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Accessible and engaging, The Politics of Human Rights offers a fresh, empirical approach to understanding human dignity and the global responsibility to protect it. Unlike traditional texts, this textbook moves beyond theory, using data-driven insights to explore why human rights violations occur and how they can be prevented. It emphasizes shared responsibility across borders to uphold human rights. Designed for students and educators, this fully updated edition enhances learning with discussion questions, recommended readings, and a unique collection of films, podcasts, and websites that bring human rights issues to life. It provides a well-rounded perspective, grounded in latest social scientific research, for anyone interested in human rights. Whether used for introductory courses or interdisciplinary studies, this book equips readers with the knowledge and tools to critically engage with human rights issues, making it an essential resource for understanding and advocating for human dignity in the twenty-first century.
In this article, I argue for a “multifunctional account” of political feasibility and against recent attempts by several theorists to defend accounts of political feasibility that reduce feasibility judgments to a single function. According to the view I defend, political feasibility can (and should) serve multiple useful functions in our political deliberative practices. This pluralist and context-dependent approach allows us to retain the insights provided by various monofunctional accounts, while avoiding the limitations of each.
Aims: Non-attendance at initial assessment appointments in perinatal services can delay crucial care and negatively affect maternal and infant health outcomes. The Tri-Borough Perinatal Service, covering Ealing, Hounslow, and Hammersmith and Fulham, aims to maintain a non-attendance (DNA) rate of 15% or lower. This study assessed DNA rates for initial assessments and explored demographic and socioeconomic factors to identify potential predictors of non-attendance.
Methods: Retrospective data from 369 patients scheduled for initial assessments between August and October 2024 in the Tri-Borough Perinatal Service were analysed. After excluding duplicates and incorrectly labelled DNAs, 283 patient records remained. Demographic variables considered included age, ethnicity, self-referral status, need for a translator, disability status, and receipt of benefits. Socioeconomic deprivation was assessed using the Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) Rank, based on the English Indices of Deprivation 2019. Statistical analyses, including Chi-square test and binary logistic regression, were conducted to identify significant associations between these factors and DNA rates. A p-value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Results: The overall DNA rate for initial assessments was 35.3% (n=100), which exceeds the gold standard. The average age of patients was 30 years. Most patients (94.7%) were referred by an external body (e.g. midwife, GP, health visitor), 16.6% required a translator, and 15.2% had a known disability. 101 patients (35%) were recorded as receiving benefits, although this was not recorded for 30 patients (10.6%). Ethnicity was not significantly related to DNA rates (p=0.062), with White British patients comprising 16.3% (n=46) of the sample, however 18% (n=51) of ethnicity data was missing due to not being recorded. DNA rates were significantly affected by appointment location (p=0.035), with the highest rates observed for physical centre appointments (40.0%), compared with home visits (20.7%) and remote appointments (25.9%). Socioeconomic deprivation, as measured by the IMD Rank, was a strong predictor of DNA rates (p<0.001), with higher deprivation correlating with higher non-attendance.
Conclusion: Socioeconomic deprivation and appointment location were found to be key factors influencing non-attendance, with higher DNA rates observed in more deprived areas and for physical centre appointments. These findings suggest that further improvement studies will be necessary to explore interventions such as alternative appointment formats and targeted support for patients from disadvantaged backgrounds, which may help reduce non-attendance and improve engagement with the service.
This chapter focuses on the knowledge pre-service and in-service teachers need to develop and evaluate oral communication (oracy) within a student’s first language, and it also explores its application in English as an additional language or dialect (EAL/D) contexts. A range of practical teaching strategies, interactive activities and integrated approaches are suggested to promote speaking, interacting and listening capabilities in students. Multimodal integrated strategies are presented that focus on oral communication, but also help develop students’ reading, writing and viewing skills, fostering well-rounded learners capable of critical thinking, effective communication and cultural awareness.
This chapter outlines essential knowledge for pre-service and in-service teachers regarding the all-encompassing component of language and literacy development: critical literacy. In the current information-saturated world of ‘fake news’ and algorithms that decide the social media content we view, it is important to empower students with the ability to critically engage and knowingly accept or resist what they are reading or viewing. Critical literacy requires text users to approach their consumption of texts with a questioning mindset. It helps them develop an understanding of how texts work – the ability to analyse and identify the visual, linguistic and multimodal features of texts that create meaning implicitly and explicitly. Drawing upon foundational theories and critical literacy models, this chapter demonstrates how to integrate the five macro-skills of reading, writing, listening, speaking and viewing of both textual and multimodal sources to develop students’ critical comprehension and production of various text types.
Phonemic awareness is a subcategory of phonological awareness. Phonemic awareness is the more specific ability to recognise and manipulate the speech sounds (phonemes) of spoken language as a developmental pathway to learning to read and write. It is the topic of this second chapter because it is developed alongside a method of teaching called phonics. Phonics is an explicit teaching method that involves learners understanding the relationship between the sounds of spoken language and the letters or letter patterns used to represent those sounds in written language. It involves learning the connections between individual phonemes and the written code of letters (graphemes).
Our goal in writing this book was to address a notable gap in the availability of essential resources dedicated to this critical content area. Despite its foundational importance, no existing text offers a focused, in-depth exploration of language and literacy knowledge tailored for pre-service and in-service teachers working in Foundation to Year 10. The 2008 Bradley Review highlighted a deficiency in teachers’ language and literacy awareness and proficiency, a concern that was addressed by the introduction of the Literacy and Numeracy Test for Initial Teacher Education Students (LANTITE) in 2016. Consequently, initial teacher education programs have initiated courses and support services in English language and literacy to bolster teachers’ personal knowledge and skills, enabling them to pass the LANTITE’s literacy component.
This chapter highlights the knowledge required to work with diverse students who communicate using the different varieties of English that exist in Australia. In line with the ‘Language variation and change’ sub-strand of the Australian Curriculum: English, we discuss linguistic and cultural diversity through the concept of plurilingualism, and the transcultural and sociolinguistic competence and knowledge required by teachers working with culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) learners. We highlight the challenges and rewards associated with instructing students from varying linguistic and cultural backgrounds. We also stress the crucial role teachers play in nurturing learners of English as an additional language or dialect (EAL/D) students.
Spoken language consists of a complex system of sounds that infants first learn to perceive and produce through social interaction in their linguistic community. This initial exposure before school is critical in preparing them for school, where they learn to encode their spoken language into written language. Once children can sufficiently speak and understand most language at around the age of five, it becomes the role of educators, and parents/care providers to assist them in the development of their explicit phonological awareness. Phonological awareness, which refers to the broad understanding of the sound structure of language, plays a critical role in the development of reading and writing. For instance, before children can effectively start learning to read, they need to develop an awareness of the sound structure of words, including syllables, rhymes and individual speech sounds called phonemes, as well as the ability to segment and blend phonemes.