter and his later confirmation in our national art.

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Proiecte artistice despre incluziune și diversitate la MNAC și MNHCV. O analiză din perspectiva studiilor despre dizabilitate

Proiecte artistice despre incluziune și diversitate la MNAC și MNHCV. O analiză din perspectiva studiilor despre dizabilitate

Author(s): Despina Hașegan / Language(s): Romanian Issue: 1/2024

Disability studies do not have a tradition in Romania and our research aims to present and study valuable initiatives of museums in this area. From the perspective of disability studies, in this article we analyze two exhibitions organised by Romanian museums. These projects showcased artistic explorations of disability undertaken by contemporary artists. The exhibitions also represented an occasion to debate on the rights of the people with disabilities and to reflect on changes in our society. We offer a theoretical approach based on both museum and disability studies and we analyze the artistic projects using concepts such as inclusion, diversity, accessibility. These initiatives are important because they demonstrate the engagement of Romanian museums in current societal issues.

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Relația dintre obiectele muzeale și datele într-o colecție digitală de fotografii etnografice

Relația dintre obiectele muzeale și datele într-o colecție digitală de fotografii etnografice

Author(s): Orsolya Tatai / Language(s): Romanian Issue: 1/2024

In the museum setting, various forms of data – written, visual, material, or digital – are pivotal for the preservation and display of cultural heritage. This research focuses on interpreting data as intangible elements within the museum environment, enveloping the exhibited or archived tangible objects. By referencing Arjun Appadurai’s concept of “thing” and its application to “data”, the study investigates how this data influences our perception and engagement with museum artifacts. Through a specific case study centered on an ethnographical photo collection, the research underscores the dynamic relationship between tangible objects and the intangible data that contextualizes and enhances our encounters with cultural heritage in museums.

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Istoria continuă a unui muzeu al artelor decorative: de la Muzeul Pedagogiei la un Muzeul al artelor (naționale) din România

Istoria continuă a unui muzeu al artelor decorative: de la Muzeul Pedagogiei la un Muzeul al artelor (naționale) din România

Author(s): Delia Bran / Language(s): Romanian Issue: 1/2024

The aim of this article is to point out certain moments in the history of exhibiting the decorative art objects in Bucharest, following the cultural twinning of this space that received both European decorative art and oriental decorative art, as well as the way to develop an authentic decorative art, starting from local tradition. Moreover, the definition of the concept of “decorative” is also discussed, which has varied and still varies today in meaning. The article traces the emergence and metamorphosis of this type of art during the existence of museums in the Bucharest cultural-space and brings shades regarding the junction between museum and education space.

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Muzeu pentru Mileniul III

Muzeu pentru Mileniul III

Author(s): Oana-Alexandra Chirilă / Language(s): Romanian Issue: 1/2024

In times when we are progressively trying to configure museum models focusing on the relationship with the public rather than the object, this article revisits two concepts that could prove useful in our endeavours: ‘third place’, stemming from urban planning and sociology, and ‘third space’, as defined by critical theory. Framing the museum as a ‘third place’ and a ‘third space’ at the same time, I posit, could help us not only to solidify our visitors’ pool but also to contribute substantially to the social health of our respective communities.

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ФЕСТИВАЛНАТА КУЛТУРА И ИЗГРАЖДАНЕ НА МЕСТНА ИДЕНТИЧНОСТ. НАЦИОНАЛЕН ФЕСТИВАЛ НА ПЪЛНЕНАТА ЧУШКА В ГРАД ЛЕВСКИ
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ФЕСТИВАЛНАТА КУЛТУРА И ИЗГРАЖДАНЕ НА МЕСТНА ИДЕНТИЧНОСТ. НАЦИОНАЛЕН ФЕСТИВАЛ НА ПЪЛНЕНАТА ЧУШКА В ГРАД ЛЕВСКИ

Author(s): Miglena Nikolaeva / Language(s): Bulgarian Issue: 23/2024

In 2019, a rather attractive festival was launched in the city of Levski, which is tied to the traditional city fair, gathering relatives and friends for more than a century. Organizers of the event are Levski Municipality and the Community center “Georgi Partsalev – 1901”, which always try to plan the event to be around August 28, when according to the old style, the town of Levski celebrates the feast of the Great Mother of God. The event, now in its fourth year, has become an emblematic celebration of culinary art. The culinary festival has a competitive nature as a jury with the chairman of the first edition was – Kateto Euro, and for the next three editions – Ivan Zvezdev, who chooses the winners.In 2020, the festival did not take place due to the Covid 19 pandemic, but from the following year, 2021, it was renewed. The purpose of the celebration of the town of Levski is to strengthen Bulgarian traditions, to attract friends and new people, to show the beauty and advantages of the Bulgarian nature, to look at the traditional dishes of our grandmothers and mothers. Holidays and festivals dedicated to food and drink are seen as part of the tools for constructing and transmitting collective memory and building local identity.

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Džez štampa u Srbiji od 1953. do 1965. godine

Džez štampa u Srbiji od 1953. do 1965. godine

Author(s): Ljubica Milosavljević / Language(s): Serbian Issue: 2/2024

The aim of the paper was to introduce the specialized press oriented towards jazz music and its practitioners that was published from 1953 to 1965 on the territory of the Republic of Serbia. The marked period was chosen for consideration since it represents the most fruitful stage in the development of the press of a specific thematic profile, but also because of the significant changes in the entire Yugoslav society. These changes, as it was possible to show, influenced the complex processes that shaped the press of the time, as well as the attitude towards this musical genre and its practitioners. The processes in question include, first of all: certain internal political movements that consistently modeled the cultural policy of the time, within which jazz attempted to obtain a favorable position; integration of the former socialist state into polarized international currents that implied the use of jazz as a means of affirming the foreign policy orientation of Yugoslav society; and the creation of the operational power of artists for self-organization and the acquisition of certain labor and social rights within the Association of Jazz Musicians. The association was founded in 1953 in Belgrade with the aim of advocating for the rights of contemporary musicians, while at the same time initiating the publication of the first newspaper Jazz: Journal of Popular and Jazz Music (Jazz. List za pitanja zabavne i džez muzike). Under this name, the journal was published from 1953 to 1954, and during the publication period from 1957 to 1958 it changed its name to Bulletin of the Association of Jazz Musicians (Bilten Udruženja Jazz muzičara). After that, in Novi Sad, in 1962, Rhythm – Yugoslav Review of Jazz and Popular Music (Ritam – Jugoslovenska revija za džez i zabavnu muziku) began to be publish by NIP Dnevnik, and later changed its name to Rhythm – Yugoslav Review of Popular Music (Ritam – Jugoslovenska revija za zabavnu muziku), under which it continued to be published until it ceased publication in 1965.

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Предизвикателства при медийното "подгряване" за гостуващи мегаспектакли („Малкият принц” от Бродуей, Леденото шоу на ШОУ на Сирк дьо Солей "Хогуордс", концертът спектакъл „Чаплин Пианисимо”)

Предизвикателства при медийното "подгряване" за гостуващи мегаспектакли („Малкият принц” от Бродуей, Леденото шоу на ШОУ на Сирк дьо Солей "Хогуордс", концертът спектакъл „Чаплин Пианисимо”)

Author(s): Petia Alexandrova / Language(s): Bulgarian Issue: 16/2024

The coverage of mega-spectacles is adequate to the scale of the events themselves: we are well informed in advance by the press releases bloated with facts and names. In this text, I pay attention to the cracks, when something veiled appears in the explanations and misleads in the expectations. There are three examples - the Broadway performance "The Little Prince", the "Hogwards" ice show of Cirque de Soleil and the concert performance "Chaplin Pianissimo".

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Фотографията под въпрос. (Рецензия за книгата на Йосиф Аструков  „Фотографията като…“)

Фотографията под въпрос. (Рецензия за книгата на Йосиф Аструков „Фотографията като…“)

Author(s): Petia Alexandrova / Language(s): Bulgarian Issue: 16/2024

In his monography "Photography as..." Yosif Astrukov reflects on the current state of the photographic image without exaltation and without criticism, as "science and art for reproduction". It raises several main discussions: about the original and its value in the "age of technical reproducibility"; about changing the reality and inauthenticity of images; for abandoning the documentary style of photography; about the boundary between the limitation of the photograph itself and the conscious manipulation of events, people and situations; for the lack of aesthetic originality, but the presence of acceleration in uses.

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RELIGION AND CONFLICT: THE CASE OF BOSNIA AND HERCEGOVINA

RELIGION AND CONFLICT: THE CASE OF BOSNIA AND HERCEGOVINA

Author(s): Kjell Magnusson / Language(s): English Issue: 42/2024

The text discusses the role of religion in the Bosnian conflict, based on data on attitudes and behaviour in Bosnia and Herzegovina, collected by a survey undertaken in 1999. To what extent did religion – understood as individual religiosity – actually shape people’s attitudes towards the conflict? Are religious people more prone to nationalism and xenophobia than others? Analyses of cross tables were ambiguous; there was no linear effect of religiosity on attitudes to the war or the future of Bosnia. Using structural equation modelling (SEM) it was assumed that religion and nationalism, understood as multidimensional concepts (second-order factor structures), cause xenophobia. It turned out that, while there was a correlation between nationalism and religion, only nationalism, not religion, was directly affecting xenophobia. The basic features of the model, both causal relations and dimensions of religion and nationalism were found among the three major ethnic communities in Bosnia.

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САМОВИКТИМИЗУЈУЋИ НАРАТИВ КАО ПРЕПРЕКА МЕЂУРЕЛИГИЈСКОМ ДИЈАЛОГУ У БОСНИ И ХЕРЦЕГОВИНИ

САМОВИКТИМИЗУЈУЋИ НАРАТИВ КАО ПРЕПРЕКА МЕЂУРЕЛИГИЈСКОМ ДИЈАЛОГУ У БОСНИ И ХЕРЦЕГОВИНИ

Author(s): Danica Lazović / Language(s): Serbian Issue: 42/2024

Bosnia and Herzegovina, as a post-conflict society, where the constitution guarantees the equality of the three constituent peoples and the three most widespread religions - Islam, Orthodox Christianity and Roman Catholicism, is faced with difficulties in achieving productive and meaningful inter-religious dialogue. Since Bosnia and Herzegovina is a country whose people have three different interpretations of historical events and three opposed conceptions for the future of the common state, its society is characterized by a high degree of polarization. The unacceptably high degree of ethnic distance, present several decades after the end of the conflict, can be partly explained by the phenomenon of self-victimization, abundantly used by all nations, their political leaders and often religious actors. The harmfulness of the self-victimizing discourse is reflected in the impossibility to set aside prejudices and stereotypes towards the religious and ethnic Others and to approach mutual ethnic and religious relations and differences in a rational way that would enable greater functionality and well-being of the society. The expressed tendency towards self-victimizing narrative is to a great extent an obstacle to the inter-religious dialogue, which is essential. The aim of the author is to answer the main research question: “Can the deeply rooted social phenomenon of self-victimization be successfully overcome by strengthening tolerance through inter-religious dialogue?” The research will be based on the main premises of social identity theory. It will implement discourse and content analysis which refers to the statements of political actors on the occasion of the Republika Srpska Day and Bosnia and Herzegovina Independence Day celebrations, as well as to the statements of religious actors that include conceptions of the religious Other.

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La memoire polonaise en onomastique roumaine
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La memoire polonaise en onomastique roumaine

Author(s): Oliviu Felecan / Language(s): French Issue: 2/2024

The presence of names from an ethnic minority or foreign personalities within a country’s public sphere is indicative of respect and appreciation for that population, as well as for the culture, literature, and scientific contributions made by its members. Employing a socio-onomastic perspective, this study explores the occurrences of Polish names in the Romanian public domain, focusing on cultural, scientific, religious, and military figures, among others. Regardless of their birthplace, field of activity, or specific connection to the Romanian people, Polish figures have enriched the broader cultural landscape and are commemorated throughout Romania. This occurs both in regions with significant ethnic minority populations and in areas with isolated instances. Street names, school names, hospitals, public institutions, companies, and non-governmental organizations invoke Polish anthroponyms and urbanonyms.

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Armenian Community in Bulgaria in The Time of COVID-19: Coping With The Challenge

Armenian Community in Bulgaria in The Time of COVID-19: Coping With The Challenge

Author(s): Tanya Matanova / Language(s): English Issue: 4/2022

The COVID-19 pandemic influenced and changed the personal and social life of thousands of people. Armenians in Bulgaria as all Bulgarian citizens had to go through the lockdown and restriction time. On a personal level, Armenians stopped visiting relatives and gathering. On an institutional level, Armenians looked for strategies to cope with the challenges of the pandemic situations – cultural organisations had to find ways to arrange events and celebrations, schools – to teach their lessons, restaurant entrepreneurs started to offer food delivery, representatives of Armenian churches searched for new mechanisms of preaching and supporting spiritually the Armenians. Based on fieldwork material gathered during the pandemic period, the paper presents some examples of how Armenians in different Bulgarian towns succeeded (or not) in expressing their ethnic and cultural Armenian identity and living as part of the Armenian diaspora in Bulgaria.

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The Effects of The COVID-19 Pandemic on Ethnic Minority Teachers and Students at Lower Secondary Schools in Some Mountainous Provinces in The North of Vietnam

The Effects of The COVID-19 Pandemic on Ethnic Minority Teachers and Students at Lower Secondary Schools in Some Mountainous Provinces in The North of Vietnam

Author(s): Nguyen Thi Minh Thu,Duong Nguyet Van,Tran Thi Nhung / Language(s): English Issue: 4/2022

The COVID-19 pandemic has turned the lives of people around the globe upside down because of its dangerous nature and speed of spread. The pandemic has forced people to change their outlooks, habits, lifestyles, and working methods to adapt to new contexts. In Vietnam, for the education sector, these strong impacts, on the one hand, created difficulties and challenges; on the other hand, they also created opportunities to adapt to new forms of teaching; and the motivation for teachers and students to have cognitive changes, contributing to the on-going educational innovation process. These effects on teaching in the ethnic minority areas of Vietnam in general and the Northern mountainous provinces of Vietnam, in particular, have become increasingly obvious. In the context of complicated developments of the COVID-19 pandemic, from the research of the teaching situation at the lower secondary level in some mountainous provinces in Northern Vietnam, in this article, the authors will analyse and explain the challenges and adaptations of those working in the education sector in these regions; and draw lessons and practical experiences as a basis for proposing specific and urgent recommendations to deal with the impacts of pandemics and maintain effective teaching for students in these areas.

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‘Dirty or Clean – Immoral or Moral’ – Differences in Perception between Two Different Cultures (Finnish Main Population and Roma Minority) – COVID-19 in Finland

‘Dirty or Clean – Immoral or Moral’ – Differences in Perception between Two Different Cultures (Finnish Main Population and Roma Minority) – COVID-19 in Finland

Author(s): Kai Viljami Åberg / Language(s): English Issue: 4/2022

COVID-19 shocked and shook the whole world. Hardly anyone could have predicted a similar pandemic. Romani communities in Europe face a much higher risk of death, as their situation, already marked by extreme racism and poverty, has been worsening in the last decade. Many Roma are not covered by social welfare, and the most vulnerable are informal workers and emigrants. Those in the informal economy are not eligible for aid, while current measures prevent them from earning an income (Asenov, 2022: 1129–1153). Thereby Gypsy, Roma, Travellers, Kaale etc. communities are at higher risk of being infected by COVID-19 and at greater risk of severe outcomes as a result of contracting pandemic. Problems in Roma health care are often caused by cultural perceptions, value and norm systems and beliefs (Alexiadou, 2018: 261–283). In Finland, the problems arising from the healthcare practices of the Romani population are often related to both linguistic and wider cultural differences in relation to the main population. In this paper, I will give a few examples of the inside perspective of the Roma in Finland based on my intensive fieldwork since 1994. I will reflect on the reasons and consequences of living in the middle of two cultures, both linguistically, culturally, and socially causing global health and healthcare to crumble. I ask, why and how COVID-19 gets a different linguistic and cultural significance among the Finnish Roma in relation to the majority population.

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Between Pending Narratives: Evaluation of COVID-19 Conspiracy Theories by University Students in Turkey

Between Pending Narratives: Evaluation of COVID-19 Conspiracy Theories by University Students in Turkey

Author(s): Mehmet Ali Üzelgün,Rahmi Oruç / Language(s): English Issue: 4/2022

With the high levels of uncertainty and vulnerability created in everyday activities, the COVID-19 outbreak has prompted a proliferation of narratives. Against the official narrative crosscutting the worlds of science, medicine, social measures, and personal responsibilities, many conspiracy theories have emerged. In this study, we examine both the official COVID-19 narrative and various conspiracy theories as conforming to a format called the pending narratives (Törrönen, 2021). Pending narratives are future-directed stories operating on three levels – story, discourse, and norm – to call their audience for a certain course of action. As such, they are inherently rhetorical, and their audience evaluation is informative of their rhetorical qualities. To examine the reception and evaluation of COVID-19 narratives by young people, we used 27 semi-structured online interviews conducted between June and October 2021 with freshmen university students across Turkey. While the official narrative was emergent throughout the interviews, we asked specifically about certain alternative stories (lab leak, population weapon, hidden elites). Our analysis shows that both the official and the conspiracy narratives have some purchase among the Turkish students. We thus divide the interview responses into three groups: adhering to the official narrative, adhering to the conspiracy theories, and those that are ‘inbetween’. Focusing specifically on the latter group, our analysis maps the reasons for which the interviewees criticise, debunk, and refute various narratives. We conclude by assessing the rhetorical qualities and appeal of the lab leak, population weapon, and hidden elites conspiracy theories.With the high levels of uncertainty and vulnerability created in everyday activities, the COVID-19 outbreak has prompted a proliferation of narratives. Against the official narrative crosscutting the worlds of science, medicine, social measures, and personal responsibilities, many conspiracy theories have emerged. In this study, we examine both the official COVID-19 narrative and various conspiracy theories as conforming to a format called the pending narratives (Törrönen, 2021). Pending narratives are future-directed stories operating on three levels – story, discourse, and norm – to call their audience for a certain course of action. As such, they are inherently rhetorical, and their evaluation by audiences is informative of their rhetorical qualities. To examine the reception and evaluation of COVID-19 narratives by young people, we used 27 semi-structured online interviews conducted between June-October 2021 with freshmen university students across Turkey. While the official narrative was emergent throughout the interviews, we asked specifically about certain alternative stories (lab leak, population weapon, hidden elites). Our analysis shows that both the official and the conspiracy narratives have some purchase among the Turkish students. We thus divide the interview responses into three groups: adhering to the official narrative, adhering to the conspiracy theories, and those that are ‘inbetween’. Focusing specifically on the latter group, our analysis maps the reasons the interviewees criticise, debunk, and refute various narratives. We conclude by assessing the rhetorical qualities and appeal of the lab leak, population weapon, and hidden elites conspiracy theories.Many conspiracy theories have emerged against the official narrative crosscutting the worlds of science, medicine, social measures, and personal responsibilities

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In-between the Narratives: Freedom and Fear through the Pandemic. The Mystery of Health

In-between the Narratives: Freedom and Fear through the Pandemic. The Mystery of Health

Author(s): Lyuboslava Kostova / Language(s): English Issue: 4/2022

This article deals with the concepts of narrative psychology and ethics and aims to clarify the connection between different social actors and their responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. The paper explores the two main aspects of these reactions: freedom and fear. Through the Hegelian paradigm of a thesis, antithesis, and synthesis, these basic individual and social sentiments will be interpreted in their mutual interconnection and subjectivity. The devil manifests himself hiding in the extremes and God – in the golden middle because love is a union of opposites, so Hegelian dialectics is at its best here. In accordance with public health policies and regulations, their impact on the everyday lives of individuals, groups, and nations will be analysed through the lenses of specific notions of authenticity and globalisation. Describing differences and finding similarities will be useful in recreating new space between the narratives where health will reveal itself as a mystery, involving our emotions, prejudices, trust, and entire multidimensional presence as grounded spiritual beings. The main questions to address here will be whether it is possible to use our capacities and stories to initiate significant social change and transformation, where fear, anger, or freedom may bring us to understand who we are and what our existential purpose is. To approach its objective, the article will evaluate online data collected from Internet pages and forums worldwide, thereby connecting seemingly contradictive positions. Only through rebuilding the collective psyche can traumatic narratives be rewritten and social cohesion restored.

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Pandemics, Epidemics and Their Classification Criteria: What Questions for Anthropology?

Pandemics, Epidemics and Their Classification Criteria: What Questions for Anthropology?

Author(s): Isabelle Gobatto / Language(s): English Issue: 4/2022

Pandemics and epidemics are based on facts, statistics, and estimates translated into projections and epidemiological modeling. They are also the subject of representations and, in a correlative way, of significations. Thus, it is biological, epidemiological, and social criteria that generate the character of seriousness to which global public policies hasten to respond with significant financial support. Many of these are caused by pathogenic agents. Among those identified since the 1970s are the AIDS viruses, more recently COVID-19. However, non-infectious diseases are sometimes supported by narratives that portray them as epidemics or pandemics for example, the WHO has referred to diabetes as a new global epidemic, given its steadily rising prevalence rates worldwide. My aim is to question the central but also ambivalent role played by the production of statistics and quantitative data in qualifying a phenomenon as an epidemic or a pandemic on the one hand and by the collective feeling of uncontrolled and socially dangerous exposure to a risk on the other. I will discuss their performative effects and their symbolic function, using the illustrative case of diabetes. Like many chronic non-communicable diseases, diabetes is a financially under-supported disease in the context of national health systems particularly in low-resource countries, even though it causes millions of deaths. Driven by a desire to alert people to future global health problems, it is of interest to consider how some experts use the notions of contamination or contagion in their arguments and to understand their underlying representations.

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Augmenting Community Response to COVID-19 Challenges: Lessons from Andhra Pradesh, India

Augmenting Community Response to COVID-19 Challenges: Lessons from Andhra Pradesh, India

Author(s): Rajna Mishra,Preeti Kumar,Sakthivel Selvaraj / Language(s): English Issue: 4/2022

The scale and magnitude of the COVID-19 catastrophe are daunting, especially in a lower-middle-income country (LMIC) like India. This study attempted to examine barriers and challenges in accessing COVID-19 services among vulnerable groups including women, children, elderly, persons with disabilities/co-morbidity/underlying medical conditions, and migrant labourers from sampled rural and urban areas of Vijayawada in Krishna district, Andhra Pradesh, India. A cross-sectional mixed method research design was adopted. Desk review followed by in-depth interviews using a purposive sampling strategy among 46 target respondents, including 25 beneficiaries and 21 Decision Makers/COVID Care Providers, was carried out. The outcomes from this study showedthat though testing capacity has surged, and services were made available there is a need to expand testing in rural areas, preferential deployment of WHO point of care diagnostic kits by outreach workers, enforcement of preventive measures, addressing misinformation on non-pharmacological interventions and sensitisation on COVID-19 vaccination. Public health services such as Immunisation, Reproductive and Child Health, Tuberculosis, and other non-COVID health services need to be strengthened, and existing measures on food and supplies for the vulnerable to be sustained.

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Необходимост от комплексна подкрепа на семейства с деца в ранна детска възраст – резултати от проучване на потребностите

Необходимост от комплексна подкрепа на семейства с деца в ранна детска възраст – резултати от проучване на потребностите

Author(s): Rossitsa Simeonova,Ivanka Shalapatova,Monika Bogdanova,Simeon I. Sapundzhiev,Savelina Rusinova / Language(s): Bulgarian Issue: 2/2024

This article presents results of an empirical study on the needs of children in early childhood age (0–7 years), including children with disabilities and their families. The data are used for the purposes of designing a new type of integrated social service for young children and their families. The authors outline the rationale for this idea in the context of the conceptual framework of the study and the conclusions from the desk research of the relevant policy and legal frameworks in Bulgaria. The empirical data and the findings from the desk research have served for drawing conclusions and recommendations for improving the responses to children and their families as part of the early childhood development policies and systems.

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