2021 2020 2019
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ERICA - Stopping Child Maltreatment through Pan-European Multiprofessional Training Programme: Early Child Protection Work with Families at Risk
Programme: Rights, equality and citizenship
Applicant:
University of Tampere
Partner:
Centre Hospitalier Maison Blanche - CHMB, LVR - Klinikum Essen, The Maria Grzegorzewska Pedagogical University, Università degli Studi di Milano - Bicocca, University of St. Andrews, Oxford Brookes University
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| According to the latest report of Unicef (2017), almost 300 million children aged 2-4 experience physical maltreatment, harsh discipline and other forms of parental maltreatment within their families. In Europe, they are estimated to total about 80 million. The ERICA training programme will address issues of agency non-collaboration, seek locally defined and monitored solutions for these problems, whilst training agencies in state of the art detection and management of child maltreatment within a family. Inter-organisational disconnection and lack of adequate consultation and collaboration between agencies in addressing the needs of children at risk of or subject to violence is a great issue. Also need reliable evidence-based identification tools for preventing maltreatment are needed.
The key aim of the project is to prevent and combat violence towards children, defined here as maltreatment, by building the expertise of professionals concerning minors living in families with child maltreatment risk, also in multicultural contexts. In detail:
- for professionals to undertake a comprehensive training program to enhance their use of risk assessment tools and their engagement in multiprofessional working practices
- to integrate a strategy which involves the civil society in the prevention of child maltreatment
- to develop, pilot and evaluate a European training program |
2020 2019 2018 2017
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DES: Disabilità e Sviluppo
Programme: AICS - Italian Agency for Cooperation and Development
Applicant:
Organismo di Volontariato per la Cooperazione Internazionale la Nostra Famiglia (OVCI)
Partner:
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| The objective is to enhance the Integrated Development Model on Community Base – realized with USADC since 2000 – at accessibility level and to spread in Khatoum State with advocacy and networking actions. Accessibility will be enhanced both in coverage and in accessibility to services by disadvantaged population, as well as in multidisciplinary approach.
Synergia will carry out the monitoring activities of the project. |
2020 2019 2018
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Creazione del primo Centro Trasfusionale della Sierra Leone
Programme: AICS - Italian Agency for Cooperation and Development
Applicant:
A.I.S.P.O. – Associazione Italiana per la solidarietà tra i popoli
Partner:
Ospedale San Raffaele, Ministry of Health and Sanitation
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| In Sierra Leone there isn’t a transfusion service coordinated at a central level; this project, through the building and the beginning of a National Transfusion Centre (CNT) in Freetown will be the starting point to empower this service at national level.
Sustainable development objectives are:
• The increase of health and of wellbeing;
• Availability of quality training;
• Reduction of inequalities
Synergia will carry out the monitoring activities of the project. |
2020 2019 2018
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Rafforzamento dei servizi erogati dall’Ospedale Comboni di Wau nelle sue responsabilità cliniche e didattiche anche come risposta ai flussi migratori del Sud Sudan
Programme: AICS - Italian Agency for Cooperation and Development
Applicant:
A.I.S.P.O. – Associazione Italiana per la solidarietà tra i popoli
Partner:
Amicic - Amici di Stefano Ciceri, St. Daniel Comboni Hospital Sierra Leone
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| General objective of the project is to foster the access to health services with a better possibility of assistance for citizenship of South Sudan, also with the aim of prevent migration from the Country itself and to increase life conditions of internal displaced people. The specific objective is to increase and improve some services of the Comboni Wau Hospital, which are considered as priority by Local Health Authorities: general hospital services, child and mother health services, maintenance.
Sustainable development objectives are:
• The increase of health and of wellbeing;
• Availability of quality training;
• Reduction of inequalities.
Synergia will carry out the monitoring activities of the project |
2020 2019 2018
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Somaliland in cammino: supporto alle eccellenze socio-sanitarie in pediatria e salute mentale - Somaliland Going Forward: support to social-health excellences in pediatrics and mental health
Programme: Agenzia Italiana per la Cooperazione allo Sviluppo (AICS) - Area Organizzazioni per la Società Civile (OSC)
Applicant:
GRT
Partner:
Terre Solidali Onlus, Università degli Studi di Milano, Women’s Development Organization IIDA, Save Somalia
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| Data on the health status of the population has revealed that Somalia is one of the country with the worst situation in the world. The most affected group is that of children, whose access to hospitals and medical treatments is very heterogeneous. The situation is critical also for another group, that of mentally ill people, due to the persistent presence of civil wars and instability that has affected the country for a long time. The condition of these individuals is even worsen by the traditional local culture that supports the discrimination and social isolation of mentally ill people. Therefore, the issue of mental health in this territory is rarely addressed.
Given the peculiar situation of Somaliland, the project aims at supporting the promotion of equality and accessibility in the national healthcare system and at improving the wellbeing of the population. In particular, the project is addressed to two sectors of the healthcare system, that is the paediatric department and the mental health sector. |
2019 2018 2017
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D.U.R.E.S.S. – Drug Use Recovery, Environment and Social Subjectivity
Programme: ERANID
Applicant:
Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca
Partner:
Universidade do Porto, Centre Hospitalier Maison Blanche - CHMB
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| In European Member States, use of substances is a serious issue in terms of screening, management, and correlates definition. Although the prevailing methodological attitude remains quantitative in current illicit drugs research, relevant data from clinical samples and administrative databases can just provide a rough picture of incidence and prevalence of drug use problems. At its most fundamental, the role of qualitative research into illicit drug use can therefore be envisaged as a means of understanding the lived experiences and meanings of drug use from the perspectives of drug users themselves, distinguishing how drug use patterns differ by social, cultural and economic context. The project plans to build a core, and, if any, a country-level characterization of the role of social environment in pathways to recovery and socioeconomic reintegration, using original and mostly unexplored sources. In particular, the project will address key gaps in the extant research knowledge exploring by content/ thematic analyses the role of social environment in pathways to recovery and socioeconomic reintegration. |
2019 2018 2017
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BORESHA MAISHA - Alternatives of life for street children and underage refugees in Nairobi
Programme: Italian Agency for Development cooperation (AICS)
Applicant:
GRT
Partner:
Comitato Collaborazione Medica - CCM, RefuSHE, US ACLI
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| 3.3. Million people are currently living in the urban area of Nairobi, among which 60,000 are street children and an additional 22,224 underage refugees (approximately 1,600 are unaccompanied minors) living in a volatile and hostile socio-political context and vulnerable to the black market and human trafficking.
In spite of the launch of Kenya Vision 2030 and the considerable SDG progresses, education, HIV, socio-economic inequality, poverty and poor institutional capacity continue to undermine Kenya’s potential.
Approximately 60% of the population lives in neighbourhoods characterized by a high social and health deterioration. The institutional fragility on protection is alarming. Health, education, access to clean water and sanitation remain top priorities for the Kenyan Government, who aims to achieve social inclusion and the creation of job opportunities for the most marginalized (minors, disabled, women and refugees), in order to create fair and sustainable development. A high level of socio- economic inequality, widespread poverty and weak governance continue to undermine Kenya’s progresses, highlighting the gap in income distribution with adverse effects on social welfare. Eastleigh is a large borough in Nairobi, predominantly populated by Somali, both Kenyan citizens as well as refugees. The latter make-up approximately 26,500 (of which 622 are endangered minors5) who live in isolation, unemployment and exploitation by human traffickers.
Mlango Kubwa, neighbouring Eastleigh, is situated in the Starehe sub-county and merges with the large Mathare slum, characterized by overpopulation, inexistent social services, crime, unemployment, unwanted early pregnancies, gender based violence and substance abuse. Its population has been recorded to be 38,374 (of which 14% are under 14 years old), who live in deterioration. Minors are particularly vulnerable, lacking significant family support they become exposed to the dangers of a life on the streets (crime, drugs, STDs). |
2018 2017 2016
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GEMMA against Violence: Gender based Empowerment of Migrants through a Multiagency Approach
Programme: Rights, Equality and Citizenship PROGRAMME (2014-2020)
Applicant:
GRT
Partner:
Compagnia Itinerante scral sociale, Azienda ospedaliera Ca Granda ospedale di Niguarda, Ecip Foundation, EPAPSY - Association for Regional Development and Mental Health, Helsinki Deaconess Institute, SOS Racismo Guipuzcoa, Farapi Koop. Elk.
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| The International Organization for Migration (2010) recognises migrants and ethnic minorities as more vulnerabile to violence and identifies migrants women as doubly vulnerable (because of this status and their gender). Although International Organizations (WHO, 2005 & Unicef, 2000) highlight violence against women as a significant global problem and studies in Europe confirm that specific groups, such as women belonging to minority groups, indigenous and migrants are more vulnerable, making up a significant percentage of women who report intimate partner violence (PACE, 2009), many policy and programmatic interventions exist in isolation and often they are not specifically targeted to violence survivors belonging to migrant/ethnic minorities or they focus on addressing the symptoms only (IOM, 2013). GEMMA Project intends to promote the implementation and ratification of the existing human rights instruments (UNDAW, 2008 and Compendium of International Migration Law UN, 2006) in the UE by developing a coordinated multisectoral approach in order to effectively address and tackle the root causes of violence and properly assist migrant/ethnic minority women survivors of violence. |
2017 2016
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BIC- Bullying in Institutional Care
Programme: Rights, Equality and Citizenship
Applicant:
Ai.Bi. - Associazione Amici dei Bambini
Partner:
University of Florence, Comune di San Giuliano Milanese, Association Samuel Vincent, EADAP, GDSACP Bucharest 1, BIHR - Bulgarian Institute for Human Relations, Università Babes Bolyai, Katholische Hochschule Nordrhein-Westfalen
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In the past project “Protecting children in child protection systems – Daphne 2009-2011” aimed at the empowerment of social care providers operating in IT, RO, BG, in favor of children living in residential care, with special focus on inappropriate placement (secondary victimization) it was demonstrated that child protection systems are dominated by coercive processes, which produce a high risk for children and adolescents to experience high levels of violence between peers. The European Network of Ombudspersons for Children (ENOC 2011), in a survey on 39 members, reports that in many European institutional care centers, in spite of the presence of the explicit policy prohibiting all violent punishment, some interviewees said “a certain amount of violence can be deemed necessary in order to keep staff and other children safe, and separation from the group or isolation is still allowed as a sanction in many countries. The involvement in bullying leads to psychological problems in adolescence and in adulthood (e.g. depression for the victim; antisocial behavior and substance abuse for the bully, over and above pre-existing symptoms and genetic, familial or social risk factors for these disorders - see Ttofi et al., 2011). The project intends to Implement a Specific Program (BIC) to prevent and combat bullying in residential care settings, easily scalable up, to improve peer relations and make residential care settings more positive and safer places for children; to reduce existing bullying, by achieving better peer relations in residential care settings. The General Objective is to contribute to preventing and combating bullying in residential care settings through children empowerment and by encouraging greater collaboration between peers in 5 Countries (IT, BG, RO, GR, FR). The Specific Objective is to implement the anti-bullying BIC program in residential care settings in order to make those places safer. Detailed goals are: reducing existing bullying, preventing its development, achieving better peer relations. BIC, based on a preliminary field research as well as on existing good practices, will be founded on three pillars:
1. Standardization and high customization of the service provided: definition of a sound methodology for easy tailoring of the anti-bullying BIC program for all kind of alternative care settings. -
2. Experiencing a non-violent environment by the care staff: improvement of skills and deeper understanding of the advantages of a non-coercive approach in managing concrete bullying situations.
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3. Empowerment of children in alternative care with the intention of enhancing the internal self-help in peers interaction.
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2016 2015 2014
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Reducing prison population: advanced tools of justice in Europe
Programme: Criminal Justice
Applicant:
Associazione Comunità Papa Giovanni XXIII
Partner:
Crime Prevention Fund IGA, Providus Centre for Public Policy, University of Dundee, Generatie Tanara Romania, ISC-SIC International Society of Criminology, Università di Bologna, University of Applied Sciences - Bremen
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| The activities of the project are aimed at improving the knowledge and at exchanging innovative measures of practices alternative to imprisonment, both in pre and in post trial phase. The first step of activities regards the collection of information both from scientific literature (in order to enlarge the knowledge on pre and post trial non custodial measures with an update of relevant legislation) and from research activities (in order to collect the existing practices on alternatives to detention in the 7 countries involved in the project - IT, BG, LV, GB, RO, FR, DE). The second step of the project concerns the identification of good practices in each country and the definition of a first draft of Guidelines for the implementation of alternatives to detention and for the definition of a Training Package targeted to staff working in services providing alternatives to prison settings. The project also foresees the involvement of an external experts committee, in order to implement a feasibility study of the Training Package and a transferability study of the Guidelines. Objectives of the project are: - to enlarge the knowledge on pre and post trial non custodial measures, with an updating of relevant legislation, as well as their costs and effectiveness;
- to map the existing practices related to pre and post trial alternatives to detention through in-depth interviews, which can highlight their strengths and weaknesses;
- to collect the existing good practices on pre and post trial alternatives to detention in countries involved in the project, in order to promote a transnational reflection and a debate on methods used in these practices and on results on offenders and victims;
- to define the Guidelines for the implementation of alternatives to prison in European Countries, in order to provide a model to be followed according to national legislations;
- to define the Training Package targeted to operators and professionals working on services providing alternatives to detention;
- to get a validation of the training package and to make the guidelines transferable to other European context, thanks to the involvement of some external experts;
- to communicate and mainstream the main results of the project through different communication channels.
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2015 2014 2013
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CAMILLE - Empowerment of Children and Adolescents of Mentally Ill Parents through Training of Professionals working with children and adolescents
Programme: Daphne III
Applicant:
University of Tampere
Partner:
Nordland Hospital, Ulss Rovigo, Middlesex University, The Maria Grzegorzewska Academy of Special Education, University of Dundee, LVR - Klinikum Essen
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| Children living with a mentally ill person are at a significantly greater risk to develope short and long term mental health problems or psychosocial difficulties. The lack of and need for better knowledge and training of the child care professionals is underlined by the scientific community, as well as the lack of pan-European guidelines for promoting healthy behaviour in children of mentally ill parents. |
2015 2014 2013
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CATCH & SUSTAIN - European Cross-Actors Exchange Platform for Trafficked Children on Methodology Building for Prevention and Sustainable Inclusion
Programme: Prevention of and Fight against Crime (ISEC)
Applicant:
European Federation for Street Children
Partner:
IAC - Instituto de Apoio à Criança, Pupil Parent Partnership, The Smile of the Child, TPD - Society of the Friends of Children, Associazione Maestri di Strada, Kopin NGO, On the Road Onlus, Evangelicka Diakonia, Ecpat, Terre des Hommes International Federation, Ministero della Giustizia, Difensore civico della Regione Veneto, Observatory on Trafficking in Human Beings, Ministry of Justice, Public Security Police, Commissioner for Children, Ealing Council, Istituto Don Calabria
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| The main objective of the project is to contribute to the prevention of child trafficking mainly through training of stakeholders coming into contact with potential child victims on one hand and through empowerment of minors at risk on the other, so as to make them aware of risks and help them protecting themselves.
The secondary objective is to assess our prevention strategy and toolkits, complementing existing experiences, increasing knowledge on vulnerable profiles and introducing innovative data collection methodologies which rely on the protagonism of service providers encouraging the constitution of cooperative anti-trafficking action plan between different agencies (social, educative, judicial, law enforcement, etc) working in the same field, increasing the prevention potential of the intervention strategies. The project wants to mainstream the main deliverable at European level supporting, this way, also the development of an anti-trafficking European network that includes non governmental social service providers. |
2014 2013 2012
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MMWD – Making Migration Work for Development
Programme: South-East Europe Transnational Cooperation Programme
Applicant:
Regione Emilia Romagna
Partner:
Regione Autonoma Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Regione Abruzzo, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Municipality of Vratsa, Region of Crete, Heraklion Development Agency, Regional Development Agency of Northern Primorska Ltd. Nova Gorica, School of Advanced Social Studies, Bistrita City Hall, Ministry of Regional Development and Public Administration, University of Applied Sciences - Salzburg, Regional Economic Development Agency for Sumadija and Pomoravlje, University of Montenegro, Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia, Old Royal Capital Cetinje, Vienna City Administration, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and European Integration, International Organization for Migration, Ministry of Labour and Social Policy, Ministero del Lavoro e delle Politiche Sociali
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| MMWD is designed in the realm of the Europe 2020 Strategy to support regional strategy-making for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth. Its key assumption is that policy-makers dealing with territorial development are in need of a future-oriented and integrated vision of development, that would help identify key regional and local challenges and translate the targets and objectives of Europe 2020 into territorial policy priorities. To help build such vision MMWD offers a sound and regionalized knowledge base, scenarios with a 2020 horizon that depict the implications of today’s demographic change in local development terms, institutional capacity sessions and roundtables for transnational policy dialogue and cooperation on migration management. The MMWD project aims to fulfil the following goals: - to improve the analysis and harmonization of the knowledge base on demographic trends and their implications for the prospects of growth and well-being of SEE regions and cities;
- to construct solid demographic forecasts and scenarios to 2020, concerning territorial development trends related to demographic change;
- to strengthen local capacity to undertake evidence-based strategic planning, with migration recognized as a relevant feature for sustainable growth policies;
- to promote and facilitate transnational dialogue among countries and territories that are affected by current demographic trends, with a view to identify comparative advantages in transnational cooperation and promote a more effective regulation of migration flows;
- to disseminate the outputs of the vision-building process of MMWD to an audience of policy makers, practitioners, experts and local communities.
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2014 2013
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RAINBOW HAS - Rights through Alliances: Innovating and Networking BOth Within Homes And Schools
Programme: Fundamental rights and citizenship
Applicant:
Ararteko
Partner:
The Maria Grzegorzewska Academy of Special Education, Comune di Milano, Middlesex University, Ecip Foundation, Consultoria de Antropologia Aplicada - FARAPI S.L., Jekino, Associacio de Famílies Lesbianes i Gais de Catalunya, Municipality of Amsterdam, Lesben und Schwulenverband in Deutschland, COC Amsterdam, Centro di Iniziativa Gay
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| From research carried out during the Rainbow project (2011) financed by the same Programme on legislation, scientific literature and through fieldwork in Italy, Spain, Bulgaria, the Netherlands, Great Britain, we could conclude that institutions should work with more commitment to respect the right to sexual and affective diversity, whereby the problem of trans/homophobia and trans/homophobic bullying (including language) remains often hidden and unchallenged. We will study family discourses, needs and strategies as well as exchanging best practices of support, in order to enlarge the debate with institutions, LGBT families, families with LGBT youngsters, families with children and youth who have been victims of trans/homophobic bullying and straight families, to create spaces and conditions for dialogue or lobbying for positive change in the direction of "breaking the silence" on LGBT issues and to train and sensitise adults especially, but not only, in the education system. The objectives of RAINBOW HAS, in continuity with Rainbow, can be detailed as follows: - Expanding the knowledge about stereotypes and about homophobia and transphobia, through studying families´ discourses.
- Identifying, analysing and exchanging best practices of services and materials of support for families and individuals with LGBT members or members who suffer(ed) from homophobic and transphobic bullying.
- Promoting respect for diversity and pushing for a trans and homophobia-free environment at school and in the family.
- Making citizens aware of the obstacles and difficulties that make trans, gay and lesbian individuals’ lives difficult.
- Understanding and identifying the main obstacles and resources for creating a legitimate space for LGBT issues in education, in each country and at European level.
- Creating spaces and conditions for dialogue or lobbying for positive change in the direction of "breaking the silence" on LGBT issues.
- Identifying strategies to create effective gay-straight alliances, especially among families´ associations at European level.
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2014 2013 2012
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NET FOR U – Needs Tackling and NETworks Tracing FOR Unaccompanied minors integration
Programme: Integration Fund Community Action
Applicant:
Istituto Don Calabria
Partner:
IPRS - Istituto Psicoanalitico per le Ricerche Sociali, The Smile of the Child, CJD Eutin, Pupil Parent Partnership, Fundación Diagrama Intervención Psicosocial, International Juvenile Justice Observatory, Association Diagrama Intervention Psychosociale
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| The main goal of the project is to define an effective multidimensional intervention programme aimed at improving the integration of unaccompanied foreign minors, ensuring their needs and interests, strengthening both their individual social networks and new form of cooperation within and between services and stakeholders. Unaccompanied minors is a target at high risk of social exclusion and with specific needs which must be regularly reviewed (with a precise attention also to those minors requiring special care, protection or treatment for their physical or mental health). The primary purposes of the project are: -
to elaborate a knowledge-based intervention model to improve helpful practices both of on-going special needs assessment (in order to elaborate coherent life-project for each minors) and common family tracing procedures (in order to map familiar relationships as possible care resources to sustain positive paths and wellbeing and/or to promote family reunification);
- to provide minors with appropriate opportunities of training and education, social and leisure activities, participation in cultural life of the context where they live, increasing the opportunities of interaction with their peers and adults of the host society, including with those belonging to the same national or cultural group in order to provide occasions for the minors to live their own culture, ensuring the respect for diversity together with the promotion of the integration in the collective life
- to build a permanent transnational cooperation within professionals, stakeholders, social workers and all other figures who work with unaccompanied foreign minors to define international measures, to share positive practices concerning the integration of unaccompanied foreign minors.
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2013 2012 2011
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ESCAPE - European Street Children Anti-violence Programme and Exchange
Programme: Daphne III
Applicant:
European Federation for Street Children
Partner:
IAC - Instituto de Apoio à Criança, Associazione Maestri di Strada, Istituto Don Calabria, ACY - Alliance for Children and Youth, RAMAD- The Association of Roma Youth and Children in Slovakia, FRCCF - Romanian Foundation for Children, Community & Family, TPD - Society of the Friends of Children
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| ESCAPE project aims to foster a transnational knowledge exchange on peer and street violence evidence-based contrast and prevention practices addressed to street living/working children-adolescent with migration background and or belonging to minorities. The project aims also to define an East-West platform development between mainly "new" and "old" EU Member States to foster transnational strategies for promoting effective programmes to prevent and contrast street and peer violence and risk behaviour related to harmfull lifestyles. |
2013 2012 2011
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RAINBOW - Rights Against INtolerance: Building an Open-minded World
Programme: Fundamental rights and citizenship
Applicant:
Centro di Iniziativa Gay Onlus
Partner:
Arcigay, SAPI - Social Activities and Practices Institute, Jekino, Bundesverband Jugend und Film e.V., COC Amsterdam, Schools Out, Arcilesbica Zami, Consultoria de Antropologia Aplicada - FARAPI S.L., European Children Film Association, Ararteko
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| The project connects EU gay and lesbian associations, schools, media professionals promoting the rights of children and young people to their sexual identity and who fight against homophobia, in order to study stereotypes and challenge them with educational tools. An action-research targeted to education professionals (teachers mainly, but also educators of informal settings), as well as to children and young people, the final beneficiaries. |
2013 2012 2011
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ORION - Overdose Risk InfOrmatioN Project
Programme: Drug Prevention and Information 2007-2013
Applicant:
University of St. Andrews
Partner:
Business Solutions Europa, Aarhus University Hospital Risskov, Universität Duisburg - Essen, Università degli Studi di Milano - Bicocca
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| 'Drugs Overdose Kills One European Per Hour' (EPHA, 2008) - an alarming but reasonably accurate reflection of the most recent reported European figures (EMCDDA, 2009a). This simple headline however does not account for the complex nature of the overdoses reported or the various comorbidities associated with non-fatal overdoses (Warner-Smith et al, 2002). A number of the fatal overdoses reported in the European reports have occurred alongside the presence of other substances e.g. alcohol, benzodiazepines, cocaine which raises important concerns relating to the influence of poly-drug consumption on fatal overdoses (EMCDDA, 2009a). The toxicological reports add weight to the need for interventions which can address these complex needs. Individuals who take an overdose may in some instances receive health care for substance misuse. However evidence is clear that treatments themselves do not necessarily change the behaviours which put them at higher-risk of fatal overdose. ORION aims to utilise an e-health tool in an innovative approach to raise awareness of factors which influence risk overdose in a European population identified as high-risk. By developing a decision analysis model it is possible to identify personalised risks of subsequent overdose and utilise a targeted approach to provide health care to improve awareness and understanding. |
2013 2012 2011
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TRIP - Testing in Recreational-settings prevention-Interventions addressed to Polydrug-users
Programme: Drug Prevention and Information 2007-2013
Applicant:
ASL Bergamo
Partner:
University of St. Andrews, NHS Fife, National Board of Health - MidWest Region, Cooperativa sociale Alchimia, Regione Lombardia, Consiglio di Rappresentanza dei Sindaci della Provincia di Bergamo, Prefettura di Bergamo, Eotovos Lorand University
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| TRIP aims to develop at transnational level a prevention and harm reduction approach targeted to the combined use of licit and illicit substances (poly-drug use) by young people in recreational settings, including the finalization of theoretically and empirically validated guidelines for harm reduction and prevention project building and tools for monitoring the project effectiveness and assessing the short-term impact of the interventions delivered. TRIP also aims to further develop the experience and knowledge collected during the project “Prevention of poly-drugs addiction and reduction of drug-related harms programs for young people in recreational settings” - JLS/ DPIP/2007-2/001 where the same TRIP partnership studied 20 EU good practices in prevention and harm reduction projects in recreational settings by empirically operationalize and test the knowledge, the methodologies and the tools previously just theoretically developed. |
2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
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Q-AGEING - Quality Ageing in an Urban Environment
Programme: European Regional Development Fund - Central Europe Programme
Applicant:
Local Government of Ujbuda Budapest
Partner:
Municipality of Maribor, Municipality of Slovenska Bistrica, Institute of Economy of Maribor, Provincia di Treviso, Municipality of Sopot, Comune di Genova, Accademia Nazionale di Medicina, Centre for Developments in Civil Society
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| Like in many cities and regions in Europe the structure of the society of the partner regions and cities of Q-AGEING project is changing radically with a relative increase of older workers (55-64), elderly people (65-79), and very elderly people (80+) and fewer people of working age. The Q-AGEING project is focuses on creating better conditions to enable active ageing by developing actions which will be concentrated on public services and urban living environment. Both aspects are interlinked. The social exclusion of ageing inactive people will increase if no actions in these fields are taken. The creation of activity/jobs for elderly will be more difficult if no innovation in public support is realized and the attractiveness of the urban environment and thus competitiveness will decrease if the changing needs of these large groups are not taken into account. Q-AGEING is a possibility for participating partners to get to know usable transnational examples and to check and adopt them in local communities. The main message of the project is that ageing provides an opportunity for the whole society and does not only generate problems. |