Advocacy for the Rights of the LGBTQ Community as a Marginalized Group in Society

Advocacy for the Rights of the LGBTQ Community as a Marginalized Group in Society

Name

Institution

Date

Writer’s name

Address

State

Date

Legislative board member’s name

Legislative board member address

State

Dear Sir/ Madam

I’m writing this letter to you regarding the advocacy of marginalized groups in society, particularly the LGBTQ team. For years now, individuals who identify themselves as homosexual, bisexual or lesbian have been condemned for their stance and made to feel inferior and abnormal. As a marriage and family therapist and a member of the professional association, I have witnessed firsthand some of the challenges that marginalized people experience due to prejudice and the stereotypical nature of society. Discrimination against members of the LGBTQ community has adverse effects on their mental health and general wellness (Taylor, 2020). Some countries already have inclusive policies that cater to marginalized groups’ needs and ensure they are treated equally as heterosexual citizens. On the other hand, other countries still lag as far as the LGBTQ matter is concerned and still subject members of this group to mental and physical torture to conform them.

My fieldwork as a family and marriage therapist has enhanced my knowledge and experience to understand the significance of listening and considering the LGBTQ community. As an expert, it is my responsibility to view the issue from a personal and systemic view and advocate for their rights as diligent citizens. This marginalized group is likely to develop somatic symptoms, anxiety, suicidal behavior, and depressive effect compared to heterosexual individuals (Ali,2017). My ethical codes compel me to speak up on behalf of this marginalized group, condemn their discrimination and ill-treatment, and create awareness on inclusivity and unified society. Affirmative therapy has proved essential and influential in combatting the adverse effects of discrimination against members of the LGBTQ community. It validates the experiences and identities of different LGBTQ members in society by creating a safe space to express themselves and feel a sense of belonging altogether.

The primary objective of the advocacy for the rights of the LGBTQ family is to eliminate the conversion policy adopted by different cultures in the country that believe physical and mental torture will turn gay people heterosexual. This initiative also targets the discrimination of LGBTQ members in the employment sector and society in general. Subjecting these individuals to mental and physical torture because of their identities and sexual orientation is unfair, outdated, and shameful in the modern world. It disturbs their mental health, self-esteem, and ability to express themselves freely like the rest of the citizens (Lewis & Kern, 2018). Additionally, it causes physical injuries that hinder their productivity and ability to support their families and carry out their daily routines. For this reason, legislative protection must be employed to condemn and ban it from society henceforth.

The government working hand in hand with various LGBTQ programs has established strategies to eradicate the discrimination of marginalized groups in society. Human rights for LGBTQ people should be heightened and mandated to protect this vulnerable group. Additionally, the government needs to develop and implement policies that pin perpetrators and ensure they are punished accordingly. This plan will warn people from harassing, discriminating, or inflicting physical pain on gay individuals (Hull,2016). There is a need to create awareness in society regarding inclusivity significance and a unified front in all aspects of the country. Stakeholders should also monitor human rights violation patterns linked to the marginalized group and devise techniques to curb such practices. These policies will bring forth a society that works together for its betterment and focuses on much more significant issues affecting the nation. These policies create a sense of belonging to the LGBTQ community and allow them to tap into their potential and express themselves freely. Failure to take legislative action against prejudice on marginalized groups will see many cultures continue to practice the conversion culture and treat such sexual orientations as disorders.

It is undeniable that the discrimination of marginalized groups causes more harm than good. Since the government has the best interest of its citizens at heart, it should consider working hand in hand with experts like family and marriage therapists to ease the mental illness burden on the LGBTQ group. It is high time the government and stakeholders became serious and worked towards achieving a neutral community where everybody is somebody. People can look beyond gender or sexual orientation during interactions, especially in social settings.

I look forward to receiving your feedback and approval regarding the issue tabled. If you have any questions about the advocacy of the rights of the marginalized groups, feel free to communicate via email Email address@gmail.comYours Sincerely,

Name

Sign

References

Ali, D. (2017). Safe spaces and brave spaces. NASPA Research and Policy Institute, 2, 1-13.

Hull, K. E. (2016). Legal consciousness in marginalized groups: the case of LGBT people. Law & Social Inquiry, 41(3), 551-572.

Lewis, M. M., & Kern, S. (2018). Using education law as a tool to empower social justice leaders to promote LGBTQ inclusion. Educational administration quarterly, 54(5), 723-746.

Taylor, C. J. (2020). Health consequences of laws and public policies that target or protect marginalized populations. Sociology Compass, 14(2), e12753.

Advocacy in Clinical Health research

Advocacy in Clinical Health researchNameCourseCourse instructorDate of submissionIn history, cases have occurred where human subjects of research have been, willingly or through criminal negligence, either infected with disease pathogens and not given medical care or left to be infected by a certain pathogen while a cure or preventive substance was available (Talley, 2012). This has led to the need of advocates to supervise all aspects of clinical health research to ensure that researchers don’t abuse the privileges enjoyed by virtue of the charter to conduct research.

An advocate in health care research means someone well placed to protect the rights of patients are adhered to. They can be considered as educators, representatives, ombudsmen, patient navigators, care managers or health advisers. Their role is to ensure that researchers adhere to best practices and help in mediating any conflicts that may arise. Advocates in research are used ensure that fair practices are adhered to and to breakdown information to the target groups. In clinical health researches, advocates have the primary duty of protecting the medical research’s human specimen (Bourgeault, 2010)

.Major issues that the advocates are concerned with include but are not limited to:

-What or who drives the research question. This implies learning of the motivation of researchers and where funding for the research comes from (De Chesney , 2008).

-Analyzing how the researchs results will be disseminated to various relevant individuals.

-That the research is carried out in the context of consent under full disclosure. This means that the subjects understand wholly what type of research they are consenting to and the possible implications.

-In recent times, clinical research has benefitted from lobbying by research advocates for funding of certain areas of medicine. This has seen a changing trend where more and more research funding is being pooled into organised advocacy lobby groups than into the research firms’ coffers (Talley, 2012)

. A most notable sector that has a beneficially of this trend is the research on breast cancer through the pink ribbon initiative.

-That the right to confidentiality has been thoroughly covered by the researchers and no derogatory, or abusive titles have been assigned to the subjects.

-That the researchers will not use any products or methods that have not been approved as fit for humans in their research.

-That special attention has been given to the prevention of any destructive effects that may arise as a from the research.

Most countries have established ombudsman offices for clinical medicine research which serve as advocates for the rights of subjects. These are mostly concerned with ethical issues from research by departments of health. Other groups involved are the United Nations through and local institutions. Mostly the last two conduct initial reviews of the research proposals, ensure that subject will not be exposed to any unreasonable or unnecessary risks and continually and periodically review approved researches to ensure the firewalls established for subjects remain intact (Farley, 2007)

. They also get involved in the approval process to ensure only the most valid proposals go through.

Health clinical research advocacy has come a long way and is yet to attain its full potential. This notwithstanding, the benefits accrued by researchers (in terms of no lost revenue in litigation) and subjects (less exposure to risks) cannot be gainsaid.

References

Top of FormBOURGEAULT, I. L., DINGWALL, R., & DE VRIES, R. (2010). The SAGE Handbook of qualitative methods in health research. Los Angeles, SAGE.

Bottom of Form

Top of Form

COSTELLO-NICKITAS, D. M., MIDDAUGH, D. J., & ARIES, N. (2011). Policy and politics for nurses and other health professions: advocacy and action. Sudbury, Mass, Jones and Bartlett Publishers.

Bottom of Form

Top of Form

DE CHESNAY, M., & ANDERSON, B. A. (2008). Caring for the vulnerable: perspectives in nursing theory, practice, and research. Sudbury, Mass, Jones and Bartlett Publishers.

Bottom of Form

Top of Form

EARP, J. A. L., FRENCH, E. A., & GILKEY, M. B. (2008). Patient advocacy for health care quality: strategies for achieving patient-centered care. Sudbury, Mass, Jones and Bartlett Pub.

Bottom of Form

Top of Form

FARLEY, D. (2007). Assessment of the AHRQ patient safety initiative: moving from research to practice evaluation report II (2003-2004). Santa Monica, CA, RAND Health.

Bottom of Form

Top of Form

MCMULLIN, J. M., & WEINER, D. (2009). Confronting cancer: metaphors, advocacy, and anthropology. Santa Fe, School for Advanced Research Press.

Top of Form

TALLEY, R. C., & CREWS, J. E. (2012). Multiple Dimensions of Caregiving and Disability Research, Practice, Policy. Dordrecht, Springer. http://public.eblib.com/EBLPublic/PublicView.do?ptiID=971589.

Bottom of Form

Bottom of Form

Advocate interview project (interview a Social worker )

1

Advocate interview project

Name: David Robinson

Intuition: Miami University

I chose to interview a Social worker whom deals with Veterans only. This was in the office of chemical dependency at the Dayton Ohio Veterans Hospital. The person I spoke with asked that I not use her name. She felt that some things she might say would come back to harm her. That her, and many others feel that more should be done for our veterans. Her time at the V.A. hospitals over her ten years has seen many things. She has worked at two other hospitals in different states. She said that because the V.A. has devised a plan that is used at all the hospitals throughout the world. That there is very little lead way on the use of different plans fixed to help individuals rather than large groups.

As we went into our talk, she seemed very happy that more veterans are interested in social work. This she said was only due to her Veterans has a connection within their own group that helps extend to other veterans. She was concerned with having making a large difference in the lives of Veterans. This she said was mostly due to the reasons why many veterans have fallen into dependency of drugs and alcohol. Which was vastly different than most of society, and the reason they have been gripped by these devices. She did seem that while many are not helped, there is a group that is helped by these meetings in large groups. Many just take in the information and try to apply this to their lives. Trying to escape the drugs holds, some prescription from V.A. physicians. Many have tried to self-medicate from the many emotional pains they feel. Her thoughts on this were many would slide onto the cracks and find themselves with little to no help. Some larger programs do help the general population with issues of dependency. Veterans are not only a diverse, but also a disproportionate group that has many issues that are twined in their lives. When asked about the present obstacles she and other social workers face daily helping group with its large problems. Most of the problems seen are the huge amount of paper work the V.A. requires from them. They have fund that they must keep daily logs, and other forms that are required to be complete accurately. The program often changes which means that they have to attend new training that may require ether more paper work, or changes in styles of group meetings.

For the most part, they work with each other’s and their superiors when changes need completed. While they can advocate for changes in this system when they attended off site meetings they feel many times changes are slow to happen, if they do happen. They have to work within the V.A. systems that are in place by the congress. One area allowed to help is the veteran is recommended to groups that are smaller if openings are available. Many of the forms required for the veteran to complete, they help the veteran.

She said, “That because all the papers reviewed daily, as they are used in the veteran’s compensation claims”. Veteran’s papers are recorded electronically for future use. This helps in preserving them; it helps in retrieving these in the future. Veterans that may move to other areas each V.A. worker can retrieve these for any needed use. Most do like this system enabling them to use some of their time more wisely. Enabling more time with the veteran’s needs. They write local representatives with concerns about process that might help the veterans receive the promise made to them.

As personally working with each other, notes left on the log as to how they feel about s certain subject, or area the veterans may be addressing. She went on to say that due to the huge amount of veterans each social worker sees in different areas it is very difficult for them to communicate with one another. Social workers find it difficult to remember each veteran on personal bases making this process not one used. In her opinion, “many may use this process if asked about a certain item or question that may have been asked”. Can add an additional problem if this is not answered correctly. This problem is why she personally does not do this. Even little changes in wording or documentation can cause delays in benefits, or compensation they may be entited.

Working with the many physicians in the system, can at times strain relationships. Learning how or what a physician’s concern is can be difficult. This adds to the frustration to meet the veterans has needs, and obtain the best outcomes. The way in the paper work must be filled out is very detailed and wording is checked by superiors. Her superiors feel that wording can reflect poorly on the system and the treatment of veterans. This does not always reflect the real needs of any one person and delivering to that person the best possible treatments they may need. This is not to say all do this practice at all places. Some areas she has worked is vastly different on the way reporting is completed. They like keeping the documents as close as possible to the reporting the social worker does.

When asked about her job and responsibilities she had maintained she was very happy to be working for men and women that have served our country. It brings a sense of accomplishment every day she is able to help someone find help, or his or her needs are meet. She reflected a bit and said, “That when she looks at a veteran she has no idea what they have been through in their time. To her they are not just another client to deal with. It is her honor to help with all the resources she has at her disposal.” Every day has different problems that may come into her office. Not every problem may have the one size fits all. Therefore, the importance of listing to the person having needs is very important. Repeating many times what the clients says so she may be able to help the best she can. This makes her feel good at night. Her job is not how she feels at night, but did the veteran get his, or her need meet.

There was not much other than the paper work. With many rules that make working at the V.A. little more stress. Even knowing that these rules can allow modified depending on the circumstances. She said that in any area there are circumstances that may not follow the rules precisely. This insures that social workers may present to the supervisor those circumstances.

She said she would like to see more ideas that help veterans with problems in areas not covered by the V.A. Humanitarian work is used, but very little. She and others would like to see the expansion of the health care, and dependency care when needed. This area would help homeless vets, them on Drugs, alcohol. One big area is the ability to launch teams for veterans in rural areas. They seem to fall into the cracks not receiving any care. This creates a great concern within the social workers role. Seeing and not being able to help in an area of need. Trying to start up a new role within the V.A. is very hard with so many processes to enter into. Sometimes it can take years for the process to work for veterans. Causing veterans to think there is no one that cares about them. When this is not the truth at all, it is so hard to explain to veterans many times about this process. When they hear how the V.A. cares for them. This puts us in spot of trying to explain that process put into place by congress. These processes, as unrealistic as they may seem have to follow the laws.

Most policies are changed at many levels. Creating sometimes many problems for the staff, and they cases are handled. While some enhance the process for veterans, some do not. The social workers are asked about the process with respect to outcomes. Her personal feelings sometimes along with others may cause them not to speak out. The disappointment with the system does concern many of the social workers that want to help. They many times feel they have their hands tied behind their back with truly helping the veterans.

Building a relationship with men and women that have very little trust to begin with is quite hard. Her idea is veterans only remember the promises made to them about care after their time in the Military serves. Many veterans never told about the many obstacles that may lay ahead for them to reach their goal. This becomes a difficult movement for the veterans to trust, and wait for answerers they to receive help. The system, built with many seemly deadfalls to hold up that help. While we, “social workers” keep veterans waiting and interested waiting for that help. veteran’s loose interest of become very disappointed in the system. A percentage does stop waiting for this process to fulfill its obligations. She wishes the process could move much faster, or at least have a way providing temporary help till the longer systems does it process. We should never have a process in place that keeps veterans from help when they come seeking this. One veteran that falls through the cracks is one to many. With the fear of PTSD in many of these lives, they do not need to be felt that no one cares. Every little change that may seem no significant to us is a major change in their lives.

Policies that could help are the ones she mentioned above could also include fast tracking some cases. A social worker needs more latitudinal movement when veterans came in for help. To try to separate the environmental concern’s from a life is very difficult when needs immediate. Trying to put yourself into the life of veteran many times is difficult. Her mention of not getting involved in the client’s life was something that is very hard for someone dealing with veterans. We cannot look at a veterans as the same as the general population. These groups have many different hardships, with added pressures.

Her closing words and ideas referred to a system that not closed to new ideas. Ideas are like ways the ground troops can share how the ideas and polices of management are truly working. Collaboration sometimes lacks at that point. Some just look at numbers and cost rather than lives affected by decisions. She hope that in the ten years things can change form the policy makers in extending more help, and flexibility to the social workers to make decisions.

AE4 Extended essay planner

AE4 Extended essay planner

Content

Click the links below to jump to the relevant part of the document.

PlanNotes3.Grouping notes4.Outline

Planning Procedure

Select a topic for your extended essay.

Choose a question for your essay.

Identify the instruction, topic and limiting words in your question.  

Make notes of what you need to include in the content of your essay. 

Extended essay question 

Assess the importance of GDP in measuring Australia’s economic wellbeing.

Instruction words: 

Assess Plan:

What is GDP

What are the alternative definitions of GDP?

How do you determine the GDP of a country?

Identify the various uses of GDP

Why would a nation choose to use GDP as a measure of wellbeing?

What options are available?

What is the strongest among the alternatives to determining wellbeing of Australia?

Define happiness index

Does the GDP really measure wellbeing?

Are the drawbacks to using it?

Advantages?

Final conclusion?

Topic words:  Importance, GDP Limiting words: 

Assessment, importance, Measuring, Australia’s economic wellbeing Notes

Reference:

Joseph E. Stiglitz. (2020,August 1). GDP Is the Wrong Tool for Measuring What Matters. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/gdp-is-the-wrong-tool-for-measuring-what-matters/

Questions or prompts based on your plan:

Other measurements of economic-wellness Notes from the source:

Evaluation:

The article takes a negative tone on the use of GDP as a measure of public welfare.

Summary:

Dissects the reasons why its use should be stopped or improved to include other indicators beyond market activities

Useful on GDP importance

A very useful source in understand what GDP is and how it is used as a measure of economic and societal welfare all over the world.

The article is also very relevant to the study questions as it highlights the use of GDP and provides an insight into why it should be improved or supplemented to ensure that total welfare of a society is well captured.

Reference:

Aitken, A. (2019). Measuring welfare beyond GDP. National Institute economic review, 249, R3-R16. https://doi.org/10.1177/002795011924900110Questions or prompts based on your plan

Other measurements of economic-wellness Notes from the source:

Summary:

The article provides a very detailed review of GDP as a measure of economic welfare, asserting how it is misused in that regard. It sheds light on the proper use of GDP and why it should not be used without the inclusion of other critical indicators that reflect overall progress of a society.

Evaluation:

The style used to present the article is very difficult to follow. However, the explanation and discussions are very rich and informative. The content is relevant and up to date and will be critical in providing a starting point to answer the research question

Reference:

Kenny, D. C., Costanza, R., Dowsley, T., Jackson, N., Josol, J., Kubiszewski, I., … & Thompson, J. (2019). Australia’s genuine progress indicator revisited (1962–2013). Ecological Economics, 158, 1-10 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2018.11.025 Questions or prompts based on your plan

GDP and Australia Notes from the source:

Summary:

The authors look at how Australia has continued to measure progress and wellbeing from the mid-20th century up to 2013. It then proceeds to attempt to provide a genuine progress indicator by combining other measures to supplement the use of GDP. It mentions the long term use of Measures of Australia’s Progress (MAP) in Australia including a collection of alternative indicators. It then discusses the GDP and its pros and cons in measuring public welfare.

Evaluation:

This article not only discusses the importance of GDP as an indicator of progress and wellbeing in Australia but also looks at alternatives including the inclusion of ecological factors and other relevant concepts.

Reference:

Trewin, D. (2001). Measuring wellbeing. Australian Bureau of Statistics. https://www.governanceinstitute.edu.au/magma/media/upload/ckeditor/files/Well-being%20presentation.pdf

Questions or prompts based on your plan

Other measurements of economic-wellness Notes from the source:

Summary:

This article discusses approaches to measuring progress and wellbeing. It also looks at the modalities foe developing measures of wellbeing and focuses its case on Australia. It compares the use of GDP in Australia with the Australian National Development Index. For comparative purposes it briefly looks at how New Zealand measures progress and provides recommendations for the future. This source is important because it focuses on Australia’s perspective of the GDP against other measures.

Evaluation:

The article looks at the measures of wellbeing relevant to Australia and attempts to introduce measures outside of financial and economic status. Defines GDP and its application in Australia and compares wellbeing of the country with New Zealand in terms of GDP, and finally looks at a suite of indicators and other subject measures of wellbeing.

Grouping notes

Plan question:

Sources

Themes Trewin (2001) Aitken (2019) Kenny et al. (2019) Joseph (2020)

GDP and eco wellbeing Not measuring eco wellbeing Not measuring eco wellbeing Not measuring eco wellbeing Not measuring eco wellbeing

Other measurements GDP is superior to other measures Mentions WHR as a better indicator GDO is better indicator Australian National Development Index

Use of GDP Use of GDP is practical Use of GDP is not practical Use of GDP is impractical Use of GDP is practical but requires complementary measures

My position: GDP is not an adequate measure of economic wellbeing in Australia

Plan question:

Sources

Themes My position:

Plan question:

Sources

Themes My position:

Outline

Introduction

(Draft)

Body 1 T E E L Body 2

T E E L Body 3 T E E L Body 4

T E E L Body 5 T E E L Body 6

T E E L Body 7 T E E L Conclusion

(Draft)

AE4 Research tracker (2)

AE4 Research tracker

Student details

Name:

Student ID:

Contents:

Key topic wordsExampleExtended essay sourcesGroup presentation sources

Key topic words

Extended essay:

Australia, GDP, Economic welfare, progress, wellbeing indicators

Group presentation:

Essay sources

Essay question:

Assess the importance of GDP in measuring Australia’s economic wellbeing

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Joseph E. Stiglitz. (2020,August 1). GDP Is the Wrong Tool for Measuring What Matters. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/gdp-is-the-wrong-tool-for-measuring-what-matters/ Online publication/news article 20.08.2021

Comments

Summary:

The article takes a negative tone on the use of GDP as a measure of public welfare and goes ahead to dissect the reasons why its use should be stopped or improved to include other indicators beyond market activities.

Evaluation:

A very useful source in understand what GDP is and how it is used as a measure of economic and societal welfare all over the world.

The article is also very relevant to the study questions as it highlights the use of GDP and provides an insight into why it should be improved or supplemented to ensure that total welfare of a society is well captured.

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Aitken, A. (2019). Measuring welfare beyond GDP. National Institute economic review, 249, R3-R16. https://doi.org/10.1177/002795011924900110Journal Article 20.08.2021

Comments

Summary:

The article provides a very detailed review of GDP as a measure of economic welfare, asserting how it is misused in that regard. It sheds light on the proper use of GDP and why it should not be used without the inclusion of other critical indicators that reflect overall progress of a society.

Evaluation:

The style used to present the article is very difficult to follow. However, the explanation and discussions are very rich and informative. The content is relevant and up to date and will be critical in providing a starting point to answer the research question.

AE4 Research tracker (3)

AE4 Research tracker

Student details

Name:

Student ID:

Contents:

Key topic wordsExampleExtended essay sourcesGroup presentation sources

Key topic words

Extended essay:

Group presentation:

Essay sources

Essay question:

Assess the importance of GDP in measuring a selected country’s economic wellbeing

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Joseph E. Stiglitz. (2020,August 1). GDP Is the Wrong Tool for Measuring What Matters. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/gdp-is-the-wrong-tool-for-measuring-what-matters/ Online publication/news article 20.08.2021

Comments

Summary:

The article takes a negative tone on the use of GDP as a measure of public welfare and goes ahead to dissect the reasons why its use should be stopped or improved to include other indicators beyond market activities.

Evaluation:

A very useful source in understand what GDP is and how it is used as a measure of economic and societal welfare all over the world.

The article is also very relevant to the study questions as it highlights the use of GDP and provides an insight into why it should be improved or supplemented to ensure that total welfare of a society is well captured.

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Aitken, A. (2019). Measuring welfare beyond GDP. National Institute economic review, 249, R3-R16. https://doi.org/10.1177/002795011924900110Journal Article 20.08.2021

Comments

Summary:

The article provides a very detailed review of GDP as a measure of economic welfare, asserting how it is misused in that regard. It sheds light on the proper use of GDP and why it should not be used without the inclusion of other critical indicators that reflect overall progress of a society.

Evaluation:

The style used to present the article is very difficult to follow. However, the explanation and discussions are very rich and informative. The content is relevant and up to date and will be critical in providing a starting point to answer the research question.

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Kenny, D. C., Costanza, R., Dowsley, T., Jackson, N., Josol, J., Kubiszewski, I., … & Thompson, J. (2019). Australia’s genuine progress indicator revisited (1962–2013). Ecological Economics, 158, 1-10 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2018.11.025 Journal Article 20.08.2021

Comments

Summary:

The authors look at how Australia has continued to measure progress and wellbeing from the mid-20th century up to 2013. It then proceeds to attempt to provide a genuine progress indicator by combining other measures to supplement the use of GDP. It mentions the long term use of Measures of Australia’s Progress (MAP) in Australia including a collection of alternative indicators. It then discusses the GDP and its pros and cons in measuring public welfare.

Evaluation:

This article not only discusses the importance of GDP as an indicator of progress and wellbeing in Australia but also looks at alternatives including the inclusion of ecological factors and other relevant concepts.

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

Group presentation sources

Presentation topic:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

AE4 Research tracker (4)

AE4 Research tracker

Student details

Name:

Student ID:

Contents:

Key topic wordsExampleExtended essay sourcesGroup presentation sourcesKey topic words

Extended essay:

GDP, Australia, welfare, economic wellbeing, indicators,

Group presentation:

Essay sources

Essay question:

Assess the importance of GDP in measuring a selected country’s economic wellbeing

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Joseph E. Stiglitz. (2020,August 1). GDP Is the Wrong Tool for Measuring What Matters. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/gdp-is-the-wrong-tool-for-measuring-what-matters/ Online publication/news article 20.08.2021

Comments

Summary:

Useful information on the use of GDP as a measure of public welfare and goes ahead to dissect the reasons why its use should be stopped or improved to include other indicators beyond market activities.

Measures of economic wellbeing

Useful information on strategies:

Defining GDP

Understanding it is used as a measure of economic and societal welfare all over the world

Use of GDP

Why it should be improved or supplemented to ensure that total welfare of a society is well captured

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Aitken, A. (2019). Measuring welfare beyond GDP. National Institute economic review, 249, R3-R16. https://doi.org/10.1177/002795011924900110Journal Article 20.08.2021

Comments

Summary:

A useful review of GDP as a measure of economic welfare, asserting how it is misused in that regard (R11)

It sheds light on the proper use of GDP (R4-R7)

Presents reasons why it should not be used without the inclusion of other critical indicators that reflect overall progress of a society (R4-R9)

Useful information:

Rich and informative explanations on the GDP as a measure of economic health

Relevant and up to date content

Provides a starting point to answer the question on GDP as an economic health measure

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Kenny, D. C., Costanza, R., Dowsley, T., Jackson, N., Josol, J., Kubiszewski, I., … & Thompson, J. (2019). Australia’s genuine progress indicator revisited (1962–2013). Ecological Economics, 158, 1-10 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2018.11.025 Journal Article 20.08.2021

Comments

Evaluation:

This article not only discusses the importance of GDP as an indicator of progress and wellbeing in Australia but also looks at alternatives including the inclusion of ecological factors and other relevant concepts.

Summary:

Looks at how Australia has continued to measure progress and wellbeing from the mid-20th century up to 2013 (p2-p4)

Provides a genuine progress indicator by combining other measures to supplement the use of GDP (p3-p4)

Mentions the long term use of Measures of Australia’s Progress (MAP) in Australia including a collection of alternative indicators (p4-p7)

Discusses the GDP and its pros and cons in measuring public welfare (p4-p6)

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

Group presentation sources

Presentation topic:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

AE4 Source evaluation template

AE4 Source evaluation template

Instructions

1. Click the link to download the AE4 source evaluation template.

2. Upload the document to the OneDrive folder you have shared with your teacher.

3. Rename the file: name.studentnumber.source_evaluation e.g. jimmy.wong.3143223.source_evaluation

4. Complete the first source evaluation for your extended essay by week 3.

5. Complete the second source evaluation for your group presentation by week 6.

6. Make notes next to each of the CRAP criteria headings in the table. Use the questions to help you.

7. Write your evaluative summary paragraph at the end of your notes in the space provided. You should write 180-200 words.

8. Save and upload to Canvas by the due date.

9.Share a copy of your source text with your teacher, by uploading a copy of the text to the shared OneDrive folder. Name your source text file with your name and student number in the file name, e.g. Jimmy.Wong.3143233.source_text.docx

Source evaluation: Extended essay (Week 3)

Topic /question Assess the importance of GDP in measuring a selected country’s economic wellbeing

Reference details

(author, date, title etc.) Trewin, D. (2001). Measuring wellbeing. Australian Bureau of Statistics.

Type of source journal article news article

report other ___________________________

C.R.A.P. criteria Your response (in note form)

Currency

Why the date of publication of the source is appropriate. 2001. While the article is almost two decades old, it still retains relevance as it discusses the issue of determining the wellbeing gof Australia.

Relevance

How this source is relevant to your assessment task. Looks at the measures of wellbeing relevant to Australia

Attempts to introduce measures outside of financial and economic status

Defines GDP and its application in Australia

Compares wellbeing of the country with New Zealand in terms of GDP

Looks at a suite of indicators and other subject measures of wellbeing

Authority

What expertise the author has or uses. Article approved by the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

Chair, Advisory Board of Australia’s National Development Index

Purpose

Why the text was written, and who it was written for. Written for the scholarly community as a contribution to literature

Summary of why this source is suitable for your extended essay/presentation:

This article discusses approaches to measuring progress and wellbeing. It also looks at he modalities foe developing measures of wellbeing and focuses its case on Australia. It compares the use of GDP in Australia with the Australian National Development Index. For comparative purposes it briefly looks at how New Zealand measures progress and provides recommendations for the future. This source is important because it focuses on Australia’s perspective of the GDP against other measures.

Source evaluation: Group presentation (Week 6)

Topic /question Assess the importance of GDP in measuring a selected country’s economic wellbeing

Reference details

(author, date, title etc.) Kenny, D. C., Costanza, R., Dowsley, T., Jackson, N., Josol, J., Kubiszewski, I., … & Thompson, J. (2019). Australia’s genuine progress indicator revisited (1962–2013). Ecological Economics, 158, 1-10.

Type of source journal article news article

report other ___________________________

C.R.A.P. criteria Your response (in note form)

Currency

Why the date of publication of the source is appropriate. 2019- Up to date and relevant

Relevance

How this source is relevant to your assessment task. This article not only discusses the importance of GDP as an indicator of progress and wellbeing in Australia but also looks at alternatives including the inclusion of ecological factors and other relevant concepts.

Authority

What expertise the author has or uses. Published under Australian National University

Endorsed by the journal of Ecological Economics

Purpose

Why the text was written, and who it was written for. Written for the Australian scholarly audience

Summary of why this source is suitable for your extended essay/presentation:

The authors look at how Australia has continued to measure progress and wellbeing from the mid-20th century up to 2013. It then proceeds to attempt to provide a genuine progress indicator by combining other measures to supplement the use of GDP. It mentions the long term use of Measures of Australia’s Progress (MAP) in Australia including a collection of alternative indicators. It then discusses the GDP and its pros and cons in measuring public welfare.

AE4 Research tracker

AE4 Research tracker

Student details

Name:

Student ID:

Contents:

Key topic wordsExampleExtended essay sourcesGroup presentation sourcesKey topic words

Extended essay:

GDP, Australia, welfare, economic wellbeing, indicators,

Group presentation:

Essay sources

Essay question:

Assess the importance of GDP in measuring a selected country’s economic wellbeing

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Joseph E. Stiglitz. (2020,August 1). GDP Is the Wrong Tool for Measuring What Matters. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/gdp-is-the-wrong-tool-for-measuring-what-matters/ Online publication/news article 20.08.2021

Comments

Summary:

Useful information on the use of GDP as a measure of public welfare and goes ahead to dissect the reasons why its use should be stopped or improved to include other indicators beyond market activities.

Measures of economic wellbeing

Useful information on strategies:

Defining GDP

Understanding it is used as a measure of economic and societal welfare all over the world

Use of GDP

Why it should be improved or supplemented to ensure that total welfare of a society is well captured

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Aitken, A. (2019). Measuring welfare beyond GDP. National Institute economic review, 249, R3-R16. https://doi.org/10.1177/002795011924900110Journal Article 20.08.2021

Comments

Summary:

A useful review of GDP as a measure of economic welfare, asserting how it is misused in that regard (R11)

It sheds light on the proper use of GDP (R4-R7)

Presents reasons why it should not be used without the inclusion of other critical indicators that reflect overall progress of a society (R4-R9)

Useful information:

Rich and informative explanations on the GDP as a measure of economic health

Relevant and up to date content

Provides a starting point to answer the question on GDP as an economic health measure

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Kenny, D. C., Costanza, R., Dowsley, T., Jackson, N., Josol, J., Kubiszewski, I., … & Thompson, J. (2019). Australia’s genuine progress indicator revisited (1962–2013). Ecological Economics, 158, 1-10 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2018.11.025 Journal Article 20.08.2021

Comments

Evaluation:

This article not only discusses the importance of GDP as an indicator of progress and wellbeing in Australia but also looks at alternatives including the inclusion of ecological factors and other relevant concepts.

Summary:

Looks at how Australia has continued to measure progress and wellbeing from the mid-20th century up to 2013 (p2-p4)

Provides a genuine progress indicator by combining other measures to supplement the use of GDP (p3-p4)

Mentions the long term use of Measures of Australia’s Progress (MAP) in Australia including a collection of alternative indicators (p4-p7)

Discusses the GDP and its pros and cons in measuring public welfare (p4-p6)

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Trewin, D. (2001). Measuring wellbeing. Australian Bureau of Statistics. https://www.governanceinstitute.edu.au/magma/media/upload/ckeditor/files/Well-being%20presentation.pdfJournal 20.08.2021

Comments

Evaluation:

The article looks at the measures of wellbeing relevant to Australia and attempts to introduce measures outside of financial and economic status. Defines GDP and its application in Australia and compares wellbeing of the country with New Zealand in terms of GDP, and finally looks at a suite of indicators and other subject measures of wellbeing.

Summary:

Discusses approaches to measuring progress and wellbeing including types of indicators (P9)

Looks at the modalities foe developing measures of wellbeing and focuses its case on Australia (p8)

Specifically looks at the measures of Australia’s progress (p10)

Compares the use of GDP in Australia with the Australian National Development Index (p13)

For comparative purposes it briefly looks at how New Zealand measures progress and provides recommendations for the future (p26)

Important because it focuses on Australia’s perspective of the GDP against other measures (p15-p20)

Group presentation sources

Presentation topic:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

Full APA reference Source type Date accessed

Comments

Summary:

Evaluation:

AERO 2384 Aviation Safety and Security Systems

AERO 2384 Aviation Safety & Security Systems

Table of contents

Abstract…………………………………………………………….3

Introduction………………………………………………………….4

What is a Safety Management System?……………………………6

Critical elements of Safety Management System……………….….6

The importance of Safety Management System. …………………..8

Who sets the standards for SMS……………………………………10

Conclusion………………………………………………………….11

References…………………………………………………….……12

Abstract

Safety management is an organizational function, which ensures that all safety risks have been identified, assessed and satisfactorily mitigated. In aviation context,it sets out organizational regulation and activities aimed at promoting and improving aviation safety.Aviation safety management policy has shifted from an out dated traditional reactive basis to a modern proactive, organizational-based focus. Aircraft accidents have become statistically rare events. That does not mean, however, that there is no room for improvement. This report contains material on about sms in the aviation operation and organisations. It aims to discus, how safety management system (SMS) became to play a vital role and the critical elements within the pillars of sms. SMS employs advanced system management theory and practice to drive the occurrence rate of serious safety events down to an even lower level.

The key fundamental concepts of SMS is a systematic approach to managing safety including the necessary organisational structures, accountability, polices and procedures. Further more, the report will discus in details the what safety management system is, the critical elements, the importance, and who are the regulators and set the standards. Safety can be defined as the state in which the risk to harm to persons or damage to property is reduced to, and maintained at or below, an acceptable level through a continuing process of hazard identification and risk management. The terms hazard and risk also need to be defined. Hazard is the condition or circumstance that can lead to physical injury or damage and risk is the consequence of a hazard measured in terms of likelihood and severity.

Introduction

Safety responsibility is defined as an obligation to achieve a successful conclusion of safety related task by using necessary action, while safety accountability is defined as anobligation to answer for action by demonstrating task achievement and taking responsibility of safety performance according to the specified expectation

(SKYbrary, 2012)

It is essential for the company to understand that the OHS targets and objectives requireappropriate designation of responsibility and accountability. The designated person shouldpossess appropriate level of skill and resource that suffice the requirement of the responsibilityand accountability. The induction program should provide every new worker with adequatetraining and resources to meet the accountability level.Delegation of safety responsibility is possible as long as it is properly documented, whiledelegation of safety accountability is not possible because it defines the obligation of theresponsible person to demonstrate the satisfactory discharge of his/her safety responsibilities(SKYbrary, 2012)

Many organizations that have adopted an SMS program have realized that the program vital role is necessary for companies and add value to their operation.

The aviation organisation is an industry dependent on service that it provides and therefore aims to achieve production output, and generate return on investment to allow growth and continued operations. Regardless of the usually stated phrase “ safety is number one” in reality, like all other industry it concerned with revenue generated, the fact is no aviation organisation has ever been created to deliver safety or even prioritised safety first.

The organisation dose however to some extent concerns it’s self with safety but how effective is that concern remains to be under question mark. Until the recent fact, which concludes that the effective safety management is one of many organisational processes that allows a firm to deliver its service and generate profit. Through positive management of safety, SMS programs have become good businessoperational practice. SMS stands alongside any other core business management function.

The world has evolved to be more analytical than ever, therefore the cost of a serious aviation accident can cripple an industry and even end the very existence of the company. The need to prioritise safety has never been more vital as the consequences of an aviation safety event can be staggering.As survival becomes the natural instinct for all organisations, success depends on the intelligent allocation of resource to SMS in order for firms to remain operational.Smaller organizations may not have sufficient resources to employ a full-time safety manager. The blunder for companies in terms of safety is often assigning the duties of safety as a collateral function to mid level manager such as Chief Pilots or manager of standards.

These mistakes lead to unintentional acts, which put safety, a secondary priority and a weak safety culture. This can be realised as a clear error especially considering substantial efforts required. Solution clear and obvious requires, genuine commitment from upper level management to position both personnel and financial resources to the critical functionof safety management. The advantages of sms program, implemented correctly and with constant monitoring will enable positive and measurable results.

What is a Safety Management System?

(ICAO) defines in a little more detail, a safety management system involves a systematic approach to managing safety, including the necessary organisational structures, accountabilities, policies and procedures (ICAO, 2009).

According to Professors James Reason, in his accidental causation model, states that SMS, is the prevention process in the chain of events, which lead to the actual event. Reason uses the Swiss cheese as an example. In the Swiss cheese model an organisations defense against failures are a series of barriers, represented by the slice and the holes, which represent the weakness in the barriers suggesting that the system produces failures when these holes in the slices are aligned.

Similar to the accident causation model, SMS encourages the proactive solution to the practice of safety. SMS is a systematic and continuous management process based on proactive identification of hazards and analyses of their risk. Safety management system requires knowledge of human error mechanism, meaning knowledge of what, and why human errors occur, because human errors account for 60-80% of all aviation accidents (ICAO). The process of SMS is built around four main pillars, policy, Risk management, Assurance and Promotion.

What are the critical elements?

Safety management process are in accordance with are pre organized plan. They must be applied in a consistent manner through out the firm. With its four main pillars consisting of 13 critical element places emphasis on hazard identification and risk control and mitigation, before events that affect safety occurs. The critical elements under the four main pillars include:

Policy

Management/ responsibility

Safety accountability

Appointment of key safety personnel

Coordination

SMS documentation

Risk management

Hazard identification

Risk assessment and Mitigation

Safety Assurance

Safety performance monitoring and measurement

The management of change

Continuous improvement of the SMS

Promotion

Training and education

Safety communication

Why is it important?

Safety management system is very essential within all organization in order to promote safety across a wide variety of industrial contexts. Only when the primary mechanism for safety management moved from prescriptive regulation to organisational responsibility was specific practices for organisational safety management collectively grouped together under the banner of ‘safety management systems’.

Safety management system practices forms the strategies by which an organisation could demonstrate and take all reasonably practical steps to maintain and ensure the safety and welfare of employees and others within the organization. Prior to the requirement for individual organisations to adopt a systematic approach to the management of safety, the welfare of employees, and the general public, was generally managed through adherence to prescriptive regulation as set out by government bodies. This so called ‘boots, belts and buckles’ approach to safety management suggested that as long as organisations followed government regulation with respect to technical protection of the workforce, the health and safety of employees was being managed effectively.

Health and safety basically, managed through the powers of the governmental inspectorate ensuring that organisations were adhering to the relevant legislation and regulations. While this approach was deemed sufficient in the early industrial age, by the later part of the 20th century, a number of catastrophic accidents resulting from the complexity of the post-industrial era led to significant regulatory reform that shifted the responsibility from the inspectorate to individual organisation’s management of their unique industrial risk. An organisation’s own responsibility for safety management (beyond adherence to regulatory requirements) was perhaps only first realised after the watershed report of the Robens Committee in the 1970s in the UK (A.R. Hale & Hovden, 1998).

The Robens Committee recommended that an organisation’s management must assume responsibility for the organisational management of risk. This recommendation, and its embodiment in 1974 within the UK Health and Safety at Work Act, set out a philosophy of ‘self-regulation’. Although the terminology of self- regulation remains problematic, this act was innovative in the fact that it included the first requirement for a common law ‘duty of care’ for an employer to ensure, as far as reasonably practical, the health and safety of its employees. Robens saw three important pillars to improved safety performance through self- regulation. These were: 1.better systems of safety organisation 2. More management initiatives 3.More participation from employees (Reason, 1997).

Safety management shifted in the late 1970s from an approach that focused on adherence to prescriptive legislation, to an approach that focused on an organisation taking responsibility for its own management of its unique risk profile. To this end,

‘Self regulation’ was defined as the requirement for an organisation to ensure that they took all reasonably practical steps to ensure the health and safety of their workforce (Feyer & Williamson, 1998).

This shift in regulatory orientation was driven by a spate of catastrophic events in a diverse set of industry domains. For instance, the 1976 Seveso disaster, which involved a large-scale release of highly toxic dioxins from a small chemical processing plant in Italy, gave rise to the Seveso II directive, whichmandated systematic management systems across facilities in Europe that handled dangerous substances (Anvari, Zulkifli, & Yusuff, 2011). A decade later, the Piper Alpha accident in the North Sea saw similar directives put in place for offshore oil and gas facilities as a result of the Cullen inquiry (Reason, 1997).

In this environment, SMS emerged as a conglomerate of safety-related activities that enabled an organisation to discharge their responsibilities under the spectre of self-regulation. Instead of completely walking away from regulation, the role of the regulator has in turnevolved to one that attempts to support and evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of a safety management system. This change has not only presented challenges to an organisation that now must effectively self-regulate, but also to the regulator who must now evaluate the effectiveness of a system, rather than compliance with a prescriptive regulation.

Who sets the standards for SMS?

The International Civil Aviation Organization develops and disseminates standards and recommended practices (SARPs) that are contained in 18 Annexes. The catastrophic industrial accident that happened across many aviation and other related industry led to the development of safety management system.

While the drivers for the development of safety management systems internationally had been catastrophic industrial accidents with widespread social impacts, in Australia, regulatory activity focussed on generic workplace health and safety management. Two Australian standards relating to the design, implementation and on- going maintenance of generic occupational health and safety management systems were developed in the late 1990s and published in the year 2000. First, Australian Standard AS4801 Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems Specification with Guidance for Use provide the detailed specification, and AS4804 Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems.

General Guidelines on Principles, Systems and Supporting Techniques provides more general guidance. These standards were heavily influenced by previous directives in the UK and Europe and explicitly aligned with the International Organization for Standardization standard ISO 9000 Quality Management suite of management systems standards. The standards for safety management systems are designed such that they mirror many components of the ISO 9000 series of standards pertaining to quality management systems and the ISO 14000 series of standards pertaining to environmental management systems. Indeed, for some time organisations have sought integration of their management systems in order to gain efficiencies and avoid duplication of processes across an organisation. Even given the very different demands of managing the risks of workplace injury compared to the risks associated with low-probability high-consequence (LP/HC) transportation accidents, the overarching structures, individual components, and major functionality of safety management systems have remained very similar, regardless of industrial context.

Conclusions

The international safety management system (SMS) standards and requirements are structured mainly as objective regulations. SMS are created in a way to emphasize more on what has to be done and how to do it. The main objective of the development of SMS is to create standards with organizations across all kind of industries. The SMS standards are designed to enable the operators of industry and service providers to integrate and develop the safety management practices into their individual operational models for the well being of employees and the company as a whole.

Although Safety management system builds upon an organization’s existing safety processes, it is different from the traditional approaches. One of the key differences is that SMS takes a proactive and predictive approach to safety management it goes beyond prescriptive audits and checklist-based inspections to develop procedures and indicators that anticipate safety risks. Safety management system spreads responsibility for safe processes throughout all levels and segments of the organization. This increase in the number of people watching for safety issues makes it less likely that a hazard will go undetected and possibly lead to an accident. Each SMS implementation will have its own customized set of layers that synchronize to create the safety culture of SMS. Each slice has holes that represent the potential for a safety hazard to go unnoticed, because the layer does not deal with that type of hazard, or due to human error.

However, when these layers are integrated by SMS principles, it becomes less likely that a hazard makes it through all the levels without being identified and mitigated as Reason (1997) mentioned on his theory of active and latent. Finally safety management system recognizes that human and organizational errors can never be completely eliminated and seeks to reduce them by developing a safety-oriented culture. Which means emphases on eliminating hazardous conditions before they can become something more serious.

References

Amalberti, R. (2001). The Paradoxes of Almost Totally Safe Transport Systems. Safety Science, 37, 109-126.

Anvari, A., Zulkifli, N., & Yusuff, R. M. (2011). Evaluation of approaches to safety in lean manufacturing and safety management systems and clarification of the relationship between them.

World Applied Sciences Journal, 15 (1), 19-26.

Arocena, P., & Nunez, I. (2010). An empirical analysis of the effectiveness of occupational health and safety management systems in SMEs. International Small Business Journal, 28 (4), 398-419.

Arocena, P., Nunez, I., & Villanueva, M. (2008). The impact of prevention measures and organisational factors on occupational injuries.

Safety Science, 46 (9), 1369-1384.

Bottani, E., Monica, L., & Vignali, G. (2009). Safety management systems: Performance differences between adopters and non-adopters.

Safety Science, 47(2), 155-162. Bottomley, B. (1999). Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems: Information Paper.

Canberra, Australia: National Occupational Health and Safety Commission. CASA. (2009). CAAP SMS (1) Safety Management Systems for Regular Public Transport Operations. Canberra, Australia: Civil Aviation Safety Authority.

Chang, J. I., & Liang, C. L. (2009). Performance evaluation of process safety management systems of paint manufacturing facilities. Journal of Loss Prevention in the Process Industries, 22 (4), 398-402.