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  2. Deinstitutionalisation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinstitutionalisation

    US states have made substantial investments in the community, and similar to Canada, shifted some but not all institutional funds to the community sectors as deinstitutionalization. For example, NYS Education, Health and Social Services Laws identify mental health personnel in the state of New York, and the two term Obama Presidency in the US ...

  3. Deinstitutionalization in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinstitutionalization_in...

    In general, professionals, civil rights leaders, and humanitarians saw the shift from institutional confinement to local care as the appropriate approach. [1] The deinstitutionalization movement started off slowly but gained momentum as it adopted philosophies from the Civil Rights Movement. [1]

  4. Deinstitutionalisation (orphanages and children's institutions)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinstitutionalisation...

    Moldova [18] has made considerable progress, where investment in inclusive education means many children with disabilities can live at home with their families, reducing the need for institutional placements. [19] Ukraine, Belarus and Bosnia. Azerbaijan has established a Department for De-institutionalisation and Child Protection. [20] [21]

  5. Kleptocracy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kleptocracy

    According to L.K. Samuels, one reason governmental bodies subscribe to theft-prone policies is to lay the groundwork for the socialization of labor and property, thus permitting kleptocrats to make a populace "subservient to an institutionalized authority."

  6. Systemic bias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systemic_bias

    Systemic bias is the inherent tendency of a process to support particular outcomes. The term generally refers to human systems such as institutions. Systemic bias is related to and overlaps conceptually with institutional bias and structural bias, and the terms are often used interchangeably.

  7. Delegitimisation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delegitimisation

    Delegitimisation is the process of constructing a "categorization of groups into extreme social categories which are ultimately excluded from society". [6] Delegitimisation provides "the moral and the discursive basis to harm the delegitimized group, even in the most inhumane ways".

  8. How The World Bank Broke Its Promise to Protect the Poor

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/worldbank-evicted...

    The payments that Lagos authorities offered for larger demolished structures, for example, were 31 percent lower than what the World Bank’s own consultants said they were worth. “It was like David and Goliath. There were these little people fighting against this giant,” Chapman said. The bank “really left vulnerable people on their own.”

  9. Cultural capital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_capital

    Embodied cultural capital comprises the knowledge that is consciously acquired and passively inherited, by socialization to culture and tradition. Unlike property, cultural capital is not transmissible, but is acquired over time, as it is impressed upon the person's habitus (i.e., character and way of thinking), which, in turn, becomes more receptive to similar cultural influences.