27 results
Search Results
2. Continuities and change in skilled work: a comparison of five paper manufacturing plants in the UK, Australia and the USA.
- Author
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Penn, Roger and Scattergood, Hilda
- Subjects
- *
SKILLED labor , *LABOR , *MANUAL labor , *DIFFERENTIATION (Sociology) , *SOCIAL change , *INDUSTRIES - Abstract
This paper involves an examination of skilled manual work in the modern paper industry. The data were collected at five mills in three countries -- the UK, Australia and the USA. The questions were formulated in order to probe four theories of skilled work. The results suggest that the distinction between skilled and nonskilled work is a fundamental feature of occupational differentiation in all five plants. They also reveal that there are intra-skilled conflicts over relative pay and demarcation lines and that these are affected by the wider socio-political environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Regulating the Digital Commons: US and UK Approaches to On-Line Gambling.
- Author
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Beem, Betsi and Mikler, John
- Subjects
- *
VIDEO games , *GAMBLING , *INDUSTRIES - Abstract
The digital revolution has created new opportunities for borderless industries such as online gambling. This has created new collective action problems as industry actors initially operate in a market without rules. In the absence of coordinated formal governance structures and institutions, the industry has responded by creating its own comprehensive self-regulatory regime. However, the United States and United Kingdom have had opposing responses: the US has increasingly sought to prohibit online gambling, while the UK has moved to regulate the industry. This paper examines the emergence of self-regulation for online gambling, and how it has been undermined or supported through the opposing legislative and regulatory responses of these two states. Taking an approach that draws on institutional analysis and design, the paper asks: what are the factors that led to the emergence of a comprehensive self-regulatory regime for this borderless industry in the absence of global governance? Why has the legislative response been so different in the US and the UK? Specifically, which interests and information have shaped their respective regulatory responses? How have these different responses affected the development of the online gambling industry and the capacity of the industry to regulate itself globally? The paper finds that the prohibition of online gambling by the US has done little to deter Americans from gambling online, but has led to the offshore expansion of the industry. The result is the rise of online gambling sites that are unregulated by the US, yet still have the potential to harm American consumers, particularly if their operators are not adherents to the industryâs self-regulation regime. On the other hand, the UK has formally adopted many of the same regulatory tools developed by the industry as effective means of regulation. The findings show that the US has created conditions under which defection from the self-regulatory regime is more likely, exposing consumers to higher risk. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
4. Relating rationality to context: interinstitutional complexity and embedded individual agency within industrial training in the UK tableware sector.
- Author
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Lambert, Neil J.
- Subjects
- *
REASON , *EMPLOYEE training , *GROUP identity , *TRAINING , *TABLEWARE industry , *INDUSTRIES - Abstract
The central contribution of this paper lies in showing a need to consider the complexity of interinstitutional systems, thereby more effectively relate rationality to context. Drawing on an institutional logics perspective, it presents a study of workplace training in a particular industrial sector in the UK: ceramic production. While identifying a vicious circle in the form of, what can be termed, a 'high-quality/low-(formal-)skill' system state, rather than simply privileging structure over action, findings show embedded individual agency. Besides being directed by goals, interests and self-seeking behaviour, a dominant logic for senior management personnel towards technology and home-based production was guided by issues of social identity and identification. 'Nested' in different opportunities and constraints presented at the levels of organizations and institutions, this individual-level logic was translated into not one, but two alternative corporate logics towards existing state-led intermediate-level workforce training arrangements. Both perpetuated a low-(formal-)skill situation in the sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Does industry self-regulation protect young people from exposure to alcohol marketing? A review of compliance and complaint studies.
- Author
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Noel, Jonathan K. and Babor, Thomas F.
- Subjects
- *
YOUTH & alcohol , *SELF regulation , *ALCOHOLIC beverages , *UNDERAGE drinking , *ALCOHOL industry , *LEGAL compliance , *COMPLAINTS & complaining , *MARKETING , *PREVENTION , *CINAHL database , *INDUSTRIES , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *MEDLINE , *ONLINE information services , *SELF-management (Psychology) , *REGULATORY approval ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Background and Aims Exposure to alcohol marketing is considered to be potentially harmful to adolescents. In addition to statutory regulation, industry self-regulation is a common way to protect adolescents from alcohol marketing exposures. This paper critically reviews research designed to evaluate the effectiveness of the alcohol industry's compliance procedures to manage complaints when alcohol marketing is considered to have violated a self-regulatory code. Methods Peer-reviewed papers were identified through four literature search engines: PubMed, SCOPUS, PsychINFO and CINAHL. Non-peer-reviewed reports produced by public health agencies, alcohol research centers, non-governmental organizations, government research centers and national industry advertising associations were also included. Results The search process yielded three peer-reviewed papers, seven non-peer reviewed reports published by academic institutes and non-profit organizations and 20 industry reports. The evidence indicates that the complaint process lacks standardization across countries, industry adjudicators may be trained inadequately or biased and few complaints are upheld against advertisements pre-determined to contain violations of a self-regulatory code. Conclusions The current alcohol industry marketing complaint process used in a wide variety of countries may be ineffective at removing potentially harmful content from the market-place. The process of determining the validity of complaints employed by most industry groups appears to suffer from serious conflict of interest and procedural weaknesses that could compromise objective adjudication of even well-documented complaints. In our opinion the current system of self-regulation needs major modifications if it is to serve public health objectives, and more systematic evaluations of the complaint process are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Closing the gap between absolute and relative measures of localization, concentration or specialization.
- Author
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Bickenbach, Frank, Bode, Eckhardt, and Krieger ‐ Boden, Christiane
- Subjects
- *
LOCALIZATION theory , *LOCALIZATION (Mathematics) , *CONCENTRATION functions , *EXPERTISE , *INDUSTRIES , *BUSINESS cycles , *ECONOMIC activity - Abstract
Empirical studies on the evolution of concentration, specialization or localization of economic activity have provided ambiguous results that strongly depend on the researcher's choice of the reference. This paper develops a decomposition method for Theil indices of localization that clarifies where this ambiguity originates from. The method allows expressing the difference between absolute and relative Theil indices of localization in terms of Theil indices that are subject to straightforward interpretation. Illustrations show that the divergence of absolute from relative localization in the EU-15 and in UK manufacturing is largely a statistical artifact inherited from the peculiarities of the industry classifications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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7. Comparing creative industries in Europe.
- Author
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Boix, Rafael, Capone, Francesco, De Propris, Lisa, Lazzeretti, Luciana, and Sanchez, Daniel
- Subjects
- *
CULTURAL industries , *INNOVATION adoption , *ECONOMICS , *INDUSTRIES - Abstract
Creative industries are increasingly understood to contribute to localised innovation and dynamism. This paper provides a methodologically consistent comparison of creative industries across France, Great Britain, Italy and Spain. We map spatial agglomerations of creative activities showing evidence of urban concentration, which for Britain and France coincides with the dominance of capital cities, whilst for Spain and Italy, significant concentrations can also be found in secondary cities. The four countries also differ in the specialisation profiles and in the role played by policy makers. A lack of dove-tailing with the European Union smart agenda is argued to be a cause of concern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The case for OFSMOKE: how tobacco price regulation is needed to promote the health of markets, government revenue and the public.
- Author
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Gilmore, Anna B., Branston, J. Robert, and Sweanor, David
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC competition , *ECONOMICS , *INCOME , *INDUSTRIES , *MARKETING , *POWER (Social sciences) , *PROFIT , *PUBLIC health , *SOCIAL control , *TOBACCO , *USER charges , *THEORY , *RATE setting , *GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
Mainstream economic theory outlines four main causes of market failure and it is already well established that two of these (information failure and externalities) exist in a tobacco market. A third cause of market failure, market power, is also a serious problem in many tobacco markets. Market power--combined with unintended and often overlooked consequences of tobacco tax policies, notably that gradual increases in specific taxes may allow the industry to disguise significant price increases--has, at least in high income countries, given cigarette manufacturers considerable pricing power and profits. This paper examines ways this market failure could be addressed and proposes as a solution a system of price cap regulation wherein a cap is placed on the pre-tax cigarette manufacturers' price but not on the retail price that consumers face. Well established in the utilities industry, price cap regulation would set a maximum price that cigarette companies can charge for their product based on an assessment of the genuine costs each firm faces in its operations and an assumption about the efficiency savings it would be expected to make. Such a system would achieve three main benefits. First, it would address the problem of market failure and excess profits while simultaneously allowing current tobacco control policies, including tax and price increases, to expand--thus tax increases would remain a central tenet of tobacco control policies and retail prices could continue to increase. Second, it would increase government revenue by transferring the excess profits from the industry to the government purse. Third, it would bring numerous public health benefits. In addition to addressing market power, while simultaneously allowing tobacco control policies to expand, it could offer a means of preventing downtrading to cheaper products and controlling unwanted industry practices such as cigarette smuggling, price fixing and marketing to the young. The paper outlines in some detail how such a system might be developed in the UK, while briefly exploring how it could be applied elsewhere, including in markets with state monopolies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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9. Disadvantaged young people accessing the new urban economies of the post‐industrial city.
- Author
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Raffo, Carlo
- Subjects
- *
CITIES & towns , *INDUSTRIES , *POOR children , *SOCIAL marginality , *SOCIOLOGY , *CULTURE , *SUPPLY & demand , *MICROECONOMICS - Abstract
The aim of the paper is to examine current and evolving supply side transition policy initiatives in the light of (a) particular demand side needs of urban young people classified as those most disadvantaged and potentially marginalized; and (b) the emerging realities of accessing and operating within particular examples of high value-added knowledge work arenas of the new urban economies in the UK. The paper is a synthesis of qualitative research undertaken by the author over the last five years that has examined notions of transition, development and learning for both young people and adults as they attempt to navigate their pathways in, and through, the new economies of the post-industrial urban context. The paper communicates the importance of a number of sociocultural theoretical concepts as a way of illuminating transition choices, actions and opportunities for disadvantaged young people. These concepts also enable a broader set of critical questions to be asked about current 14–19 transition policy and practice, particularly with regards to Connexions and the Careers Education and Guidance in England 11–19 National Framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. FRIENDS IN BUSINESS: RESEARCHING THE HISTORY OF QUAKER INVOLVEMENT IN INDUSTRY AND COMMERCE.
- Author
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Roberts, Helen
- Subjects
- *
QUAKERS , *PROTESTANTS , *COMMERCE , *INDUSTRIES , *SECTS , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper is intended as an aid to those researching the history of Quaker involvement in industry and commerce, with a regional focus on Yorkshire .A selection of archives of businesses founded and run by Quakers, as well as of family and personal papers of Friends in business are surveyed here. Both the historical context and a summary of the surviving sources are given for each collection surveyed, with details of where the material is held. Examples have been chosen to represent the Quaker contribution to particular trades and industries, and in some cases, to promote collections which have recently been catalogued or are little known. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
11. To ‘enable our legal product to compete effectively with the transit market’: British American Tobacco's strategies in Thailand following the 1990 GATT dispute.
- Author
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MacKenzie, Ross, Lee, Kelley, and LeGresley, Eric
- Subjects
- *
TOBACCO products , *BUSINESS , *CRIME , *DOCUMENTATION , *FEDERAL government , *INDUSTRIES , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *HEALTH policy , *POLICY sciences , *PUBLIC health , *RESEARCH funding , *SALES personnel , *ECONOMIC competition , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
The opening of the Thai tobacco market, following action brought by the US Trade Representative under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, is seen as a key case study of the tensions between trade and health policy. Interpretations of the dispute cast it, either as an example of how trade agreements undermine national policy-making, or how governments can adopt effective public health protections compliant with international trade rules. As a UK-based company, British American Tobacco has been regarded as peripheral to this dispute. This paper argues that its close monitoring of the illegal trade during this period, the role of smuggling in the company's global business strategy, and its management of the relative supply and pricing of legal and illegal products after market opening provide a fuller understanding of the interests and roles of transnational tobacco companies and the government in this dispute. The findings have important policy implications, notably the role of effective governance in countries facing pressure to open their tobacco sectors, need to better understand corporate-level activities within an increasingly globalised tobacco industry, and need to address the intertwined legal and illegal trade in implementing the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. RESEARCH INTO THE USE OF STATISTICAL QUALITY CONTROL IN BRITISH MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY PART I.
- Author
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Followell, Roy F. and Oakland, John S.
- Subjects
- *
QUALITY control , *INDUSTRIES , *FACTORY management , *QUALITY assurance , *TOTAL quality management , *INDUSTRIAL management - Abstract
The work described in this paper is part of a large, Government-funded investigation into the usage of statistical methods of quality control (SQC) in British manufacturing industry. This paper reports the results of an investigation of fifteen firms which claimed in earlier work to be successful users of SQC. It is shown that six of the companies were in fact not regularly using recognized SQC techniques. Some general conclusions are drawn from the activities of these, and the remaining nine companies which were examined in detail. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
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13. Regional Selective Assistance in Scotland: Does it make a difference to plant productivity?
- Author
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Moffat, John
- Subjects
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GRANTS (Money) , *INDUSTRIAL productivity , *ECONOMIC development , *SUBSIDIES , *LABOR productivity , *BUSINESS enterprises , *INDUSTRIES , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper examines whether receipt of a Regional Selective Assistance (RSA) grant has a causal impact on plant total factor productivity (TFP). To tackle the problem of self-selection into the treatment group, propensity score matching is employed. In order to control for the endogeneity of other variables in the model, estimations are performed using the system GMM estimator. The results show that for low technology manufacturing, receipt of an RSA grant leads to a fall in TFP. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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14. The case for Ofsmoke: the potential for price cap regulation of tobacco to raise £500 million per year in the UK.
- Author
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Branston, J. Robert and Gilmor, Anna B.
- Subjects
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TOBACCO laws , *INDUSTRIES , *SMOKING , *PUBLIC administration , *RESEARCH funding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
Objective A system of price-cap regulation has previously been suggested to address the market failure inherent to the tobacco industry. This would benefit public health directly (eg, by making it extremely difficult for the industry to sell cut-price cigarettes, or use price as a marketing strategy) and indirectly (eg, by reducing the available money the industry has for spending on marketing and lobbying). This paper explores the feasibility of applying such a scheme in the UK. Methods The impact of price-capping is modelled using optimistic and conservative scenarios, each with different assumptions, and using 2009 and 2010 profit data for the major companies selling tobacco in the UK. The models are used to calculate by how much would profit be reduced through the imposition of price caps, and thus, how much revenue could be raised in additional taxes, assuming the end price the consumer pays does not change. Results Tobacco companies enjoy massive profit margins, up to 67%, in the UK. The optimistic scenario suggests a potential increase in UK tobacco tax revenue of £585.7 million in 2010 (£548.4 million in 2009), while the conservative model suggests an increase in revenue of £433.6 million in 2010 (£399.2 million in 2009). This would be approximately enough to fund, twice over, UK-wide antitobacco smuggling measures, and smoking cessation services in England, including the associated pharmacotherapies, to help people stop smoking. Conclusions Applying a system of price-cap regulation in the UK would raise around £500 million per annum (US$750 million). This is likely to be an underestimate because of cautious assumptions used in the model. These significant financial benefits, in addition to the public health benefits that would be generated, suggest this is a policy that should be given serious consideration. INSET: The price cap scheme and the benefits it would bring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Using UKCP09 probabilistic climate information for UK water resource planning
- Author
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Christierson, Birgitte v., Vidal, Jean-Philippe, and Wade, Steven D.
- Subjects
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CLIMATOLOGY , *WATER supply , *INDUSTRIES , *STREAMFLOW , *HYDROLOGY , *HYPERCUBES , *ANALYSIS of variance - Abstract
Summary: Water companies in the United Kingdom have considered climate change in their water resources plans for more than a decade through studies funded by UK Water Industry Research (UKWIR). This paper presents an initial assessment of the impact of the UK Climate Projections 2009 (UKCP09) on river flows at a national scale for the 2020s under the A1B scenario and the implications for water resource planning. A daily hydrological modelling framework based on two conceptual model structures and the Generalized Likelihood Uncertainty Estimation (GLUE) methodology has been applied to 70 catchments across the UK. A Latin Hypercube Sampling approach was adopted to handle the probabilistic nature of UKCP09. Results show a decrease in mean annual flow over most of the UK, with negative median values of all monthly changes except in winter over the western and northern mountainous areas. Furthermore the results indicate a high likelihood of a significant decline in summer flows. An analysis of variance shows that the main uncertainty in river flow changes comes from the spread in climate projections. Finally results are found to be consistent with a previous UKWIR assessment based on individual projections from 6 Global Climate Models (GCMs) under the A2 scenario. The reduction in summer low-flows, critical for water resources, appears however more limited with UKCP09. Although most expected changes are within natural variability, the drier conditions overall and the greater spread of results with respect to previous assessments indicates a need for testing the robustness of water resource plans. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
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16. The advantages and challenges of linking industrial needs with academic research.
- Author
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Dunhill, A. K., Thayer, P. J., and Newton, K.
- Subjects
- *
INDUSTRIAL management , *ACADEMIC-industrial collaboration , *BUSINESS & education , *EDUCATION research , *NONDESTRUCTIVE testing , *INDUSTRIES - Abstract
This paper describes the advantages and challenges of an organisation that links industrial needs with academic research. The successful UK Research Centre for NDE (RCNDE) was established in 2003 as a partnership between various large industrial users of NDE, the UK Government university funding body (EPSRC) and six leading UK universities. During the 1980s and 1990s, industrial organisations reduced the size of or closed their NDE research laboratories and concentrated on shorter-term development activities to further their core businesses. At this time, the links between industry and universities regarding NDE were often weak; industrial needs were seen as immediate whilst academic timescales too protracted. The result was poor delivery and/or understanding of academic output and a correspondingly slow uptake of new research ideas. During the 1990s, major industrial users of NDE and universities began to develop bilateral arrangements to overcome the barriers to effective cooperation. Recognising the wide range of industries with a need for high-quality NDE research, discussions instigated by the UK Government in 2001-2 led to the creation of RCNDE in April 2003. Since that time, industrial and university involvement has steadily grown and the success of the partnership led to a second phase of public funding between 2008-2014. The core membership now includes 16 major industrial companies and six universities, with a growing number of other universities and companies also participating. From its inception, RCNDE has emphasised the importance of exploiting the research outcomes and a system based on Technology Readiness Levels is now being used to facilitate the technology transfer process. This approach helps all parties to understand the full range of activities which need to be achieved before new research can be translated into commercial products or processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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17. The organisational identity of science centres.
- Author
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Tlili, Anwar
- Subjects
- *
SCIENCE museums , *ORGANIZATIONAL aims & objectives , *POLITICAL autonomy , *SCIENCE education , *INDUSTRIES - Abstract
This paper presents an empirically grounded mapping of the organisational identity that science centres in the UK are trying to carve out for themselves against the backdrop of developing organisational strategies and multiple external pressures, expectations and perceptions. I attempt this through a relational analysis that views the science centres' organisational identity formation as constituted by and through a dialectic of autonomy and heteronomy that subtends the differential relationships science centres seek to cultivate vis-a-vis what I describe as the 'parent' fields - namely, science, formal education, the leisure industry and the museum. Science centres seek to stage a unique encounter of these four parent fields - an encounter that appropriates many significant dimensions of these fields without duplicating them. Through my analysis I hope to capture some of the key tensions and dilemmas that science centres and their organizational actors have to grapple with, the balancing acts they have to perform, and the complex organisational identity that is being forged in the process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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18. Consumptive and non-consumptive values of wild mammals in Britain.
- Author
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MacMillan, D. C. and Phillip, S.
- Subjects
- *
MAMMALS , *SUPPLY & demand , *SUPPLY-side economics , *ECONOMIC equilibrium , *INVENTORY control , *FORESTS & forestry , *RURAL industries , *INDUSTRIES - Abstract
1. Wildlife make an important contribution to the rural economy; generating jobs, income and profits from food and sporting enterprises, and contributing in less direct ways by bringing pleasure from viewing and learning. This paper reviews the literature regarding the contribution made by wildlife to the rural economy and to British society more widely. The review focuses on UK studies published in peer-reviewed journals and official web-based sources in the last 20 years. 2. Traditional activities such as deer stalking remain an important source of wealth and employment, but their overall contribution is declining relative to non-consumptive uses such as wildlife tourism. 3. Much of the literature focuses on the negative impacts of mammals on commercial activities such as agriculture and forestry, even though these impacts are relatively insignificant in economic terms at both regional and national levels. 4. Wild meat provides a niche in the contemporary food market, but, although demand is growing, growth is handicapped by a fragmented supply chain and lack of marketing. 5. In comparison with other rural resources such as farming, the contribution made by wild mammals to the rural economy appears small, even in relatively remote regions, but this may partly reflect gaps in the literature regarding their contribution via less formal markets, hobby activities, and in supporting ecosystem equilibrium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Industry evolution and cross-sectoral skill transfers: a comparative analysis of the video game industry in Japan, the United States, and the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Izushi, Hiro and Aoyama, Yuko
- Subjects
- *
INDUSTRIAL revolution , *TECHNOLOGICAL progress , *INDUSTRIES , *TECHNOLOGICAL revolution , *SUPPLY & demand , *SOCIAL status , *INDUSTRIAL management , *INDUSTRIAL productivity - Abstract
In this paper we explore the interrelationship between technological progress and the formation of industry-specific skills by analysing the evolution of the video-game industry in three countries: Japan, the United States, and the United Kingdom. We argue that the cross-sectoral transfer of skills occurs differently depending on national contexts, such as the social legitimacy and strength of preexisting industries, the socioeconomic status of entrepreneurs or pioneer firms in an emerging industry, and the sociocultural cohesiveness between the preexisting and emerging industries. Each country draws on a different set of creative resources, which results in a unique trajectory. Whereas Japan's video-game industry emerged out of corporate sponsorships in arcades, toys, and consumer electronics industries and drew skills from the comic book and animated-film sectors, the video-game industry in the United States evolved from arcades and personal computers. In the United Kingdom the video-game industry developed bottom-up, through a process of skills formation in the youth culture of `bedroom coders' that nurtured self-taught programmers in their teens throughout the country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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20. THE QUEST FOR APPROPRIATE ACCOUNTABILITY:STAKEHOLDERS, TRADITION AND THE MANAGERIAL PREROGATIVE IN HIGHER EDUCATION.
- Author
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Roberts, Richard H.
- Subjects
- *
HIGHER education , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *EDUCATION savings accounts , *SOCIALIZATION , *POSTSECONDARY education , *INDUSTRIES - Abstract
British higher education has undergone an unprecedented transformation over the past twenty years from an elite and individualised personal option embodied in historic universities (and their qualified institutional imitation in post-war expansion) to an industrialised, mass higher education system designed to produce a standard, reliable, predictable human 'product' suited to the putative needs of British industry and commerce. This 'reform' or 'modernisation' incorporates key features of 'managerial modernity' and it has been imposed without effective critique or resistance. In this paper we outline and analyse aspects of the quasi-totalitarian 'normalisation' of the education system as a whole, and pose some basic questions about the adequacy of the result as means of intellectual maturation and fundamental socialisation. It is concluded that the limits of 'accountability' have been narrowly and prescriptively drawn, and that both the tacit assumptions and targeted outcomes of this facility for social reproduction may be held in part responsible for a reduced and diminished 'post-humanity'. Some marginal figures offer material for creative resistance, but what resources, if any, do conventional Christian theology, ethics or pedagogic practice offer in the face of this forced homogenisation of the human?
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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21. Education for Industry: a complex technicism.
- Author
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Rikowski, Glenn
- Subjects
- *
EMPLOYMENT & education , *INDUSTRIES - Abstract
Employer criticism of British school-leavers is long-standing. Coherent statements by employers regarding their educational 'needs' have not materialised; employers' accounts concerning such needs are typically confused or contradictory. This paper formulates a 'filter' enabling better understanding of industry's educational needs. The starting point is that these needs are essentially labour-power needs. The 'needs filter' rests on this and another concept drawn from Marxism: capital. Furthermore, its development is grounded on a series of assumptions (that employers 'needs' can in principle be stated, that there are no contradictions within labour-power, and that employers' labour-power needs are realisable through education and training). After discussing conventional views on the 'needs of industry', the filter is presented as a series of labour-power needs for categories and functions of capital. Its utility for curriculum design, employers and researchers is explored. However, if the guiding assumptions underpinning the filter cannot be justified then the whole edifice collapses. It is argued that as labour-power is inherently contradiction-ridden then the filter implodes - along with it any notion that employers can straightforwardly state their labour power needs as a foundation for education and training planning and curriculum development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. PROFIT SHARING AND THE CYCLE OF CONTROL.
- Author
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Bougen, P.D., Ogden, S.G., and Outram, Q.
- Subjects
- *
PROFIT-sharing , *INDUSTRIES , *CONTROL theory (Engineering) , *SYSTEM analysis , *MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Profit sharing has recently returned to public prominence and is becoming increasingly popular in British industry. Although it is commonplace to view the previous incidences of profit sharing in terms of the cycle of control thesis, this perspective cannot explain the present enthusiasm. This paper re-examines the cycle of control theory's ability to predict the timing, the contextual conditions and the managerial motives for the introduction of profit sharing. Two case studies are presented in order to show ways in which management have used profit sharing; these studies raise serious doubts about the explanatory value of the cycle of control thesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. FAMILIES, FIRMS AND FINANCE CAPITAL: THE DEVELOPMENT OF UK INDUSTRIAL FIRMS WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO THEIR OWNERSHIP AND CONTROL.
- Author
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Francis, Arthur
- Subjects
- *
INDUSTRIES , *FINANCIAL institutions , *PROPERTY , *CORPORATE growth , *FINANCE , *LOANS - Abstract
This paper reports findings from the Oxford Growth of Firms project on the ownership and control position of the largest 250 UK companies and, in more detail, that of a sample of ai of these large firms. An analysis is made of the social and economic historical context in which most of today's large firms grew up. A theoretical model is developed of the stages of control through which firms are likely to pass. It is suggested that most firms are unlikely ever to become controlled by their own professional managers and that there is a trend towards firms being controlled by financial institutions. Evidence is then put forward, from an analysis of the current control position of the `top 250' UK firms and from brief histories of the 21 sample large firms, which supports the previously outlined theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. What does the industry hold for me?
- Author
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Booth, R.
- Subjects
- *
TECHNOLOGY , *EDUCATION , *ENERGY development , *INDUSTRIES , *NUCLEAR energy , *POLITICAL science , *RENEWABLE energy sources - Abstract
This paper looks at what the nuclear industry can offer young engineers and scientists, both now and in the future. It gives a personal viewpoint from one such member of the industry and of the UK Young Generation Network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The knowledge-driven strategy.
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENT policy on economic competition , *INDUSTRIES - Abstract
Discusses the British Department of Trade and Industry's White Paper entitled `Our Competitive Future: Building the Knowledge Driven Economy.' Paper's analysis of the state and future direction of business and industry in Great Britain; Proposals made in the White Paper; Industrial collaboration.
- Published
- 1999
26. Engineers respond to UK Industrial Strategy.
- Subjects
- *
INDUSTRIES , *ENERGY consumption - Abstract
The article reports on the Industrial Strategy green paper published by the Royal Academy of Engineers (RAEng) for the Great Britain with aspects from professional engineers such as Institution of Chemical Engineers (IChemE); and consideration of improvement approaches for energy efficiency.
- Published
- 2017
27. Direct writing gets industry group.
- Subjects
- *
TRADE associations , *WRITING materials & instruments , *INK-jet printers , *ELECTRIC circuits , *INDUSTRIES - Abstract
Reports on the establishment in Great Britain of the Direct Writing Association. Potential to British industry of direct writing techniques; Inkjet printing of plastic electronic materials to form active circuits and components; Founding membership of BAE Systems, FujiFilm Electronic Imaging and the University of Cambridge in the trade association.
- Published
- 2004
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