34 results on '"Bellotti, Elisa"'
Search Results
2. Co-evolution of a socio-cognitive scientific network: A case study of citation dynamics among astronomers
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Espinosa-Rada, Alejandro, Bellotti, Elisa, Everett, Martin G., and Stadtfeld, Christoph
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- 2024
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3. Gender inequalities in research funding: Unequal network configurations, or unequal network returns?
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Bellotti, Elisa, Czerniawska, Dominika, Everett, Martin G., and Guadalupi, Luigi
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- 2022
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4. ScriptNet: An integrated criminological-network analysis tool
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Bellotti Elisa, Lord Nicholas, Elizondo Cecilia Flores, Melville Joshua R., and Mckellar Steve
- Subjects
scriptnet ,crime script analysis ,social network analysis ,criminal networks ,counterfeit alcohol ,Mathematics ,QA1-939 ,Social Sciences - Abstract
This brief article illustrates the features of ScriptNet, a software package that facilitates a visual analysis of the organisational aspects of criminal enterprise, together with a visual analysis of the network of people, organisations, places and resources that are in some way involved in the commissioning of these goal-oriented crimes. ScriptNet is an amalgamation of the terms ‘script’ and ‘network’ that in turn represent two analytical approaches to understanding criminal and social behaviours. Script refers to crime script analysis, an analytical technique that organises knowledge about the procedural aspects and procedural requirements of the crime commission process. Network derives from social network analysis, and specifically from the framework of multi-mode and multi-link networks, which maps individual and collective actors, together with resources they can access and places where they are located, and the various types of relationships that may link them. In this article we illustrate the functions and features of ScriptNet using data provided by the Food Safety Authority of Ireland (FSAI). We discuss the innovative aspects of ScriptNet and we identify its limits. In its current format, ScriptNet has been developed as proof of concept. The code is open source, and we welcome people to collaborate and implement new and improved functions.
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- 2022
- Full Text
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5. Social networks as double‐edged swords: Understanding the impact of relational positivity and negativity on Hungarian migrants' return experiences.
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Hoór, Dorottya and Bellotti, Elisa
- Subjects
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RETURN migrants , *SOCIAL status , *SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL support , *FAMILY relations - Abstract
The paper examines how relational positivity and negativity within personal networks shape the return experiences of Hungarian migrants. Previous studies have hinted at the potential ‘dark side’ to personal networks for returnees, but no research has explored how different types of positive and negative ties impact return experiences. To address this gap, the study collected personal network data from 69 returning migrants in Hungary and analysed the effects of social support, relational negativity, and ambivalence on their self‐evaluated return experience score. The findings reveal that migrants' return experiences are significantly influenced by both relational positivity and negativity, affected by factors such as relational context, emotional closeness, geographical location, and social status. Particularly, relationships with family members and romantic partners are susceptible to relational negativity, which can adversely affect return experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. ‘C’ is for commercial collaboration: enterprise and structure in the ‘middle market’ of counterfeit alcohol distribution
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Spencer, Jon, Lord, Nicholas, Benson, Katie, and Bellotti, Elisa
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- 2018
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7. A script analysis of the distribution of counterfeit alcohol across two European jurisdictions
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Lord, Nicholas, Spencer, Jon, Bellotti, Elisa, and Benson, Katie
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- 2017
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8. The evolution of research collaboration within and across disciplines in Italian Academia
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Bellotti, Elisa, Kronegger, Luka, and Guadalupi, Luigi
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- 2016
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9. Getting funded. Multi-level network of physicists in Italy
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Bellotti, Elisa
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- 2012
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10. The social processes of production and validation of knowledge in particle physics: Preliminary theoretical and methodological observations
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Bellotti, Elisa
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- 2011
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11. What are friends for? Elective communities of single people
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Bellotti, Elisa
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- 2008
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12. Social Network Analysis
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Everett, Martin, Crossley, Nick, and Bellotti, Elisa
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- 2016
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13. Scientific Networks
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Bellotti, Elisa
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- 2016
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14. Mapping the Contours of Modern Slavery in Greater Manchester
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Gadd, David, Broad, Rosemary, Craven, Jonathan, Lightowlers, Carly, and Bellotti, Elisa
- Published
- 2017
15. Counterfeit alcohol distribution: A criminological script network analysis.
- Author
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Bellotti, Elisa, Spencer, Jon, Lord, Nick, and Benson, Katie
- Subjects
INTERORGANIZATIONAL networks ,FORGERY ,SOCIAL network analysis ,TELEVISION crime programs ,SCRIPTS ,SOCIAL structure - Abstract
This paper analyses a series of subsequent and connected investigations by a domestic European regulator on the network of distribution of counterfeit alcohol across two jurisdictions. The analysis mixes script analysis, a narrative framework for enhancing the understanding of how crimes unfold and are organized, with multi-node multi-link social network analysis, to observe the social structure in which crime scripts take place. We focus our attention on the key players that occupy strategic positions within the network of the crime commission process, from where they overview and control the various phases (scenes) and perform brokerage activities across the scenes, and on strategies of concealment of illicit products beyond the facade of legitimate business. Our findings indicate that actors in charge of managing the proceeds of the criminal activity are also the ones better positioned to monitor the entire process. The overall structure of the criminal network shows a good level of resilience and efficiency, although actors do not adopt common traits of a criminal lifestyle that facilitate secrecy and covertness. We believe that, by shifting the analysis from the nature of the group organization to the network of links between all the aspects of a crime commission process, the organizational structure and its weakest links become more detectable, easier to compare across proto- and meta-scripts, and ultimately more prone to situational preventive measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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16. Media effects on sustainable food consumption. How newspaper coverage relates to supermarket expenditures
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Bellotti, Elisa and Panzone, Luca
- Published
- 2016
17. Ties and Narratives:Qualitative methods and visualizations in the study of friendship networks
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Bellotti, Elisa
- Abstract
One of the most powerful aspects of social network data is the fact that they can reproduce social relationships in a formal and comparable way. Relational matrices abstract from the hustle and bustle of everyday interaction, and systematise information in terms of presence or absence of ties expressing them in a directed or undirected, binary or valued form. While the formal approach represents an advantage of social network analysis, as it allows bracketing off the idiosyncratic and subjective content of social structures, the mathematization of the complex nature of social relationships has also been criticised for the lack of engagement with the subjective meaning and context of relationships. Such stream of critique has called for an increase of use of qualitative methods in social network research. The first goal of the paper is to address these critiques by rebalancing the argument and showing how social network analysis has always engaged with both formal and contextual aspects of social structures. The paper reviews some theoretical perspectives that discuss and systematise a mixed method approach, and explores the methodological advantages of using network visualizations together with qualitative interviews in the collection, analysis and interpretation of personal networks. The advantages of adopting a mixed method approach are illustrated over some examples of friendship networks of 23 single male and female people collected in Milan, Italy, in 2005. A classic name generator is used to reconstruct their egonets of friends, and the visualization is adopted as the input for in-depth interviews with specific attention devoted to the meaning of friendship relationships, the kind of resources they offer, the conflicts and constrains they entail, and how they have developed and evolved over time. By comparing information obtained respectively with name generators and in-depth interviews, the paper shows how the mix of data improves and specify the understanding of personal networks.
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- 2016
18. Comparing fields of sciences: multilevel networks of research collaborations in Italian academia
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Bellotti Elisa, Guadalupi Luigi, and Conaldi Guido
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Social Network Analysis ,Research collaborations - Abstract
In this chapter we want to identify a suitable approach that can be applied to the study of scientific collaborations. In other words, we are interested in modelling the multilevel structure of scientific work, looking at social networks of collaborations between scientists, and at how these networks are embedded in disciplinary and organizational levels. Once the relational structure of scientific collaboration is described, we want to see if it plays a role in scholars' success. We adopt the structural approach of Lazega et al. (2008) and analyze the local system of public funding to academic disciplines in Italy using bipartite networks. Such analysis has been already done for the two academic areas of physics (Bellotti 2012) and philosophy (Bellotti 2014). Here we extend the analysis to all the areas of research in Italian Academia, in order to compare the results across different scientific fields. By doing this, we observe the variability of structural effects across disciplinary areas, that we expect to be organized in different but comparable ways. In particular, previous analysis of physicists and philosophers showed in both cases the overarching importance of academic ranks and of brokerage roles in obtaining research funding, together with some other interesting effects, like the less impacting but still significant importance of working with a long term established group of colleagues, and the advantages of working on specific sub-disciplines (Bellotti 2012 and 2014).
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- 2015
19. Comparing Fields of Sciences: Multilevel Networks of Research Collaborations in Italian Academia.
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Bellotti, Elisa, Guadalupi, Luigi, and Conaldi, Guido
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- 2016
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20. Networks of practices in critical consumption.
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Bellotti, Elisa and Mora, Emanuela
- Subjects
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CONSUMPTION (Economics) , *SUSTAINABILITY , *SOCIOLOGY , *ROBUST statistics , *METHODOLOGY , *SOCIAL network analysis - Abstract
This article proposes some theoretical and methodological advancements in the study of critical consumption within the framework of the theory of practices. It does so by applying an innovative analytic technique based on network analysis: using data from a survey of a representative sample of the Italian population, we analyze the structure of connections between variables at different levels of correlations, and then we focus on some interesting local neighborhoods that suggest elements for interpretative frameworks. The aim of this article is to explore whether it is possible to consider critical consumption as a practice, and if so what are the elements that characterize it as an entity. We also aim to observe whether these elements are connected to other (not necessarily sustainable) practices. Results do not show robust and coherent connections of elements that allow speaking of critical consumption as a practice, but they identify interesting anchor points where ethnographic approaches can be directed. These crossroads, where bundles of elements encounter, suggest the existence of loose knits of activities where competences and meanings of different practices encounter and contaminate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
- Full Text
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21. Informal Control, Effective Voice and Perceptions of Work Reward Fairness in a Worker Co-operative.
- Author
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Coutinho, James, Bellotti, Elisa, and Borgatti, Stephen P.
- Abstract
Worker co-operatives aim to produce a fairer distribution of work rewards than exists in conventional firms. Workers collectively own the firm and participate democratically in decisions, so should be able control rewards. However, direct participation in decisions is inefficient in larger firms. To balance democracy with efficiency, larger co-operatives combine a formal hierarchy with worker voice in decisions via elected representatives. This move is associated with the emergence of unequal informal organizational control and reward differentials. In this paper we ask how informal organization shapes control processes and worker perceptions of reward fairness in a representative democratic co-operative. We present a mixed-methods case study of a retail firm facing financial crisis which had reduced pay and benefits for workers. In this context, workers who maintained informal friendships with elected representatives on the firm's governing board had a more effective voice in rewards than workers without such relationships. Effective voice in turn led workers to perceive their rewards as fairer. Fairness perceptions had important consequences for the co-operative spirit -- the shared perception that all organization members were working towards common goals without opportunism. We explore the implications of our findings for maintaining democracy and promoting co-operative survival in times of crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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22. Brokerage roles between cliques: a secondary clique analysis.
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Bellotti, Elisa
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ACTORS ,STOCKBROKERS ,MATRIX attachment regions ,MATRICES (Mathematics) ,CLIQUES (Sociology) - Abstract
The article focuses on a study which examined the roles of actors in the cohesive structure or cliques by applying the brokerage ideas of R. V. Gould and R. M. Fernandez. It is demonstrated on a dataset collected from 100 social services in Milan, Italy in 2006 which is composed of matrix that was analyzed using the clique analysis techniques in the Ucinet software package and is visualized using the Netdraw software package. It shows that actors bridge the gaps between the cohesive subgroups.
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- 2009
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23. Syndicate women. Gender and networks in Chicago organised crime: by Chris Smith, University of California Press, 2019, 208 pp., $85.00, £70.00 (Hardback), $29.95, £25.00 (Paperback), $29.95, £25.00 (ebook), ISBN: 9780520300767.
- Author
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Bellotti, Elisa
- Subjects
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CRIME , *ORGANIZED crime , *ELECTRONIC books , *GENDER , *INTERSECTIONALITY , *PAPERBACKS - Abstract
Once she identifies what she defines as the organised crime network, Smith conducts a simple yet elegant structural analysis: she uses few descriptive metrics (size, centralisation, average degree, number of ties) to explain how different networks may produce different outcomes for men and women. The percentage of women involved in organised crime decrease from 17.6% in the Progressive era to 4.1% in the Prohibition era, and consequently co-offending relationships, either between men and women or within women only, decrease accordingly. Prohibition, Smith concludes, was not an economy that excluded women: the shift that pushed women outside the organised crime relegate them to hidden positions, which made criminal women more difficult to detect and therefore, ultimately, less perceived as criminal actors. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2019
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24. Social support during retirement : a mixed method for social network analysis research
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Ortiz, Francisca, Olsen, Wendy, and Bellotti, Elisa
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ageing population ,retirement ,older people ,social support network ,social support - Abstract
This thesis aims to understand how older people cope with pensions through their social support networks. More specifically, their social support networks change through their lives until retirement, ultimately influencing their experiences during retirement. A case study in Santiago, Chile, is used as it is one of the first neoliberal pension systems in the world and one of the unequal countries in terms of economic distribution. The methodological aspect of the thesis is a mixed-method approach. I studied a group of 30 older people living in Santiago, divided equally by socioeconomic levels (high-, middle- and low-class districts) and gender (older women and men). They were asked for their history and social support networks during the important events of their lives. They chose the events and the construction of their social support network at those times. The data used for the networks was retrospective and from the ego's point of view. In addition, six dimensions (material aid, intimate support, advice, physical assistance, feedback and positive interactions) of the social support networks were considered, and negative interaction, which is more anti- support, was also evaluated. The main findings suggest the relevance of researching the association between older people's lives and their social support networks from a relational and longitudinal point of view. The results are divided into three chapters: First, there is information about older people's social support networks once they retire, divided by the dimensions measured. Second, three types of trajectories (opportunities, constraints and mobilization) shaping the retirement experience associated with social support networks over time are discussed. Third, conditions are identified that make an older person feel satisfied (or not) with their retirement is considered by applying the relational variables from the social network analysis. My research suggests that the social support networks of older people act as available resources or nets to cope with difficulties. They are the daily relationships constructed and embedded through their life histories that help, protect and sustain them and keep society going at the micro-level. However, they also cause strain and constraints for older people. That was clear considering the three types of trajectories and how they were associated with having or using social support networks over time. As I shall argue, people have their support networks because of their experiences rather than survival strategies.
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- 2022
25. A network approach for the sociological study of science and knowledge : modelling a dynamic multilevel network
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Espinosa, Alejandro, Shafie Schoch, Termeh, Bellotti, Elisa, and Everett, Martin
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Social Network Analysis ,Sociology of Science and Knowledge ,Scientific Networks ,Multilevel Networks ,Longitudinal Networks - Abstract
The thesis investigates the usage of multigraphs to understand citation patterns among researchers in the Chilean astronomical and astrophysics community. The usage of multigraphs to study scientific networks in local contexts has been acknowledged in early developments from the sociological study of science and knowledge but has been scarcely addressed in current empirical research. This research will show that multiple networks can contribute to investigating why scientific networks evolve, considering stable processes that mix social, cognitive, and situational dimensions. In this research, processes of group formation using multigraphs are considered to enlighten the patterns of citations among researchers. The co-evolution of different networks is analysed, incorporating different levels (three-modes) and types of relationships that are jointly investigated. First, to understand how a group of academics generate interpersonal intercitations after the arrival of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array. And, secondly, to inquire how the local scientific community prepares for the arrival of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory. For the analysis, it is used quadratic assignment procedures and stochastic actor-oriented models. This research offered methodological advances to understand multilevel networks exploring new goodness of fit, often used in statistical network models, for multiplex and three-mode multilevel networks. And suggest as an analytical strategy the analysis of samples of multilevel networks to investigate broader communities. The research shows that the usage of citation-based measures is difficult to understand and that the consideration of different interpersonal relationships and the context allowed recovering the social dimension of the intercitation. The social relationships grounded on scientific collaboration and space proximity based on institutional affiliation are more accurately suited to understand the co-evolution of the networks and the intercitation among astronomers than cognitive-based networks when measured as the tendency to publish in similar journals. And, in the broader community, there is a tendency upon intercitation among researchers affiliated in the same external research centres creating closure in scientific niches (i.e., research centres) as a community's tendency towards diversity and multi-connectivity.
- Published
- 2021
26. Organising insider dealing in financial markets : scripts and networks
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Zeng, Yongyu, Bellotti, Elisa, and Lord, Nicholas
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Market abuse ,Financial crime ,Organised crime ,Environmental criminology ,Organisation of crime - Abstract
Insider dealing is a form of financial market misconduct that arises when individuals abuse their privileged access to confidential and price-sensitive information to deal in financial instruments in financial markets and/or to tip information to other individuals. Previous criminological research on insider dealing has mostly highlighted the individual and occupational aspects and some organisational elements that influence insider dealing activities. However, there is a knowledge gap related to the organisation of insider dealing in financial markets, specifically its structure of activities, legitimate opportunity structures and co-offending relationships. Inspired by the theoretical foundations of environmental criminology and crime opportunity theories and the organisation of crime perspective, this thesis addresses this gap in research by using crime script analysis and multi-mode multi-link multi-time network analysis based on 43 known cases in the UK between 2000 and 2020. The data used in this thesis is recorded from official records, news media reports, semi-structured interviews conducted with lawyers and compliance officers in the UK, and policy and legal documents. The key findings revealed through the crime script analysis are summarised as: (1) the access to insider information can be gained legitimately through occupational roles in certain organisations or illegitimately through unsupervised circumstances; (2) offenders rely on pre-existing dealing accounts and finances to carry out insider dealing, but additional accounts and finances also are acquired to leverage greater returns, and previous investment habits influence the financial products used for insider dealing; (3) tipping often occurs through pre-existing relationships between co-offenders and it involves abnormally frequent and efficient communications between co-offenders to coordinate illegal dealings; (4) concealment is achieved through the legitimate appearance of offenders, natural disguises of the legitimate and routine social and business settings, encrypted and anonymous communication channels, layers of offshore shell companies, third-party bank accounts, deception and collusion; and (5) insider dealing is generated and facilitated by the structure of legitimate financial markets. The key findings revealed through the network analysis include: (6) co-offenders cooperate to support the division of labour, flexibility and resilience to carry out the insider dealing scripts; (7) key actors in insider dealing networks can be identified not only based on their central position in the social network, but also their exclusive access to resources and activities needed for insider dealing to occur, and there are also emergent leaders who coordinate day-to-day operations in the scripts; (8) aside from pre-existing social relations, offenders establish instrumental relations to execute some scenes of the insider dealing scripts; (9) social networks may grow over time to strengthen the division of labour, flexibility and resilience to carry out the scripts; and (10) insider dealing involves a structure of relations not only among co-offenders but also shared resources, activities and locations, and this structure corresponds to the procedural requirements shown in the insider dealing scripts. The main substantive conceptual and theoretical contributions of this thesis to previous criminological research are: (1) understanding insider dealing as a dynamic structure of activities: insider dealing necessitates a specific sequence of scenes, but the execution of scenes varies depending on the specific procedural requirements of each case, and there are differences between core and contingent activities; (2) understanding insider dealing as a market-based crime: while previous research has mostly depicted insider dealer as a behaviour of financial professionals, or white-collar criminals, this research shows how insider dealing can be committed by offenders who do not work in the financial sector, and insider dealing originates in and is facilitated by the legitimate architecture of financial markets; (3) understanding the importance of social relations among co-offenders in the execution of insider dealing scripts: co-offenders cooperate by bringing in the resources needed in the various tasks they are assigned, thus enhancing the efficiency and security necessary to commit insider dealing; (4) recommending specific actions for public and private sector organisations to disrupt the organisation of insider dealing: the findings of the script and network analysis highlight critical points where situational crime prevention measures can be developed to alter the settings that facilitate insider dealing. While results presented here are highly distinctive and original, they are not free of limitations, and future work using alternative data sources and theoretical approaches is needed.
- Published
- 2021
27. Home, sweet home? : a mixed-methods personal network study of the lived experiences of high-skilled Hungarian returning migrants
- Author
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Hoór, Dorottya, Bellotti, Elisa, and Bloch, Alice
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personal networks ,cultural identity ,mixed-methods ,integration ,mixed embeddedness ,return migration ,social networks ,skilled migration - Abstract
As Russel King wrote 'return is the great unwritten chapter of migration' (2000). Accordingly, very little is known about how returning migrants experience their return, especially in the context of a post-socialist Central European country. The thesis thus presents an inquiry into the lived experiences of high-skilled Hungarian returning migrants. As theoretical engagement with return has rather been fragmented and often marginal to migration theory, the thesis presents a novel Integrated Theoretical Framework, which draws on the insights of four key research areas: integration, re-integration, social networks and cultural identity. By combining the insights of the matrix of attachments, multi-dimensional re-embedding, social capital and support, and the Cultural Identity Model into a single framework, the thesis does not only address their individual shortcomings but enables a comprehensive analytical approach to understanding returnees' experiences as a multi-faceted process within the broader migration cycle. To do so, it takes a mixed-methods personal network approach, where it utilises personal network data and in-depth qualitative information from thirty-four returnees. As part of the data analysis, it combines Thematic Analysis, fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis, and descriptive social network measures as well as multi-level modelling techniques. It finds that migrants' experiences vary greatly from highly positive experiences to ambivalent or even hugely negative experiences. The thesis demonstrates that these experiences can be conceived as returnees re-embedding process on five dimensions, including their living standards, social, cultural, professional and political re-embedding, and that their social re-embedding plays a particularly important role. Moreover, returnees' experiences are directly and positively linked to their social capital, which can be understood as the function of their positive and negative social ties, where negative ties have a disproportionately strong negative effect. As the multi-level social network analysis reveals, networks with several emotionally close ties to Hungarians who also reside in the country provide the most social support to returnees. Additionally, based on their network compositions, returnees demonstrate five distinctive network trajectories throughout their migration cycle: transnationalism, ethnic maintenance, ethnification, host country attachment, and dispersion. These trajectories are underlined by different integration patterns and cultural identity changes, leading to markedly different re-embedding processes, social capital and consequently return experiences.
- Published
- 2021
28. Managing translation projects : practices and quality in production networks
- Author
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Foedisch, Melanie, Olohan, Maeve, and Bellotti, Elisa
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418 ,technologies ,network ,professional translation ,vendor manager ,project management ,quality ,practice theory ,workplace studies - Abstract
Over the past two decades, translation workplaces have been substantially transformed by technological developments (Drugan 2013; Risku et al. 2013), and by the emergence of production networks in which a language service provider (LSP) acts as an intermediary between translator and client (Abdallah and Koskinen 2007; Abdallah 2012). However, there is little research into how technologies are integrated in the various translation workplaces found in production networks. My research aims at enhancing our understanding of translation project management and translation quality in production networks by conceptualising project management as a practice (Shove et al. 2012). For this empirical study, a data set was collected based on 60 hours of workplace observations within a UK-based LSP and 10 semi-structured interviews with four project managers (PMs) and one vendor manager (VM). Drawing on concepts from practice theory, the study analyses routinised enactments of the practice by PMs, their integration of information technologies into such enactments, their understanding of translation quality, and their strategies to achieve quality in the translation production process. I propose that the practice of translation project management is deeply embedded into a larger complex of interdependent translation production practices. A practice-theoretical framework emphasises the socio-material and collective nature of the practice. My study demonstrates that project management is a joint effort between PMs and other actors in translation production. Based on an analysis of how PMs use CAT tools and an enterprise resource planning (ERP) system when they are managing translation projects, I argue that technologies are inextricably linked with enactments of production practices, and that they form part of the social structures surrounding the practice. The application of practice theory affords a new understanding of skills, or competence, in which the engagement in professional activities is vital, and in which building competence is an ongoing process. Finally, I suggest that buyers of translation products, i.e. clients, substantially contribute to translation quality, as PMs carry out project management based on the notion of translation as a service.
- Published
- 2018
29. Workplace democracy, well-being and political participation
- Author
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Coutinho, James, Russell, Andrew, O'Neill, John, and Bellotti, Elisa
- Subjects
658.3 ,Workplace democracy ,Worker co-operatives ,Co-operatives ,Democracy ,Political participation ,Well-Being ,Egalitarianism ,Economic democracy ,Social network analysis ,Networks ,Equality ,Employee voice ,Work ,Job quality ,Retail ,Political attitudes ,Organizational behaviour ,Participatory democracy ,Civic skills ,Employee ownership - Abstract
A democratic workplace is one where workers as a body have the right to determine the internal organization and future direction of the firm. Worker co-operatives are a type of democratic firm. In a worker co-operative employees are joint-owners of the firm and participate democratically in workplace governance. Much has been written about the supposed benefits of worker co-operatives for workers and for society. One thread of this research, originating with Carole Pateman’s theoretical work (Pateman 1970), argues that worker co-operatives act as sites of political learning for workers. By participating democratically in workplace decisions, individuals are thought to learn the skills and psychological dispositions needed to participate in political democracy. A second thread argues that co-operatives will improve worker well-being. Democratic governance will give workers control over work organization, increasing autonomy in their daily lives, and leading to an increase in non-material work rewards such as job satisfaction. Worker ownership will equalize the material rewards from work and improve job security. These arguments are premised on the idea that democratic governance structures and worker ownership will lead to widespread, effective worker participation in decision-making and the equalization of power at work. However, insufficient attention is given to the contextual factors beyond formal governance and ownership structures that shape the internal dynamics of workplace democracy. I conduct an in-depth, mixed-methods case study of a worker co-operative with 158 employees in the UK cycling retail industry. Using survey research, social network analysis, in-depth interviews and direct observation, I show how individual differences, firm-level contextual factors such as the social composition of the organization, and macro-level factors such as economic and cultural context, lead to unequal participation opportunities and different outcomes for different groups of workers within the firm. My research leads to three conclusions. First, the outcomes of workplace democracy for workers are highly context-dependent. They will differ across groups of workers within co-operatives, across different democratic firms, and across cultures. Second, the relationship between workplace democracy and political participation is more complex than the Pateman thesis suggests. It is contingent on the political identities of workers, which are themselves shaped by wider political economic context. Political identity affects both participation behaviour at work, and how workplace experience shapes political views. Third, the subjective well-being outcomes of workplace democracy depend on workers’ expectations about work. Expectations are shaped by the same forces that mould political identity. Workplace democracy raises expectations for certain groups of workers, leading to well-being harms when expectations are not met. Overall, the benefits of workplace democracy for workers and for society are overstated. In the UK context, co-ops are unlikely to realize the benefits attributed to them without large-scale public policy interventions.
- Published
- 2016
30. Managing Translation Projects: Practices and quality in production networks
- Author
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Foedisch, Melanie, BELLOTTI, ELISA E, Olohan, Maeve, and Bellotti, Elisa
- Subjects
project management ,workplace studies ,quality ,professional translation ,network ,vendor manager ,practice theory ,technologies - Abstract
Over the past two decades, translation workplaces have been substantially transformed by technological developments (Drugan 2013; Risku et al. 2013), and by the emergence of production networks in which a language service provider (LSP) acts as an intermediary between translator and client (Abdallah and Koskinen 2007; Abdallah 2012). However, there is little research into how technologies are integrated in the various translation workplaces found in production networks. My research aims at enhancing our understanding of translation project management and translation quality in production networks by conceptualising project management as a practice (Shove et al. 2012). For this empirical study, a data set was collected based on 60 hours of workplace observations within a UK-based LSP and 10 semi-structured interviews with four project managers (PMs) and one vendor manager (VM). Drawing on concepts from practice theory, the study analyses routinised enactments of the practice by PMs, their integration of information technologies into such enactments, their understanding of translation quality, and their strategies to achieve quality in the translation production process. I propose that the practice of translation project management is deeply embedded into a larger complex of interdependent translation production practices. A practice-theoretical framework emphasises the socio-material and collective nature of the practice. My study demonstrates that project management is a joint effort between PMs and other actors in translation production. Based on an analysis of how PMs use CAT tools and an enterprise resource planning (ERP) system when they are managing translation projects, I argue that technologies are inextricably linked with enactments of production practices, and that they form part of the social structures surrounding the practice. The application of practice theory affords a new understanding of skills, or competence, in which the engagement in professional activities is vital, and in which building competence is an ongoing process. Finally, I suggest that buyers of translation products, i.e. clients, substantially contribute to translation quality, as PMs carry out project management based on the notion of translation as a service.
- Published
- 2017
31. Connective action for regeneration : a comparative case study of social networks andcommunity infrastructure in New East Manchester
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Carley, Elizabeth, Tranmer, Mark, and Bellotti, Elisa
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302.3 - Abstract
This study explores the mechanisms underpinning policy efforts to build community in deprived urban neighbourhoods using a mixed-method comparative case study. Two neighbourhoods within the New East Manchester (NEM) urban regeneration area are examined, one of which hosted a New Deal for Communities (NDC) regeneration partnership from 1999-2010. In 2009 the NDC successor body established a community forum in each neighbourhood in an attempt to sustain and extend NDC’s participatory practices. The study compares the community infrastructure embodied by the residents’ groups eligible to participate in the forum in each neighbourhood. Social networks data, standard survey metrics and ethnographic material on 61 groups were collected. These elucidate the structure of groups’ relations, their collective action capacity and the extent to which NDC, and its successor, NEM, were implicated in the formation and development of these relations. NDC was the most prominent expression of the New Labour’s social capital-orientated “turn to community” (Duffy and Hutchinson, 1997). However, the final national evaluation of the scheme raised doubts about its impact, finding little effect on community relations at the neighbourhood level (CLG, 2010c). This gap between policy ambition and outcome is probed in this study using new tools and employing concepts from the social movements’ literature, rather than the social capital framework underpinning most existing research on NDC. It focusses specifically on social relations as a metric of community infrastructure, but resists the network analytic tendency to infer community from the mere presence of relations (Blokland, 2003). Instead it seeks evidence of the capacity for pairwise ties to be translated into communal mobilization through the interplay of relational, cognitive and contextual mechanisms, including specific facets of the political opportunity structures (POS) of NDC. The study contributes to debates on policy, theory and method relevant to: the practice of civic engagement and community development in regeneration; the sociology of community in deprived post-industrial neighbourhoods; and the measurement of community capacity and collective agency. Analysis of social networks considers three levels: the connection of individual residents to each group; relations between groups within the neighbourhood; and relations between groups and local service-providers. Results show very similar levels of network connectivity in the two neighbourhoods, but greater evidence of the growth of sustainable grassroots organising and leadership capacity in the non-NDC area. Quantitative and qualitative analysis of POS concludes that NDC was instrumental in generating a constrained, controllable form of community engagement to meet the delivery requirements of the scheme. This process stifled the development of a wider, independent self-organising capacity on the ground, sustainable beyond the life of NDC.
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- 2013
32. Workplace Democracy, Well-Being and Political Participation
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James Coutinho, O'NEILL, JOHN JF, BELLOTTI, ELISA E, Russell, Andrew, O'Neill, John, and Bellotti, Elisa
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Political participation ,Work ,Job quality ,Economic democracy ,Well-Being ,Retail ,Participatory democracy ,Employee voice ,Political attitudes ,Democracy ,Social network analysis ,Equality ,Workplace democracy ,Egalitarianism ,Organizational behaviour ,Employee ownership ,Worker co-operatives ,Co-operatives ,Civic skills ,Networks - Abstract
A democratic workplace is one where workers as a body have the right to determine the internal organization and future direction of the firm. Worker co-operatives are a type of democratic firm. In a worker co-operative employees are joint-owners of the firm and participate democratically in workplace governance. Much has been written about the supposed benefits of worker co-operatives for workers and for society. One thread of this research, originating with Carole Pateman’s theoretical work (Pateman 1970), argues that worker co-operatives act as sites of political learning for workers. By participating democratically in workplace decisions, individuals are thought to learn the skills and psychological dispositions needed to participate in political democracy. A second thread argues that co-operatives will improve worker well-being. Democratic governance will give workers control over work organization, increasing autonomy in their daily lives, and leading to an increase in non-material work rewards such as job satisfaction. Worker ownership will equalize the material rewards from work and improve job security.These arguments are premised on the idea that democratic governance structures and worker ownership will lead to widespread, effective worker participation in decision-making and the equalization of power at work. However, insufficient attention is given to the contextual factors beyond formal governance and ownership structures that shape the internal dynamics of workplace democracy. I conduct an in-depth, mixed-methods case study of a worker co-operative with 158 employees in the UK cycling retail industry. Using survey research, social network analysis, in-depth interviews and direct observation, I show how individual differences, firm-level contextual factors such as the social composition of the organization, and macro-level factors such as economic and cultural context, lead to unequal participation opportunities and different outcomes for different groups of workers within the firm.My research leads to three conclusions. First, the outcomes of workplace democracy for workers are highly context-dependent. They will differ across groups of workers within co-operatives, across different democratic firms, and across cultures. Second, the relationship between workplace democracy and political participation is more complex than the Pateman thesis suggests. It is contingent on the political identities of workers, which are themselves shaped by wider political economic context. Political identity affects both participation behaviour at work, and how workplace experience shapes political views. Third, the subjective well-being outcomes of workplace democracy depend on workers’ expectations about work. Expectations are shaped by the same forces that mould political identity. Workplace democracy raises expectations for certain groups of workers, leading to well-being harms when expectations are not met. Overall, the benefits of workplace democracy for workers and for society are overstated. In the UK context, co-ops are unlikely to realize the benefits attributed to them without large-scale public policy interventions.
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- 2016
33. Community and health worker perspectives on malaria in Meghalaya, India: Covering the last mile of elimination by 2030.
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Nengnong CB, Passah M, Wilson ML, Bellotti E, Kessler A, Marak BR, Carlton JM, Sarkar R, and Albert S
- Abstract
Background: Malaria remains a public health problem in regions of northeastern India due to favourable bio-geographic transmission conditions, poor access to routine healthcare, and inadequate public health and healthcare infrastructure. This study was undertaken to better understand community members' and health workers' perceptions of malaria, as well as their knowledge, attitudes, and prevention practices related to the disease in Meghalaya state., Methods: The study included participants from three malaria endemic districts: West Khasi Hills, West Jaiñtia Hills, and South Garo Hills from 2019 to 2021. A total of 82 focus group discussions (FGD) with 694 community members and 63 in-depth interviews (IDI) with health personnel and traditional healers residing within the three districts were conducted. A thematic content analysis approach was employed, and NVivo12 software was utilized for data management., Results: Most participants reported a perceived reduction in malaria during recent years and attributed this to changing attitudes and behaviours in health seeking behaviour and effective government interventions. Local availability of testing and treatment, and an improved, more responsive health system contributed to changing attitudes. Long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) were largely preferred over indoor residual spraying (IRS), as LLINs were perceived to be effective and more durable. Community members also reported using personal protective measures such as applying repellents, burning straw/egg trays, wearing long sleeve clothes, and applying ointments or oils to protect themselves from mosquito bites. While most participants acknowledged the role of mosquitoes in malaria transmission, other conditions that are not mosquito-borne were also attributed to mosquitoes by some participants. The communities surveyed have largely shifted from seeking traditional healers to using public facilities, although some participants reported switching between the two or using both simultaneously. Using the example of improved understanding of cerebral malaria which was previously attributed to mental illness due to 'bad spirits', participants explained how cultural and ritualistic practices had changed., Conclusions: Our findings reveal diverse perceptions among community members regarding malaria, its prevention, practices to prevent mosquito-transmitted diseases, and their opinions about the health system. A key finding was the shift in malaria treatment seeking preferences of community members from traditional healers to the public sector. This shift highlights the changing dynamics and increasing acceptance of modern healthcare practices for malaria treatment and prevention within tribal and/or indigenous communities. By recognizing these evolving attitudes, policymakers and healthcare providers can better tailor their interventions and communication strategies to more effectively address ongoing needs and concerns as India faces the 'last mile' in malaria elimination., Competing Interests: Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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34. Social network and household exposure explain the use of malaria prevention measures in rural communities of Meghalaya, India.
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Bellotti E, Voros A, Passah M, Nongrum QD, Nengnong CB, Khongwir C, van Eijk A, Kessler A, Sarkar R, Carlton JM, and Albert S
- Abstract
Malaria remains a global concern despite substantial reduction in incidence over the past twenty years. Public health interventions to increase the uptake of preventive measures have contributed to this decline but their impact has not been uniform. To date, we know little about what determines the use of preventive measures in rural, hard-to-reach populations, which are crucial contexts for malaria eradication. We collected detailed interview data on the use of malaria preventive measures, health-related discussion networks, individual characteristics, and household composition in ten tribal, malaria-endemic villages in Meghalaya, India in 2020-2021 (n=1,530). Employing standard and network statistical models, we found that social network and household exposure were consistently positively associated with preventive measure use across villages. Network and household exposure were also the most important factors explaining behaviour, outweighing individual characteristics, opinion leaders, and network size. These results suggest that real-life data on social networks and household composition should be considered in studies of health-behaviour change.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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