2024-02-14 23:00:00
Page 11 to 17: Florence Lefresne and Éric Verdier – Introduction | Page 18 to 19: Céreq surveys | Page 22 to 23: Economic and social issues and mobility support systems | Page 25 to 36: Florence Lefresne – Chapter 1. Public policies and professional mobility: a historical perspective | Page 39 to 51: Damien Brochier – Chapter 2. Supporting and accompanying mobility: in search of a new paradigm? | Page 53 to 63: Anaïs Chatagnon and Matteo Sgarzi – Chapter 3. Building and securing mobility. The CEP at the heart of dialogue between actors | Page 66 to 68: Presentation | Page 71 to 84: Thomas Couppié and Céline Gasquet – Chapter 4. The unique mobility of young beginners | Page 87 to 95: Christine Fournier, Marion Lambert and Isabelle Marion-Vernoux – Chapter 5. Professional mobility wishes of young employees and quality of work: a determining link | Page 97 to 109: Ekaterina Melnik-Olive and Camille Stephanus – Chapter 6. Evolving within the company. How are the courses constructed and differentiated? | Page 111 to 121: Ekaterina Melnik-Olive and Camille Stephanus – Chapter 7. What do restructuring do to employee career paths? | Page 123 to 135: Vanessa di Paola, Arnaud Dupray and Stéphanie Moullet – Chapter 8. Mobility towards managerial functions in Europe: impact of parenthood and family policies | Page 138 to 140: Time for professional reconversions | Page 143 to 154: Camille Stephanus and Josiane Véro – Chapter 9. Prevented, constrained or desired: three faces of retraining through the prism of socio-professional categories | Page 157 to 168: Jérémy Alfonsi, Arnaud Dupray and Alexie Robert – Chapter 10. Professional reorientations: from the variety of projects to individual challenges | Page 171 to 182: Alexandra d’Agostino, Catherine Galli and Ekaterina Melnik-Olive – Chapter 11. Professional retraining projects put to the test of the health crisis | Page 185 to 193: Nathalie Bosse, Arnaud Dupray and Alexie Robert – Chapter 12. Retraining in times of health crisis: rarer and defensive projects | Page 195 to 203: Samira Mahlaoui, Liza Baghioni and Emmanuel Sulzer – Chapter 13. The ecological transition: a challenge for reconversion of professions?.
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#Céreq #Essentiels #Number #time #mobility #professional #reconversion
March 2024
Sunday March 3, 2024 Weather Forecast: Cold Weather, Rain, Snowfall, and Wind Gusts Across Morocco
2024-03-03 04:59:00
Here is the weather forecast established by the General Directorate of Meteorology for Sunday March 3, 2024
– Quite cold weather with local frost, in the morning and at night, in the Atlas and its neighboring western regions, the Rif, the Eastern plateaus and the South-East.
– Rain in the Gharb, Chaouia, Doukkala, Saiss, the Phosphates and Oulmès plateaus, the Rif, the north of the Oriental, the Mediterranean coast and in the Middle Atlas.
– Snowfall on the peaks of the Middle Atlas with flakes on the Rif.
– Light rain or scattered drops in the Tangier region, Loukkos and Abda.
– Local drizzle over the northwest of the Southern provinces.
– Dust removal in the Saharan regions and the Oriental.
– Fairly strong to strong wind gusts on the Central, Southern, Mediterranean and Oriental coasts.
– Minimum temperatures of around -02/03°C in the Atlas and the Rif, 10/16°C in Souss, the extreme South-East, the southern provinces and 04/10°C everywhere else.
– Maximum temperatures up slightly in the South-East and down elsewhere.
– Rough to rough seas in the Mediterranean, slightly rough to rough on the Strait, rough between Mehdia and Tarfaya, gradually becoming rough to very rough in the morning between Casablanca and Sidi Ifni and rough to rough elsewhere.
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#weather #Sunday #March
Humanitarian Aid Airdrops in Gaza: United States Takes Action in the Midst of Crisis
2024-03-03 02:05:52
This content was published on March 2, 2024 – 11:11 p.m.
(Keystone-ATS) The United States carried out on Saturday a first operation to drop humanitarian aid on the Gaza Strip, threatened with famine according to the UN following almost five months of war between Israel and Palestinian Hamas which has caused more 30,300 deaths.
The operation comes two days following Israeli soldiers fired on a hungry crowd who rushed on a humanitarian aid convoy in Gaza City, a tragedy which left 116 dead according to the Palestinian Islamist movement.
Faced with the difficulties of transporting humanitarian aid by road, particularly to the north of the besieged territory, several countries have recently parachuted cargoes there, notably Jordan with the support of France, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. , as well as Egypt in cooperation with the United Arab Emirates.
“Airdrops cannot and must not replace humanitarian access,” nevertheless warned the NGO International Rescue Committee (IRC).
“We received two bags of flour from the aid that arrived on the day of the massacre in Gaza on Thursday,” said a 28-year-old resident of the Zeitoun neighborhood: “This is not enough. Everyone is hungry. Aid is rare and insufficient”.
38,000 meals
Three American military planes dropped 66 “packages” equivalent to more than 38,000 meals, in a joint operation with Jordan, according to an official from the American Military Command for the Middle East (Centcom).
On Friday, American President Joe Biden announced that his country would participate “in the coming days” in humanitarian aid drops on Gaza.
Cargoes by land, subject to the green light from Israel which has imposed a blockade on Gaza since 2007, only arrive in very limited quantities via Rafah from Egypt.
And their transport, particularly in the north of the territory, is perilous due to fighting, Israeli bombings, rubble blocking roads and sometimes looting.
“We are going to insist that Israel facilitate the entry of more trucks (…) There is really not enough aid arriving in Gaza,” Joe Biden said.
Gunshot wounds
An aid distribution in Gaza City turned tragic on Thursday when several hundred people rushed onto humanitarian aid trucks.
Hamas claims that the Israeli army opened fire on the crowd, while Israel acknowledges “limited shooting” by soldiers who felt “threatened”, ensuring that the majority of those killed were killed in a stampede.
A UN team said it found “a large number” of gunshot wounds in a hospital in the city where many victims had been admitted.
The international community has called for an investigation into this tragedy and an immediate ceasefire in the war triggered by an unprecedented attack carried out on October 7 in southern Israel by Hamas commandos infiltrated from Gaza.
The strikes have left at least 92 dead in the past 24 hours, according to the health ministry of Hamas, which took power in Gaza in 2007.
Strike at Rafah
At least 11 people were killed “and nearly 50 others injured, including children” in a strike on a tent camp housing displaced people near a hospital in Rafah, the ministry said.
It also reports 13 children dying from “malnutrition and dehydration” in recent days.
The toll of the war in the Gaza Strip continues to rise with a total of 30,320 dead, the majority civilians, according to the same source.
Since October 7, the Israeli army has been relentlessly shelling this strip of land approximately 40 km long and 10 km wide. On October 27, its soldiers launched a ground operation in the north, which gradually extended to the south.
Around 250 people were kidnapped. According to Israel, 130 hostages are still being held in Gaza, 31 of whom are believed to have died, following the release of 105 hostages in exchange for 240 Palestinian detainees during a truce at the end of November.
This war has caused a humanitarian catastrophe in the Palestinian territory where 2.2 million of the 2.4 million inhabitants are threatened with famine, according to the UN.
Nearly 1.5 million Palestinians are crowding into Rafah, the vast majority displaced people trapped once morest the closed border with Egypt, and fear an Israeli ground offensive.
– Biden prudent –
“The responsibilities for blocking aid are clearly Israeli,” said the head of French diplomacy, Stéphane Séjourné, speaking of “indefensible and unjustifiable situations for which the Israelis are accountable”.
“The famine adds to the horror,” he said in an interview published Saturday.
The head of the African Union, Moussa Faki Mahamat, accused Israel of a “massive massacre of Palestinians” during Thursday’s tragedy and called for an international investigation.
The head of European diplomacy Josep Borrell described as “unacceptable” the “shooting by Israeli soldiers on civilians trying to obtain food”, and called for “an impartial international investigation” into this tragedy.
Negotiations
The tragedy in Gaza also dealt a blow to the efforts of mediators – Qatar, United States, Egypt – who are trying to reach a compromise on a truce associated with new releases of hostages.
Mr. Biden wanted to be cautious by repeating on Friday “hope” for a truce by Ramadan, the holy month of fasting for Muslims which begins this year on the evening of March 10 or the 11th.
And a senior American official assured Saturday that an agreement on a truce in the war in Gaza was “on the table” and that now “the ball was in Hamas’ court” for it to come into force.
“The Israelis have more or less accepted it. And a six-week ceasefire might begin today in Gaza if Hamas agrees to release a well-defined category of vulnerable hostages,” the American official said in an interview with the press, specifying that , for the moment, “discussions continued” to seal an agreement before the start of Ramadan, in a week.
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#begins #aid #airdrops #Gaza
Empowering Communities Through Cancer Screening: Mars Bleu Operation in Aveyron
2024-03-03 04:09:00
Doctor Caline Ngounou-Nietchueng displays a broad smile. Alongside Christiane Trézières, manager of the multi-professional health center Les Serènes, midwife Claire Saur and Hélène Delmas, awareness manager, she launched the “Mars Bleu” operation in Aveyron from the premises of the presbytery from La Fouillade. Responsible for the Aveyron and Lot sites of the Occitanie Cancer Screening Coordination Center, the practitioner wanted, through this approach, to support the need to move towards awareness programs for screening for different cancers, while highlighting the partnership strong link which links the structure for which it assumes responsibility with the MSP. Screening for breast, cervical and colorectal cancers will be highlighted throughout the month of March in the field. “40% of cancers are preventable,” assures Caline Ngounou-Nietchueng. But to move towards this, it is necessary to limit certain lifestyle habits. A balanced diet and regular exercise also play protective roles in the appearance of cancer. A complete program imagined from La Fouillade to Sébazac, from Luc-la-Primaube to Villeneuve, from Rignac to Olemps, is in place.
Thus, every Friday in March (8, 15, 22 and 29) La Fouillade will be the setting for in-depth work involving four midwives: Claire Saur, Anaïs Jammes, Charotte Dijols and Blandine Dérolez around the screening of cancer of the uterus (make an appointment by calling 06 84 91 29 27). The coordination center offers appointments to carry out mammograms in conjunction with the Decazeville hospital center (appointment at 05 65 43 71 71).
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#Cancer #screening #Mars #Bleu #Aveyron #launched