23 Feb The impact of domestic violence on college students’ mental health Search Website ONLY from school website: https://www.csulb.edu/university-library Requirements: deeply | .doc file Note
sociology writing question and need support to help me learn.
More importantly, for the grand scheme of our semester-long project.
Refer back to the modules on your Literature Review and How to Take Notes to see expectations for the assignment or a refresher to make sure you are on track. These are the notes that you will use to write the literature review paper itself, which will be due the following week. For the the notes submission this Thursday night, make sure you have a sufficient amount of notes from each of your 6+ articles (~half-page of bullet points perhaps, but this can vary widely depending on each article and what you get out of them). Remember, the more notes you have extracted from more articles, the easier it is going to be to write your literature review later. The notes also need to be organized by subdivision theme of your individual topic, not organized by article.
Topic: The impact of domestic violence on college students’ mental health
Search Website ONLY from school website: https://www.csulb.edu/university-library
Requirements: deeply | .doc file
Notes CheckPolicy & Methods- SF is a national leader in waste reduction and management. (Silvs, Rosano, Stocker, Gorissen, 2016)-San Francisco launched a Zero Waste plan to eliminate all landfill waste. (Silvs, Rosano, Stocker, Gorissen, 2016)- San Francisco provides incentives to participate in the city wide landfill diversion effort. Compost and recycling bins are more affordable than trash bins. In addition, San Francisco issues fines to businesses and residents for not complying with proper disposal. Small businessesand residents can be fined up to $100 and larger facilities and businesses can be charged up to $1000. (Wu, Liu, Brough, 2019)- San Francisco collaborates with private companies to manage proper waste disposal within the city. (Wu, Liu, Brough, 2019)- Waste management policies contribute to positive environmental behavior. (Wu, Liu, Brough, 2019)- Stronger disposal bans have effectively diverted yard trimmings from the trash to compost. (Platt, Goldstein, 2014)- PAY AS YOU THROW (PAYT) and SAVE MONEY AND REDUCE TRASH (SMART) systems encourage individuals to participate in waste reduction and proper disposal. (Platt, Goldstein, 2014)- PAYT systems within cities positively divert waste from landfill but cities must be cautious as it can also lead to illegal dumping. (Taylor, 2009)- Examples of how to improve diversion rates in U.S.-Municipal and provincial diversion goalsMunicipal and provincial organics bansLevel of enforcementClear garbage bagsProgram encourages diversionGarbage bag limitsOutreach and educationBi weekly garbage pick upsInclusion of all householdsInclusion of ic&I sectorAccessible to multi-residential dwellings Free green bins? (Taylor, 2009)
– Individuals can compost at home but with less energy potent. This includes vermin composting,garburating, grass-cycling, mulching, and direct soil incorporation.? (Taylor, 2009)Effects- Waste management policies contribute to positive environmental behavior. (Wu, Liu, Brough, 2019)- Composting employs two times more than landfilling and four times more than incinerators in Maryland on a per-ton basis. (Platt, Goldstein, 2014)- Maryland to Reduce Waste, Create Jobs & Protect the Bay (Platt, Goldstein, 2014)- Each state of composting at facilities requires employee handling thus creating more jobs locally. (Platt, Goldstein, 2014)- San Francisco currently has a 80% diversion rate. This is attributed to the culture as well. (Silvs, Rosano, Stocker, Gorissen, 2016)- After shifting from waste management to resource recovery, Nova Scotia had a net savings between $31.2 million and $167.7 million. This is a savings of $33 to $178 per Nova Scotia resident per year. (Taylor, 2009)Facts on Compost and Landfill-70% of compost in the U.S. is yard trimmings. Yard trimming compost facilities are not equipped nor staffed to handle food scraps leaving food scraps to be composted by private operation facilities. (Platt, Goldstein, 2014)- 90% of waste ended up in landfills in California in 1989. (Silvs, Rosano, Stocker, Gorissen, 2016)- Food scraps and yard trimmings can produce methane, a high energy green house gas. The methane can be preserved as reused if the materials are composted but can also contribute to pollution if they are landfilled. (Brown 2016)- 95% of food scraps and 42% of yard trimmings are land filled. (Brown 2016)- Yard waste is the most composted material. (Taylor, 2009)- Incineration is expensive and has negative effects on hum health and the environment. (Taylor, 2009)Challenges
– Large scale composting efforts remain a challenge due to affordable trash bin prices. (Platt, Goldstein, 2014)- Scholars point out that difference in waste diversion rates in Italy can be due to infrastructure, politics, and the local culture. (Agovino, Garofalo, Mariani, 2016)- Metropolitan cities with more population have more difficulty in waste separation and waste management overall. (Agovino, Garofalo, Mariani, 2016)- Acceptable composting materials vary from city to city. (Taylor, 2009)- It is cheaper to use the remaining, reliable landfill space than starting efforts to compost. (Taylor, 2009)- Odor produced by compost can discourage composting efforts especially if facilities are near residents (Taylor, 2009)