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Portrait of Mohan Vivekanandan, Group Executive, Origination and Client Coverage, Development Bank of Southern Africa during Africa Investment Forum 2019 - Memorandum of Understanding with the East African Community on November 12, 2019, at Sandton Convention Centre, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Understanding Today's Agriculture class, and joined by ANFS grad students toured the organic poultry farm hosted by Extension poultry agent Georgie Cartanza. Photos Michele Walfred
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Understanding Performance Management Explain formal and informal performance management evaluation in the workplace Performance Management – A mentor’s role is to guarantee that informal evaluations are conducted regularly in the course of their work relationship and that their employees’ progress can be tracked in real-time. This form of evaluation can be accomplished through job-related conversations, … Continue reading Understanding Performance Management
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Portrait of Bernard Mono, Head of Finance at East Africa Development Bank during Africa Investment Forum 2019 - Memorandum of Understanding with the East African Community on November 12, 2019, at Sandton Convention Centre, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Adopted: Understanding the Journey of Cross Cultural Adoption - Hosted by Kingdom Diversity at Southeastern
Understanding Cinema;
23 June 2017;
Photograph: Lloyd Smith © EIFF, Edinburgh International Film Festival All Rights Reserved
Terre des Hommes started a pilot project in Ukraine to help children affected by the war.
'My Friend' is a mental health and psychosocial support initiative combining cognitive behavioural and emotion-focused therapy. This programme equips participants with physical and mental strategies for recognising emotions, understanding stress levels, and effectively reducing stress.
The programme includes 12 group sessions tailored for children aged 5 to 7 and their caregivers. In Ukraine, over half of the participants are internally displaced persons from frontline areas affected by military operations.
Through their participation, children and caregivers develop emotional awareness and learn several coping strategies to manage distress.
Storytelling is a central feature in the programme, with Lando the hare as the main character guiding the narrative. In each new session, Lando encounters a new obstacle he must overcome. The children also create puppets through which they express their emotions.
The pilot project, funded by Giro555, was highly successful. Many caregivers noted their difficulty discussing emotions and recognised that the programme benefits themselves and their children.
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The large-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 marked a devastating escalation of the conflict following the 2014 annexation of Crimea and the occupation of parts of Eastern Ukraine. In response to this crisis, Cordaid has supported Ukrainians since 2015, providing crucial humanitarian assistance and fostering resilience through impactful partnerships with local Caritas organisations.
Caritas Ukraine and Caritas Spes swiftly deliver emergency assistance to conflict-affected regions nationwide. By prioritising local leadership, these partnerships empower Ukrainians to determine their needs and implement sustainable solutions.
Key initiatives include:
•Emergency Relief: Supporting displaced people in fragile and vulnerable circumstances in war-affected areas in the east with basic needs.
•Water Rehabilitation: Repairing damaged water systems and installing filtration units in heavily affected areas to ensure access to clean water.
•Healthcare Programmes: Establishing nine medical centres that provide integrated services, including primary healthcare, psychological support, and palliative care. These centres are designed to achieve financial sustainability through government support.
•Livelihood Recovery: Helping displaced people rebuild their lives through business training and start-up grants.
•Palliative Care Expansion: Meeting the rising demand for home and hospice care for displaced elderly and chronically ill, impacted by the ongoing conflict.
By late 2024, over 3.7 million people remained displaced within Ukraine, with 6 million more seeking refuge abroad. The war’s toll on housing, infrastructure, and mental health has created urgent needs. An increasing number of families deal with the loss of family members, mostly husbands, sons and fathers, and demobilised veterans are struggling to reintegrate into society.
Cordaid’s recovery programmes address these challenges by:
•Providing emergency relief to newly displaced individuals, particularly in eastern regions.
•Offering psychosocial support and rehabilitation for civilians affected by the war and for veterans and their families.
•Supporting essential utilities, including water systems, electricity, and winterisation supplies.
As the conflict continues, Cordaid remains committed to a dual emergency relief approach and sustainable recovery that considers new needs.
By strengthening partnerships with the Ukrainian Caritas branches and other local organisations, fostering local leadership, and ensuring financial sustainability, Cordaid aims to build resilience and restore hope for the millions affected by this devastating war.
Through collaboration, innovation, and a focus on evolving community needs, Cordaid is helping to create a path forward for Ukraine—one rooted in dignity, resilience, and hope for a brighter future.
Food Fest 2015, An International Understanding project for the year 2015 organized by the Interact District 3220 was held on 31st of May 2015 from 9.00am onwards at Kandy City Centre premises.
©KandyZone | Isuru Gimhana | Ushan Malshika |Editing, reproducing and re-using the images for commercial purpose or otherwise, without permission of KandyZone, are strictly prohibited and considered as intended copyright infringement
HANDS Seminar on impact assessment of MARVI workers at Mövenpick Hotel, Karachi.Wherein Prof.A G Billoo, Dr.Shaikh Tanveer Ahmed, Senator Dr Karim Ahmed Khawaja, Mr. Iqbal Hussain Durrani. Secretary, Health Department,Prof.Rasheed Juma, Dr.Yasmeen Qazi and other dignitaries from Health and Population Welfare Department, Development partners, Diplomats, Public Health Professionals, NGOs representatives, Professional Associations and Media Professionals took part.
Understanding Idle No More: NDP Edmonton-Leduc discussion forum. L-R: Jim Graves (NDP Edmonton-Leduc Riding Association), Elder Taz Bouchier, Lewis Cardinal.
Secretary Rita Landgraf welcomed about 80 mental health professionals, advocates and consumers to an April 1 conference, "Understanding Loneliness." Secretary Landgraf said loneliness is increasing, but especially for vulnerable populations such as people with serious mental illness, seniors, and people with other disabilities.
"As humans, we need those meaningful social interactions that people who care about us or provide," Secretary Landgraf said.
A 2010 AARP study of adults found that 40% said that they had been lonely, a figure that was double the rate in the 1980s.
The conference, sponsored by DHSS' Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health, also included a consumer panel, experts on statistics and trends, and recommendations for reaching out to people with serious mental illness.
The McGee group is going to the ends of the earth to understand how precipitation patterns respond to climate change. Recognizing that past changes provide unique opportunities to test our understanding of the climate system, the group is building high-resolution records of past precipitation changes in sensitive regions around the world using natural precipitation archives such as lake deposits and stalagmites. In the past two years this work has taken the group to shorelines preserving records of large ancient lakes in the deserts of the western U.S. and subtropical South America, to caves in the Yucatan peninsula and deep inside islands in Vietnam's Ha Long Bay, and onto a drill rig sampling deeply buried lake sediments in the high tropical Andes.
Images courtesy: Nguyen Hieu & Do Trung Hieu
Phnom Penh, January 12, 2023: The Wonders of the Mekong is a USAID-funded project that seeks to improve understanding, management capacity, and appreciation of a functional and healthy Mekong River for fish, other aquatic animals and people. The President Dr. Brian Sandoval for the University of Nevada, Reno and his colleagues will visit project activities and partners in Cambodia on January 10-20, 2023. During this visit, Dr. Sandoval and other delegates will meet with the management of Fisheries Administration H.E. Poum Sotha, Director General of Fisheries Administration and the IFReDI project PI Dr. Heng Kong to discuss future collaboration. After meeting with Director General of Fisheries Administration and other leaders from different departments, there will be a ribbon cutting ceremony for the Limnology Laboratory which has supplied the equipment and operated under financial supported from USAID funded Wonders of the Mekong.
The limnology laboratory includes machines and equipment and since January 2022 more than 200 water samples have been collected and analyzed. Many water samples have been analysed by a PhD Student currently enrolled in a PhD program at the Royal University of Phnom Penh. The main purpose of the limnology laboratory is to contribute to the long-term research and monitoring the health of the Mekong River and Tonle Sap Lake. The outputs from the limnology laboratory will improve the condition of the lake and help stakeholders take effective action to preserve biodiversity and environmental health.