The Guidelines Impact Study investigated use and usefulness of the guidelines for client-centred practice produced in the 1980's by the Department of National Health and Welfare and the Canadian Association of Occupational Therapists. This paper outlines the study, summarizes findings, and discusses implications for revising and updating the Guidelines. Qualitative interview data from key informants across Canada were incorporated into a quantitative survey of a 5% sample of CAOT members. Data reveal variable use of the Guidelines, with greatest use in acute care and rehabilitation services; and mixed interpretations of the Model of Occupational Performance, particularly 'environment' and 'spiritual component'. Recommendations include: clarification of the purpose and audience of revised Guidelines; national consultation during updating to include diverse forms of practice; and rethinking the Model of Occupational Performance as a dynamic model. Updated Guidelines should include both generic concepts and specific applications for different types of occupational therapy practice.
Folklore has, until very recently, been at the fringes of archaeological research. Post-processual archaeology has promoted plurality in interpretation, however, and archaeology more widely is required to make itself relevant to contemporary society; so, contemporary folkloric practices vis-à-vis archaeological remains are once again receiving attention. In this paper we examine contemporary Pagan understandings of and engagements with "sacred sites" in England. Specifically, we explore how Pagan meanings are inscribed and constituted, how they draw on "traditional" understandings of sites and landscapes, and instances in which they challenge or reify the "preservation ethic" of heritage management. From active interactions with sites, such as votive offerings and instances of fire and graffiti damage, to unconventional (contrasted with academic) interpretations of sites involving wights and spirit beings, Neolithic shamans, or goddesses, there are diverse areas of contest. We argue archaeology must not reject Pagan and other folklores as "fringe," but, in an era of community archaeology, transparency and collaboration, respond to them, preferably dialogically.
Our Sacred Sites, Contested Rites/Rights project (www.sacredsites.org.uk) examines physical, spiritual and interpretative engagements of today's Pagans with sacred sites, theorises 'sacredness', and explores the implications of pagan engagements with sites for heritage management and archaeology more generally, in terms of 'preservation ethic' vis a vis active engagement. In this paper, we explore ways in which 'sacred sites' ---both the term and the sites ---are negotiated by different interest groups, foregrounding our locations, as an archaeologist/art historian
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.