Examples of Berkel in a sentence
Zoidze, M.A. Elferink, A.E. Berkel, J.M. Klaase, P.J. van Diest, Tumor-stroma ratio as prognostic factor for survival in rectal adenocarcinoma: A retrospective cohort study.
Berkel and colleagues (2011) stress that responsiveness can also be defined in the number of sessions a participant has attended (attendance), active participation, satisfaction and home practice completion.
It was a central aspect of the European Employment Strategy designed in 1997 (Bonvin & Farvaque 2006) and since this time labour market policies across EU countries have seen a shift from passive to active measures that are increasingly subject to European social policy interventions (van Berkel 2000b).
See also Tai and van Dongen 2016; and Klaas van Berkel, ‘Utopianism in Anton Pannekoek’s Socialism and Astronomy’, in this volume, 75-86; Annemarie Rullens, ‘From Science to Science’, in this volume, 151-172; and Bart van der Steen, ‘“A New Scientific Conception of the Human World”’, in this volume, 137-155.
Dane and Schneider (1998), Coatsworth, Duncan, Pantin & Szapocznik (2006), and Berkel, Mauricio, Schoenfelder, Sandler (2011) state that enthusiasm and clarity with which the implementer presents program activities, reflective listening of participants as well as fostering cohesion among participants are also dimensions of the quality of delivery.
The Nordic countries and other welfare states in Europe have increasingly used social contracts to mediate the power balance between citizens and the state (Åkerstrøm Andersen, 2003, 2005; Veitch, 2011; Hamilton, 2014; Keskitalo, 2007; Van Berkel & Roche, 2002).
There is evidence for this pattern for the spheres of housework (van Berkel/ de Graaf 1999), childcare (Bonke/Esping-Andersen 2011), and paid work (Steiber/ Haas 2009; Steiber et al.
Similarly, Rik van Berkel has studied the relationship between formal and operational policy reform during the transformation from passive to active welfare states in labour market and social policies (Berkel & Borghi 2008, Berkel forthcoming).
Considine 2001; Bruttel 2004; Struyven & Steurs 2005; Sol & Westerweld 2005; Bredgaard & Larsen 2005, 2006, 2007; Berkel & Borghi 2007).
As Berkel and Borghi states: “It is no exaggeration to state that a ‘wave’ of welfare reforms aimed a substantive changes in social policies has been followed by a second reform wave aimed at reorganising the institutional structures through which service provision take place” (Berkel & Borghi 2008: 333).