2,508 results
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2. WHEN WORLDS KEEP ON COLLIDING: EXPLORING THE CONSEQUENCES OF ORGANIZATIONAL RESPONSES TO CONFLICTING INSTITUTIONAL DEMANDS.
- Author
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PACHE, ANNE-CLAIRE and SANTOS, FILIPE M.
- Subjects
INSTITUTIONAL environment ,CONFLICT management ,SCHOLARLY method ,MANAGEMENT ,BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations ,DECENTRALIZATION in management - Abstract
In this paperwe share the behind-the-scenes story of the development of our paper "When worlds collide: The internal dynamics of organizational responses to conflicting institutional demands," which received the 2020 Academy of Management Review Decade Award. Furthermore, 10 years into its publication, we assess the degree towhich the phenomenonof conflicting institutionaldemands is still prevalent today. Wefurtherpushour theorizing, extending our initial model of the determinants of organizational responses to institutional complexity by discussing the potential consequences of these responses and outlining the organizational factors that may enable their successful enactment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Het archief van de Centrale der Boek- en Papiernijverheid-afdeling Gent.
- Author
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Langouche, Jessica
- Subjects
TRADE associations ,BOOK industry ,DECENTRALIZATION in management - Abstract
Copyright of Brood & Rozen: Tijdschrift voor de Geschiedenis van Sociale Bewegingen is the property of AMSAB - Institute of Social History and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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4. Are we blockchain ready: a systematic review.
- Author
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Chan, Johnny and Ott, Veronika
- Subjects
BLOCKCHAINS ,INNOVATIONS in business ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,DISTRIBUTION (Economic theory) ,BUSINESS development - Abstract
It has been a decade since blockchain is introduced to the world by Satoshi Nakamoto. Are we ready to adopt the technology and build new things on top of it by now? Would blockchain change how we change things if we could organise ourselves in a trustless system? To answer these questions, we conduct a systematic review of the literature to study all the relevant blockchain research from our colleagues. We identify three factors that could provide the required conditions for blockchain to be adopted more readily among industries and societies as a means to establish trust: a legal framework, deep understanding, and evidence-based benefit. We further discuss the implication of blockchain to our understanding of innovation, and the opportunities and challenges we are facing today with too many initiatives and ideas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
5. Towards a Better Understanding of Quality 4.0.
- Author
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souad, Lahmine and Bennouna, Fatima
- Subjects
INDUSTRY 4.0 ,INDUSTRIAL revolution ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,LOGISTICS ,RESEARCH methodology - Abstract
Industry 4.0(I4.0) or the fourth industrial revolution is a strategy that relies on digital and ubiquitous connectivity enabled by various technologies to transform processes, products, and services through real-time and decentralized decision-making, allowing systems to transition from surveillance to autonomy in collaboration with humans. resulting in the emergence of 'Industry 4.0' The term '4.0' has been applied to a variety of fields, including Quality 4.0, Agriculture 4.0, Agribusiness 4.0, Service 4.0, Logistics 4.0, Health 4.0, and so on, all of which represent the impact of Industry 4.0 on these terms. Quality 4.0(Q 4.0) is a new term that refers to a new and improved approach to quality management, it how we can use the DATA obtained by 4.0 and use it correctly with the quality methodology, the objective of this paper is to explain industry 4.0 as well as quality 4.0 and presented the various quality 4.0 relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
6. Problems and Challenges of Indian Rural Local Governments in Achieving Sustainable Development Goals: An Analysis of the Viable Perspectives.
- Author
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Divi, Sriram, Dash, Debendra Nath, and Sahoo, Manoj K.
- Subjects
LOCAL government ,DEMOCRACY ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,GENDER inequality ,RURAL development ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Indian democracy has noble features of decentralization, devolution, and de-concentration. The 73
rd Constitutional Amendment Act (CAA) of the early 1990s is a landmark for democratic decentralization which accorded constitutional status to Panchayati Raj or Local Governance system within the country. Wherein Gram Panchayat (village level) is the basic unit of grassroots governance, Panchayat Samiti (block level) at the middle level and Zila Parishad (district level) is the highest level of local administration. With 73rd CAA, 29 functional items were put under Panchayats, relating to Sustainable Development Goals, such as Poverty Alleviation, Zero Hunger, Good Health & Well-being, Quality education, Gender equality, Clean water and Sanitation, Clean energy etc. The UNDP identifies Local Governments as vital partners in implementation. This paper analyzes the major challenges of Indian rural local government in achieving the sustainable development goals and examines its viable perspectives. The research methodology followed is descriptive research with narrative and qualitative analysis. The findings indicate significant challenges in attaining the SDGs in rural India and limited resources with rural local governments like. The silver lining, however, lies with the government willingness to translate the digital gains into productive information, mass awareness creation, and push for greater effective role of women the local governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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7. Strengthening resilience: decentralized decision-making and multi-criteria analysis in the energy-water-food nexus systems.
- Author
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Haji, Maryam, Namany, Sarah, and Al-Ansari, Tareq
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MULTIPLE criteria decision making ,SUSTAINABLE development ,RESOURCE management ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,WATER supply ,POWER resources - Abstract
The Energy-Water-Food (EWF) nexus is a complex and multidimensional system, in which the energy, water and food resources are strongly interconnected. EWF nexus systems are seriously threatened by natural hazards (e.g., climate change and extreme weather events) along with other human-driven threats, including rapid population growth, urbanization, terrorism, and geopolitical uncertainty. As such, integrated analysis, as encouraged by the EWF nexus can facilitate the identification of essential connections and potential conflicts that may arise in the planning and operation of resource systems. Moreover, in order to consider immediate shocks and long-term pressures, it is imperative to prioritize the strengthening of EWF system resilience by incorporating robust and efficient resource management strategies, which consider various dimensions of sustainability and security such as technical, environmental, economic, and societal aspects. Decentralization is one concept that has the potential of improving the resilience of nexus systems faced to the multiple risks governing them through reducing single points of failure and enabling swifter responses to sudden shocks and continuous volatilities. However, in order to achieve a holistic system resilience through decentralization, the assessment of the different risks impacting each nexus sector is fundamental, yet it can be particularly challenging. Therefore, the objective of this study is to review the currently available resilience assessment methods for the EWF nexus system. The systematic literature review will connect various assessment methods used within decentralization studies that are applied to improve the resilience performance of the EWF nexus system. A total of 84 journal papers were evaluated. The review demonstrates that the deployment of multi-criteria decision-making framework based on composite indicators can be effective in addressing risks and uncertainties within EWF systems. Furthermore, findings of this review illustrate complementary connections between decentralization and resilience concepts, which when integrated with the EWF nexus approach, can be effectively utilized for integrated sustainable resource management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. Wind power planning in France (Aveyron), from state regulation to local planning [Erratum, paper published in Land Use Policy 26 (2009) 744–754].
- Author
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Nadaï, Alain and Labussière, Olivier
- Subjects
WIND power ,STATE regulation ,STRATEGIC planning ,LAND use ,ENERGY policy ,LANDSCAPES ,DECENTRALIZATION in management - Abstract
Abstract: The development of wind energy in France presents an exemplary case of contrast between the policy instrument and its effectiveness in terms of installed wind power capacity. After 7 years of one of the highest feed-in tariffs in the world, the installed capacity in France is still very low. This is notably due to a diffuse pattern of administrative landscape protection which impacts on the construction of wind power potential. In turn, the pace of wind power development can be understood only by looking in more detail at the way in which landscape is dealt with in local planning processes. This paper examines the question using the case of Aveyron in southern France. We follow the shifting ways in which landscape is enrolled in wind power planning, in a context where new planning instruments favor an incipient decentralization in wind power policy. The case points to a change in both the networks and the concepts involved in the design of landscape representations that underlie the construction of wind power potential. We show that this change has been forced by the far-reaching and decentralized visual impacts of wind power technology, suggesting that technology is recomposing the social as part of its development process and questioning the very meaning and perception that is given to landscape. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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9. The devolution of OR/MS: Implications from a statistical content analysis of papers in flagship...
- Author
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Reisman, Arnold and Kirschnick, Frank
- Subjects
DECENTRALIZATION in management ,REGRESSION analysis ,OPERATIONS research ,MANAGEMENT science ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,SYSTEMS theory - Abstract
Ackoff has decried the "devolution" of OR/MS. Corbett and Van Wassenhove have spoken of its "natural drift," and a sociologist has described its "regression" as typifying that of other learned professions. To shed light on these views, we undertook a detailed survey of a segment of the OR/MS literature, with particular focus on the space in flagship journals devoted to theory on the one hand and applications on the other. While the literature of OR/MS contains many articles and texts with the word application in the title and the word data in the text, the definitions and uses of these terms are not precise. The claimed applications differ in degree and the actual data differ in kind. To encompass these different meanings we used a five-point scale to classify articles in the 1962 and 1992 volumes of Operations Research and Management Science and the 1972 and 1992 volumes of Interfaces. The resulting statistical analyses shed considerable light on the direction that OR/MS is taking and raise questions about its appropriateness. Finally, the paper raises fundamental questions about the direction that OR/MS should take and the roles that its journals should play in pursuing this direction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1994
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10. Empowering nurses: exploring self-managed organizations in Indian healthcare.
- Author
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Malik, Elham and Shankar, Shail
- Subjects
HOME care services ,NURSES ,HOME nursing ,WORK ,SELF-efficacy ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,DATA analysis ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH evaluation ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,SOUND recordings ,THEMATIC analysis ,JOB satisfaction ,NURSES' attitudes ,RESEARCH methodology ,GROUNDED theory ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,PATIENT satisfaction ,MANAGEMENT ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Background: Given India's high patient load on the existing healthcare setup, as well as political, social, and organizational challenges, the nursing sector is facing various problems, therefore leading to substandard nursing experiences leading to poor patient care at the parallel healthcare setups, specifically homecare. This paper presents self-managed organizations (SMOs) characterized by a horizontal management structure as an effective alternative to existing hierarchical management structures overladen with bureaucracy. Therefore, we are exploring the strategies at self-managed homecare organizations that can make nursing a better and more productive experience. Method: This study utilized Constructivist Grounded Theory (CGT), employing semi-structured interviews to explore nursing dynamics in horizontal organizational structures. It delved into crucial aspects like finances, organizational structure, value systems, information flow, and conflict resolution within SMOs. The methodology involved theoretical sampling, prioritizing expert self-management knowledge over mere representativeness. Seven nurses, twelve management members, and fifteen patients from self-managed homecare organizations contributed to the examination of nursing experiences. Constant comparative analysis of data led to the identification of the Qualitative Success Enablers (QSEs), revealing three themes: Insightfulness, Enhancing Nursing Experience through Job Enrichment, and Autonomy-Enabled Intrapreneurship. Results: The findings indicate that the horizontal management structure represented by the studied organization in India has shown considerable success in times laden with uncertainties during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially during the delta wave, which revealed the frailty of existing healthcare infrastructure. The organization successfully maintained a better nursing experience and gained patient and employee satisfaction, as revealed by in-depth semi-structured interviews and constant comparative analysis. Conclusion: In a world of unique challenges, we stand on the brink of significant transformations. SMOs are vital in India's homecare sector for enhancing nursing experiences and overall organizational performance. Fostering a trust-based environment within SMOs is integral to delivering effective services. The autonomy to design nursing jobs, insightfulness, and innovativeness in the nursing job through suitable training activities, various job enrichment methods, and finding meaningfulness in a job through softer aspects of caregiving result in an enhanced nursing experience at SMOs. This groundbreaking approach can be extended to other homecare organizations in India, relieving the strain on the existing healthcare system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Managing risk in corporate groups: Limited liability, asset partitioning, and risk compartmentalization.
- Author
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Belenzon, Sharon, Lee, Honggi, and Patacconi, Andrea
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LIMITED liability ,RISK management in business ,ASSET management ,CORPORATE veil ,ASSET allocation ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,INVESTMENTS - Abstract
Research Summary: Limited liability enables corporate parents to avoid financial responsibility of their subsidiaries. However, courts can disregard separate legal personality, "pierce the corporate veil," and impose the debts of a subsidiary on its parent—an exception referred to as "enterprise liability." We argue that in countries with weak enterprise liability, groups can better compartmentalize risks by incorporating more of their units as legally independent subsidiaries. Weaker enterprise liability may also induce headquarters to delegate more decision‐making authority to their subsidiaries, invest more, and expand faster, although failure rates could rise. Using data from 16 countries across the Americas, Asia, and Europe, we provide evidence supporting these predictions. This paper highlights two channels—risk compartmentalization and subsidiary autonomy—through which limited liability laws affect organizational outcomes. Managerial Summary: Limited liability is a key attribute of the corporate form. However, when the owner of a corporation is another corporation (as in corporate groups), a key justification for limited liability—to protect small, passive investors from unlimited losses—is severely weakened. We examine how variation in parent limited liability protections for subsidiaries across countries affect firm boundaries, internal organization, and performance. In countries with strong limited liability protections, groups partition their assets more finely into legally independent subsidiaries and grant their subsidiaries more autonomy. They also invest more and grow faster, although they experience higher rates of significant revenue declines. Our findings suggest that limited liability laws play a central role in shaping organizational structure and performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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12. Discipline lessons from American faith-based autonomous schools: a narrative of power and 'mini-public' ideology.
- Author
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Finefter-Rosenbluh, Ilana
- Subjects
SCHOOLS ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,DISCIPLINE ,SOCIOLOGY ,PARENTS - Abstract
Widespread neoliberal approaches to education consider schools increasingly accountable for self-management and 'client' recruitment, encapsulating economic ideologies that assume privatisation is essential for social progress. With an ever-shifting landscape of market-driven policies and the increasing growth of private education settings, more research is needed to cast light on emerging or under-researched aspects of autonomous schools. Located within a U.S. state that has strict constraints on tax subsidies for religious K-12 education, this paper investigates how an extensive form of decentralisation corresponds with schools' discipline and ethical environment. It analyses teacher interviews and web documents from faith-based, autonomous schools in a state that has devolved power and authority for decision-making to parents and other independent 'agents', having a distanced relationship with its nonstate 'actors'. The paper follows Foucault's use of the metaphor of the panopticon and adopts his power analysis to examine the nature of parental control and its influence on disciplinary and ethical practices. Evidence suggests that these autonomous schools are driven by a 'mini-public' ideology that constrains educators' autonomy and generates particular disciplinary norms; entangling ethical, educational, and social ramifications, including teacher resistance and teacher demoralisation. Implications for policy are discussed in this context of control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Empowering strategic priority areas of cultural policy: empirical findings on cultural participation processes in Serbia.
- Author
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De Santo, Milica Kočović, Rodić, Danijela Milovanović, Babović, Dunja, and Kuźma, Inga
- Subjects
CULTURAL policy ,STAKEHOLDERS ,PARADIGM (Linguistics) ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
Background: The background of this research encompasses contemporary cultural policy issues and their factors of influence, with a special focus on cultural participation processes. The sphere of culture provides the fundamental base for reading and changing the paradigmatic paths through the contents and acts of formal and informal stakeholders. Culture is deeply interlinked with other departments of the entire economy by connections with feedback loops. The impacts of culture on the socio-economic and natural environment, as the "fourth pillar" of sustainable development, are recognized on the international level by theory, expert groups, and practice. Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to bring about a deeper understanding of participatory processes and their importance for strategic priority areas of cultural policy development. Study design/methodology/approach: Our study design included institutional analysis, starting from the regulatory framework that reflects cultural policy and its strategic goals, by involving previous relevant theoretical research including the ICET model. Another objective of the paper is to answer a range of questions. What are participation processes' main characteristics and challenges in culture and cultural policy development? Is there a relationship between these challenges? How to achieve desirable cultural and institutional integrative transformations in order to accomplish the strategic priority areas of cultural policy? We bring the conclusions based on theoretic and empirical overview of new empirical research findings based on the survey conducted in 2022 for the need of EPICA research project.1 Findings/conclusions: The findings of this research lead us to recognition, conceptualization and understanding of the existing participatory processes in culture, towards inspiring the future modelling of more integrative strategic and systemic solutions to reflect desirable and harmonized development. Limitations/future research: The limitations of research reflect future endeavour to contribute to reforming the field of culture (by formal and informal means) through more robust horizontal integration with other departments, to achieve sustainable and coherent effects through linking strategies, new forms of participation, decentralization, arm's length principle, and degrowth policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. Employer Association Fragmentation and Decentralization of the Collective Bargaining Structure in Italy.
- Author
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Bergamante, Francesca and Marocco, Manuel
- Subjects
COLLECTIVE bargaining ,COLLECTIVE labor agreements ,MEMBERSHIP in associations, institutions, etc. ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,EMPLOYERS - Abstract
Purpose -- The purpose of this paper is to provide an analysis of the collective bargaining trends in Italy, using data from the INAPP-RIL survey conducted on a sample of approximately 22.000 Italian firms. Design/methodology/approach -- In the first part, the analyses data from 2005 to 2015, focusing on multi-employer and single-employer bargaining, with particular regard to employer association membership. In the second part, single-employer bargaining in 2015 is investigated, examining data by firm size, economic sector and geographical area. Findings -- The share of firms with at least one employee applying a multi-employer collective agreement grew from 2010 to 2015, while in the same period employer association membership decreased. In those years, the share of firms applying firm-level agreements did not increase, and second-level bargaining mainly depended on business dimension and economic sector. Research limitations/implications -- This research proposes an empirical framework and calls for an in-depth analysis concerning the possible effects of employer association fragmentation on Italian collective bargaining. Originality/value -- Compared to other analyses, the empirical evidence collected provides additional information: multi-employer bargaining has continued to be applied outside of an association membership logic. Paper type -- Research paper [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
15. --Eleven tips for operational researchers working with health programmes: our experience based on implementing differentiated tuberculosis care in south India.
- Author
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Shewade, Hemant Deepak, Frederick, Asha, Kalyanasundaram, Madhanraj, Chadwick, Joshua, Kiruthika, G., Rajasekar, T. Daniel, Gayathri, K., Vijayaprabha, R., Sabarinathan, R., Shivakumar, Shri Vijay Bala Yogendra, Jeyashree, Kathiresan, Bhavani, P. K., Aarthi, S., Suma, K. V., Pathinathan, Delphina Peter, Parthasarathy, Raghavan, Nivetha, M. Bhavani, Thampi, Jerome G., Chidambaram, Deiveegan, and Bhatnagar, Tarun
- Subjects
TUBERCULOSIS prevention ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,STRATEGIC planning ,MEDICAL triage ,LEADERSHIP ,HUMAN services programs ,DECISION making ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,POLICY sciences ,HEALTH care rationing - Abstract
Due to the workload and lack of a critical mass of trained operational researchers within their ranks, health systems and programmes may not be able to dedicate sufficient time to conducting operational research (OR). Hence, they may need the technical support of operational researchers from research/academic organisations. Additionally, there is a knowledge gap regarding implementing differentiated tuberculosis (TB) care in programme settings. In this 'how we did it' paper, we share our experience of implementing a differentiated TB care model along with an inbuilt OR component in Tamil Nadu, a southern state in India. This was a health system initiative through a collaboration of the State TB cell with the Indian Council of Medical Research institutes and the World Health Organisation country office in India. The learnings are in the form of eleven tips: four broad principles (OR on priority areas and make it a health system initiative, implement simple and holistic ideas, embed OR within routine programme settings, aim for long-term engagement), four related to strategic planning (big team of investigators, joint leadership, decentralised decision-making, working in advance) and three about implementation planning (conducting pilots, smart use of e-tools and operational research publications at frequent intervals). These may act as a guide for other Indian states, high TB burden countries that want to implement differentiated care, and for operational researchers in providing technical assistance for strengthening implementation and conducting OR in health systems and programmes (TB or other health programmes). Following these tips may increase the chances of i) an enriching engagement, ii) policy/practice change, and iii) sustainable implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. Unification of power and responsibilities for state‐owned enterprises: A quasi‐natural experiment.
- Author
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Hu, Ning, Yu, Shilei, Cao, Yanan, Guo, Savannah, and Wang, Yu
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT business enterprises ,CORPORATE governance ,PROPERTY rights ,POWER (Social sciences) ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,INDUSTRIAL productivity - Abstract
Research Question/Issue: Based on Property Rights Theory and Empowerment Theory, this paper uses the establishment of local State‐Owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commissions (SASACs) as a quasi‐natural experiment to investigate whether and how SASACs improve the efficiency of state‐owned enterprises (SOEs). Research Findings/Insights: (1) After the establishment of SASACs, and compared to those not supervised by the SASACs (i.e., the control group), SOEs governed by local SASACs (i.e., the treatment group) have experienced a significant increase in decentralization and empowerment from the government, proxied by corporate pyramid levels. We also find increased pay‐performance sensitivity for SOE managers and higher productivity measured by total factor productivity (TFP). (2) SASACs adopt different strategies to manage SOEs in monopolistic and competitive industries. (3) The above effect of the SASACs is more pronounced in SOEs supervised by high‐quality governments that effectively protect property rights, enforce fair contracts, apply laws and regulations to everyone, and sufficiently refrain from expropriation. Theoretical/Academic Implications: Using a quasi‐natural experiment, this paper expands the existing literature on SOE reform from the perspective of incentive reform at the regulatory level based on Property Rights Theory and Empowerment Theory. Practitioner/Policy Implications: (1) Privatization is not necessarily the only optimal solution for SOE reform. We show that the unification of power and responsibilities can be very effective and is perhaps less costly and more practical than privatization. Thus, our study provides an encouraging solution for SOE reform for other countries. (2) Countries experiencing SOE reform should also work on strengthening their government quality in order to fully maximize the benefit of the reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. Decentralization and Collaborative Disaster Governance for the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor: Current Trends and Implications.
- Author
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Tao, Song, Hui, Liu, and Yeerken, Wuzhati
- Subjects
DISASTER relief ,BELT & Road Initiative ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,DISASTERS ,REGIONAL cooperation - Abstract
The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) plays an important role in China's 'Belt & Road Initiative'. It is also one of the most disaster-prone regions in the world. Considering that decentralized disaster governance has been gaining much attention in the world, this paper systematically analyzes the disaster management system in the CPEC region. Specifically, it compares the national, provincial, municipal and community-level institutional mechanisms for disaster management in China and Pakistan, and then closely examines the current trends of decentralized disaster governance based on a recent round of semi-structured and open-ended interviews in Xinjiang, China and Pakistan. Issues and gaps of decentralized disaster governance were drawn out from the experiences of participation among related stakeholders. We found that although the decentralization of the disaster management system has been the main trend in both China and Pakistan, national and provincial disaster management agencies still play a key role in the disaster relief work. Therefore, the centralization and decentralization of disaster management are not contradictory, but the more disaster governance shifts towards decentralization, the more urgent the consolidation of multi-level (vertical) and broader (horizontal) collaboration becomes. Based on this analysis, we aim to provide insights, lessons and recommendations for the way forward for strengthening disaster management in CPEC. In particular, we summarize different but integrated approaches towards effective disaster risk coping strategies and regional cooperation on disaster management in CPEC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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18. Decentralisation and community stakeholders' engagement for better mental health services development in the conflict-affected regions of Ukraine.
- Author
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Klymchuk, Vitalii, Vysotska, Krystyna, and Gorbunova, Viktoriia V.
- Subjects
STAKEHOLDER analysis ,WAR ,COMMUNITIES ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,MENTAL health services - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore how conflict-affected communities in Ukraine (the Lugansk region) can develop sustainable mental health services in decentralised settings. The main interest focuses on community stakeholders' perception of their problems and solutions that communities can create to achieve better mental health coverage. Design/methodology/approach: A series of roundtables (RTs) (4 RTs, 62 participants overall), accompanied by interactive brainstorming techniques, were conducted with communities' representatives/stakeholders from the East of Ukraine (Lugansk region, a government-controlled area) during the year 2021. Participants (health, mental health, social care workers and administration representatives) were provided with the opportunity to discuss mental health services' development challenges and create affordable solutions for their communities. Results of discussions were submitted to qualitative analysis and offered for review by participants. Findings: Decentralisation in Ukraine led to allocating funds alongside responsibilities for developing the services to communities. Most of the communities appear not to be ready to acknowledge the role of mental health services, entirely relying on the existing weak psychiatric hospital-based system. Awareness-raising interactive capacity-building activities for the community leaders and decision-makers effectively promote community-based mental health services development. Five clusters of challenges were identified: leadership, coordination and collaboration problems; infrastructure, physical accessibility and financial problems; mental health and primary health-care workforce shortage and lack of competencies; low awareness of mental health and available services and high stigma; war, crises and pandemic-related problems. Communities stakeholders foresaw seven domains of action: increasing the role of communities and service users in the initiatives of governmental bodies; establishing in the communities local coordination/working groups dedicated to mental health service development; developing the community-based spaces (hubs) for integrated services provision; embedding the mental health services in the existing services (social, administrative and health care); mental health advocacy and lobbying led by local leaders and service users; increasing capacity of communities in financial management, fundraising; developing services by combining efforts and budgets of neighbouring communities. Research limitations/implications: The study has potential limitations. Participants of the roundtables were mostly appointed by local authorities, so some of them didn't have a motivation for mental health services development. Service users were involved only from the facilitators' side, not from the side of communities; therefore, it was impossible to include their view of problems and solutions. Obtained data were limited to the opinion of local professionals, administration workers and other local stakeholders. The human rights aspect was not clearly articulated in the tasks of the roundtables. Originality/value: To the best of the authors' knowledge, the paper is original in terms of its topic (connecting decentralisation and local stakeholders' engagement for understanding the challenges of mental health services development) and research strategy (engagement of Ukrainian communities, qualitative analysis of the discussion results and applying the best practices and international recommendations to the local context). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Soft information and the geography of SME bank lending.
- Author
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Zhao, Tianshu, Luintel, Kul B., and Matthews, Kent
- Subjects
SMALL business ,BANK loans ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,MORTGAGES ,DECENTRALIZATION in management - Abstract
This paper explores the geography of bank lending to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and tests the argument that large institutions with complex organizational structures are better able to filter 'hard' information than 'soft' information. Mortgage lending is used as a control to illustrate the case of 'hard' and 'soft' information. Using data on individual bank lending to SMEs and mortgages by postcode area in Great Britain for the period 2013(2)–2014(4), the paper explains the spatial dispersion of SME lending in the UK in terms of geographical distance and supports the policy of establishing a geographically decentralized financial system as a counterbalance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. HungerHash: A Distributed Network for Child-Hunger Relief Based on Hedera Hashgraph.
- Author
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JAM, Naser and KALKAN, Kübra
- Subjects
DISTRIBUTED network protocols ,CRYPTOCURRENCIES ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,BLOCKCHAINS ,SUPPLY chains ,FOOD security - Abstract
Copyright of Duzce University Journal of Science & Technology is the property of Duzce University Journal of Science & Technology and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Urban Transportation and Inter-Jurisdictional Competition.
- Author
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Pinto, Santiago M.
- Subjects
URBAN transportation ,JURISDICTION ,TRANSPORTATION ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,FINANCING of transportation ,PLANNING - Abstract
It is well-known that competition for factors of production, including competition for residents, affects the public services provided in the communities. This paper considers the determination of local investment in urban transport systems. Many specialists question the effectiveness of the current U.S. top-to-bottom transportation institutional arrangement in which the federal government plays a dominant role and recommend a shift toward a decentralized organization. We examine how such a shift would affect the levels of transport investment. Specifically, we consider a model of two cities, and assume, as in Brueckner and Selod (2006), that transport systems are characterized by different time and money costs. We compare the outcomes reached when the transport system is decided by a central authority (a state or federal government) to the one decided by each jurisdiction in a decentralized way. In the latter case, city or local transportation authorities choose the system that maximizes residents' welfare, taking as given the decisions made elsewhere, essentially competing for residents (or workers). Our analysis shows that even though a shift toward a decentralized arrangement of the transportation system would generally lead to overinvestment (relative to the centralized case), the extent of this bias depends on the specific factors that drive transport authorities in deciding the transportation system, on the landownership structure, and on the financing arrangements in place. The paper also shows that, in a more general setup, when the two cities differ in their productivity levels, the more productive city will tend to overinvest in transportation systems that connect the two cities, and the less productive city will tend to underinvest in those systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
22. Local employer engagement or distant elites? Local enterprise partnerships and employment and skills in England.
- Author
-
McGurk, Patrick and Meredith, Richard
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,LABOR market ,EMPLOYERS ,JOB skills - Abstract
This paper investigates the responsibilities and membership of Local Enterprise Partnerships (LEPs) in England in the light of devolution of employment and skills responsibilities. Through the theoretical lens of 'hollowing out' and a direct comparison with the late-Thatcherite Training and Enterprise Councils (TECs) of the 1990s, the paper argues that LEPs represent a fresh, market-driven attempt by the government to alter the institutional framework for meeting local labour market needs through 'local business leadership'. However, through a synthesis of publicly available data across all LEPs, the paper shows that while LEPs assume important strategic and practical roles, their structure, resourcing and sectoral affiliations are poorly aligned for the engagement of local employers. Rather, it is argued, LEPs may be characterised as distant business elites, with only weak connections to local employment and skills priorities. Conclusions are drawn about the implications of distant and elite LEPs boards for future employment and skills policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Urban spatial structure in OECD cities: Is urban population decentralising or clustering?
- Author
-
Veneri, Paolo
- Subjects
URBAN density ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,PLURALISM ,URBAN planning ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
Copyright of Papers in Regional Science is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. THE ROLE OF IMMOVABLE PROPERTY TAXES IN THE EU COUNTRIES -- TAXES ON LAND, BUILDINGS AND OTHER STRUCTURE IN SUB-NATIONAL TAX REVENUES UNDER THE CONDITIONS OF TAX DECENTRALIZATION.
- Author
-
Maličká, Lenka
- Subjects
TAX revenue estimating ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,GROSS domestic product ,PUBLIC debts ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
The literature concerned in fiscal federalism and fiscal decentralization promotes the sub-national responsibility for sub-national resources and spending. In this paper sub-national tax revenues are compared to total tax revenues expressing the tax decentralization for the sample of EU 28 countries. Beside it, the main part of sub-national taxes, the immovable property tax -- tax on land building or other structure, is compared to total sub-national tax revenues. Using the GMM system estimation determinants of sub-national tax revenues, real estate tax revenues and tax decentralization are investigated on the sample of EU countries. Results show the significant negative relation between GDP per capita growth, population density and inflation rate and all variables in question. In the case of sub-national government real estate tax revenues the positive relation with public debt is observed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Centralization of rule-making versus embeddedness in the Eurozone.
- Author
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Savevska, Maja
- Subjects
EUROZONE ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,FISCAL year ,EMBEDDEDNESS (Socioeconomic theory) - Abstract
A new consensus has emerged which stipulates that the Eurozone problems are caused by a lack of embeddedness of the euro in proper financial and fiscal unions. This paper reviews the debates on the Eurozone's state of disembeddedness and argues that it is not enough to embed the monetary union in scaled-up financial and fiscal unions. For the euro problems to disappear it needs to be embedded in social Europe. The transfer of policy prerogatives at the supranational level does not make the structure embedded, but the substance of the policy measures. From a Polanyian perspective, the extent of the Eurozone dis/embeddedness depends not on the level of centralization of policymaking, but on the interplay between the two forgotten Polanyian principles: improvement and habitation. This paper tries to assess the extent of dis-embeddedness through these two principles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Exploring the Interrelationships between Public Health, Fiscal Decentralization, and Local Government Debt in China.
- Author
-
Cao, Mingyao, Duan, Keyi, Cao, Mingyu, and Ibrahim, Haslindar
- Subjects
LOCAL government -- Economic aspects ,HEALTH policy ,INVESTMENTS ,DEBT ,MATHEMATICAL models ,PUBLIC health ,REGRESSION analysis ,MEDICAL care costs ,THEORY ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness ,SOCIOECONOMIC disparities in health ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper investigates the interrelationships among local government debt, fiscal decentralization, and public health. The investigation begins by constructing a theoretical model to analyze the inherent connections between these variables. Subsequently, an empirical analysis is conducted using data from China between 2015 and 2021. The findings demonstrate a bidirectional relationship between fiscal decentralization, local government debt, and public health. Specifically, it is observed that an increase in local government debt has adverse effects on both fiscal decentralization and public health, while fiscal decentralization has a positive impact on public health. These insights are consistently validated through rigorous regression methodologies, affirming the robustness and significance of these relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Modeling Global and Local Aspects of Spatial Structure Explicitly in Land-Use Optimization: The Case of Mek'ele City, Ethiopia.
- Author
-
MEHARI, Ashenafi and GENOVESE, Paolo Vincenzo
- Subjects
LAND management ,GENETIC algorithms ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,SPATIAL analysis (Statistics) - Abstract
Urban spatial structure remains the center of quest and modeling. The decentralization concept is among the leading literature discourses that guide spatial analyses. In line with the decentralization discourse, the application of land-use optimization as a modeling method has grown significantly. Despite decentralization dominating the contemporary spatial analysis literature, no study so far explicitly declares an end to the centers (and subcenters). While centers (and subcenters) are alive, the land-use optimization has never taken this macro-morphological structure into consideration. This case study frames land-use optimization within the agglomeration and decentralization concepts based on the view that no single conceptual framework addresses spatial analysis sufficiently. On a theoretical level, the link is between coarse morphological assumption (basis of economic geography) and decentralization (basis of sustainable built environment). The paper blends these dual theories, one governing urban macro-morphological structures and the other governing decentralization literature. On a methodological modeling level, it blends centers and other discretized uses. Optimizing four objectives across the complete centralization through multiple centers of gravity to complete the decentralization of urban spatial structures applying Non-dominated Sorting Genetic Algorithm II, the case study findings justify the importance of explicit modeling of the macro-morphological element. It has been observed that multicenter urban forms perform well above both the single center and the dispersed scenarios. It is, therefore, argued that an appropriate approach to land-use optimization is modeling both the macro-spatial element and fine spatial elements. The result further indicates that local land-use planning regulations place the structure of city in a suboptimal state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. STATEFUL LAYERED CHAIN MODEL TO IMPROVE THE SCALABILITY OF BITCOIN.
- Author
-
Elwi, Dalia, Abu-Elnasr, Osama, Tolba, A. S., and Elmougyi, Samir
- Subjects
BITCOIN ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,CRYPTOCURRENCIES ,DEEP learning ,MACHINE learning - Abstract
Copyright of Jordanian Journal of Computers & Information Technology is the property of Jordanian Journal of Computers & Information Technology and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
29. IoT-Chain: Security of things for Pervasive, Sustainable and Efficient Computing using Blockchain.
- Author
-
Akhtar, Mohd Majid and Rizvi, Danish Raza
- Subjects
BLOCKCHAINS ,INTERNET of things ,UBIQUITOUS computing ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,NETWORK routers - Abstract
This paper unfolds the infancy of the exquisite experience of the 'Internet of Things'. It will address the thrilling potential of the looming opportunity of IoT & will echo the integration of things when harnessed with the bubble of internet. The topic is vulnerable due to handful factors but chiefly improves the insights and will observe exponential rise in the 'Next generation'. The new rule enchanted for future will be "Anything that can be connected will be connected". Moreover, cognitive consciousness of people will understand that IoT is the next big thing without procrastinating, in particular. This paradigm will review the implementation and challenges of several domotics technologies and others in general within the communication field and its contribution to the 'Smart World', exploring supplementary in fields of healthcare, living culture, transportation and furthermore that collectively rise for the world of Ubiquitous computing or Pervasive computing around us. Pervasive computing in short serves as a meaning where smart devices are connected as network and available all time. By scratching past, we have seen DDoS attack happening in 2016 via botnet attacks & malware from the devices such as IP security cameras, routers, printers. IoT as of now, have taken steps for the security but still lacks for the major part. Blockchain, the revolutionary technology behind the famous Bitcoin, which is cryptographically secured and decentralized, hence, can act as the liberator for the security of IoT devices. Blockchain in short are distributed immutable ledger that maintains the integrity of the network by achieving consensus algorithms like Proof of Work or Proof of Stake. Hence, an attacker won't be able to take down the IoT devices as easy as it was taken down before and eventually, harder to attack or hack the network. This manuscript discusses the use of Blockchain technology implementation for the security of IoT devices along with the sustainable and energy efficient solution towards the problem stated and addresses the limitations, if any. We also discuss the future prospect for IoT, blockchain and other possible architectures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Spatial Inequalities and Economic Growth.
- Author
-
López-Bazo, Enrique, Monastiriotis, Vassilis, and Ramos, Raul
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,FISCAL policy ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,ECONOMIES of agglomeration ,ADMINISTRATIVE efficiency ,INCOME inequality - Abstract
Copyright of Spatial Economic Analysis is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. How Organizations Sustain and Navigate Between (De)centralization Equilibria: A Process Model.
- Author
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Hartwich, Eduard, Rieger, Alexander, Fridgen, Gilbert, Hoess, Alexandra, Roth, Tamara, and Young, Amber Grace
- Subjects
INFORMATION services ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,INFORMATION resources ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior ,BUSINESS models - Abstract
Finding the ‘right’ balance between centralization and decentralization in organizational processes, governance, and IT can be difficult. To navigate this tension field, organizations need to find (de)centralization equilibria that are often dynamic and depend on organizational strategy and context. However, little is known about how organizations should respond once an old equilibrium is punctuated or breaks down. In this paper, we thus conduct an inductive multiple-case study to investigate how organizations sustain and transition between (de)centralization equilibria. We synthesize our insights into a process model that paints the transition as an iterative recalibration process subject to centralization and decentralization tensions. Often, this process will require local and temporary compromises. Our work contributes a muchneeded process perspective to the IS literature on (de)centralization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
32. Finding the Devastating Economic Disaster's Root Causes of the 2011 Flood in Thailand: Why Did Supply Chains Make the Disaster Worse?
- Author
-
Nakasu, Tadashi, Miyamoto, Mamoru, Bhula-or, Ruttiya, Mokkhamakkul, Tartat, Anantsuksomsri, Sutee, Amornkitvikai, Yot, Duangkaew, Sutpratana, and Okazumi, Toshio
- Subjects
SUPPLY chains ,ECONOMIC development ,RISK assessment ,DECENTRALIZATION in government ,DECENTRALIZATION in management - Abstract
This paper aims to identify the root causes that exacerbated the economic damage from the 2011 Chao Phraya river flood disaster in central Thailand industrial complex area. Finding root causes is crucial for learning from disasters; however, there has not been much investigation of the economic damage root causes with regard to the 2011 Chao Phraya river flood disaster. This paper seeks to investigate the root causes of the economic damage by organizing the existing analytical frameworks, tools and approaches to clarify why industrial parks and estates experienced such substantial economic devastation that resonated worldwide. The study's research design includes a social background survey, in-depth interview surveys and an investigation of the disaster's root causes. Through the research, inadequate urban and land use planning facilitated by a decentralization policy, foreign companies settlement in the country, which involved urbanization and relocation without proper risk assessment, information, and knowledge, and supplier's responsibility based on the supply chain's structure, are detected as root causes for the high economic damage in the industrial complex area. This study also provides key lessons essential to building regional resilience in industrial complex areas: 1) considering the potential risks of regional planning, which include both socio-economic and climate changes; 2) clarifying the roles of companies, regions, and nations in sharing risk information with related stakeholders before, during, and after a disaster; and 3) building horizontal and vertical collaborations among all related stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. CROWDWORK PLATFORMS: JUXTAPOSING CENTRALIZED AND DECENTRALIZED GOVERNANCE.
- Author
-
Gol, Elham Shafiei, Avital, Michel, and Stein, Mari-Klara
- Subjects
BLOCKCHAINS ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,ONLINE algorithms ,QUALITY control - Abstract
Crowdwork is a novel form of digitally mediated work arrangement that is managed and organized through online labor platforms. This paper focuses on the governance of platforms that facilitate creative work--that is, complex work tasks that require high-level skill and creative workers. Crowdwork platform governance faces numerous challenges as a result of technology mediation, scalable and distributed workers, and temporary work arrangements. Creative crowdwork platforms, such as Topcoder, typically require additional governance structures to manage complex tasks. However, we know relatively little about creative crowdwork platform governance, as most existing studies focus on routine work platforms, such as Amazon Mechanical Turk. Accordingly, this paper explores how incumbent and insurgent creative crowdwork platforms are governed under centralized and decentralized modes. We conducted a comparative case study based on the analysis of two different cases: Topcoder, a successful commercial platform with a largely centralized governance structure, and CanYa, an emerging innovative platform based on blockchain technology with more decentralized governance. We identified and classified different governance elements related to work control and work coordination. In addition, we explored the characteristics of creative crowdwork platform governance with different degrees of centralization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
34. Informal Public Financial Management Institutions in a Decentralizing System-Lessons for the Implementation of the Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) in Sub-Sahara Africa.
- Author
-
Hodick, Benjamin
- Subjects
- *
DECENTRALIZATION in management , *DEBT relief , *ADMINISTRATIVE procedure , *POVERTY , *FINANCIAL management - Abstract
Recent years have seen fundamental reorientations in international development cooperation. Two of the most far reaching ones have been the development of Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSP)and the increasing attention paid to decentralization. Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSP) have been introduced in the late 1990s as a pre-requisite for debt relief under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative. They are intended to provide a national strategy for poverty reduction and sustainable development. This study looks at examples from sub-Sahran countries and how PRSP and decentralization interact with each other and what consequences of this interaction are by studying a third subject that has moved center-stage in international development cooperation over the last years: Public Financial Management (PFM). As evidence from sub-Saharan Africa shows, most PFM systems are characterized by lack of routine with administrative procedures which result in an ad hoc mode of action and uncertainty throughout the system. It refers to the fact that rules, procedures and institutions of the governance system are not entirely reliable and therefore do not provide longterm predictability. This on the other hand jeopardizes the implementation of national strategies for poverty reduction. ..PAT.-Conference Proceeding [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
35. Production monitoring and control with intelligent products.
- Author
-
Meyer, Gerben G., (Hans) Wortmann, J.C., and Szirbik, Nick B.
- Subjects
PRODUCTION management (Manufacturing) ,PRODUCTION (Economic theory) ,PRODUCTION planning ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,JOB shops ,PRODUCTION control - Abstract
Advances in production planning and control in recent decades have focused on increasing the sophistication of the planning function. For good reasons, these advances have led to the centralisation of the planning function in production. However, the sophistication of the planning function should be in balance with monitoring and control of the plan. Monitoring and control are by their nature decentralised, beginning on the shop floor, and, therefore, the desire for greater sophistication in monitoring and control leads to renewed interest in decentralised and localised approaches. This paper demonstrates the possibility of using intelligent products for decentralised monitoring and control. Intelligent products are aware of their local context and can negotiate with local manufacturing resources. As such, local solutions to problems can be proposed directly when problems occur. With the advancement of the 'Internet of Things', such a scenario is likely to become feasible in the near future. The paper demonstrates the viability of such an approach through a simulation study, in which robustness is included as an additional measure of performance. The results of the simulations are encouraging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Decentralized Clinical Trials: Scientific Considerations Through the Lens of the Estimand Framework.
- Author
-
Izem, Rima, Zuber, Emmanuel, Daizadeh, Nadia, Bretz, Frank, Sverdlov, Oleksandr, Edrich, Pascal, Branson, Janice, Degtyarev, Evgeny, Sfikas, Nikolaos, and Hemmings, Robert
- Subjects
STATISTICAL models ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,RESEARCH funding ,CLINICAL trials ,PATIENT-centered care ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
While industry and regulators' interest in decentralized clinical trials (DCTs) is long-standing, the Covid-19 pandemic accelerated and broadened the adoption and experience with these trials. The key idea in decentralization is bringing the clinical trial design, typically on-site, closer to the patient's experience (on-site or off-site). Thus, potential benefits of DCTs include reducing the burden of participation in trials, broadening access to a more diverse population, or using innovative endpoints collected off-site. This paper helps researchers to carefully evaluate the added value and the implications of DCTs beyond the operational aspects of their implementation. The proposed approach is to use the ICH E9(R1) estimand framework to guide the strategic decisions around each decentralization component. Furthermore, the framework can guide the process for clinical trialists to systematically consider the implications of decentralization, in turn, for each attribute of the estimand. We illustrate the use of this approach with a fully DCT case study and show that the proposed systematic process can uncover the scientific opportunities, assumptions, and potential risks associated with a possible use of decentralization components in the design of a trial. This process can also highlight the benefits of specifying estimand attributes in a granular way. Thus, we demonstrate that bringing a decentralization component into the design will not only impact estimators and estimation but can also correspond to addressing more granular questions, thereby uncovering new target estimands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. SKIN IN THE GAME: THE TRANSFORMATIONAL POTENTIAL OF DECENTRALIZED AUTONOMOUS ORGANIZATIONS.
- Author
-
Wong Ellinger, Eleunthia, Wayne Gregory, Robert, Mini, Tobias, Widjaja, Thomas, and Henfridsson, Ola
- Subjects
- *
DECENTRALIZATION in management , *BLOCKCHAINS , *HUMAN-machine systems , *COLLECTIVE action , *FINANCIAL management - Abstract
Decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs)--collectively owned human-machine systems deployed on a blockchain that self-govern through smart contracts and the voluntary contributions of autonomous community members--exhibit the potential to facilitate collective action in managing digital commons. Yet the promise of decentralization and collective action is difficult to sustain. To this end, this paper critically examines the transformational potential of DAOs in the case of decentralized finance. Using a polycentric governance lens, we contribute to the literature on technology-enabled forms of organizing with a model explaining the transformational potential of DAOs to facilitate collective action in digital commons. Our study highlights that (1) DAOs are a new form of organizing enabled by blockchain technology in which individuals are free to pursue their objectives within a general system of rules enforced by smart contracts, (2) collective action for managing digital commons can be sustained through a set of three mechanisms--sustained participation, collective direction, and scaled organizing, and (3) DAOs tend to strike a balance between centralized and fully decentralized or community-based governance by implementing a polycentric governance system involving a combination of human and machine agency that creates skin in the game. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Healthcare provision for Swedish persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
- Author
-
Björne, Petra and Flygare Wallén, Eva
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH services accessibility , *DECENTRALIZATION in management , *DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION , *ENDOWMENTS , *MEDICAL care , *HEALTH policy , *SWEDES , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities , *DEVELOPMENTAL disabilities , *HEALTH equity , *PEOPLE with disabilities - Abstract
This paper aims to give a short description of Swedish healthcare provision for persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD). Swedish persons with IDD should have access to the general healthcare system on the same terms as the general population, and thereby enjoy equal opportunities for healthcare of good quality. Reports from government agencies and interest groups, however, describe a decentralised and fragmented healthcare system that requires significant coordination; a lack of adjustments; a lack of specialised healthcare professionals; and gaps in healthcare provision. Research in recent years has reported unequal access to planned healthcare; excess mortality and premature deaths; and insufficient or inadequate support in end‐of‐life care. We conclude that health inequalities and healthcare challenges faced by Swedish persons with IDD might be caused by obstacles at several structural levels. Allowing persons with IDD to access timely and adequate healthcare requires the development of better opportunities for coordination of healthcare and social services, as well as training for healthcare professionals and direct support staff. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Rezoning at the threshold of two systems: regionalised party–statecraft in China's Greater Bay Area.
- Author
-
Anguelov, Dimitar, Peck, Jamie, Zhang, Jun, and Su, Xing
- Subjects
FINANCIAL liberalization ,ZONING ,AUTHORITARIANISM ,REGIONAL development ,DECENTRALIZATION in management - Abstract
During China's reform era, dominant narratives described a transition away from centralised planning in favour of mutually reinforcing processes of liberalisation and decentralisation. Under Xi Jinping, the talk has increasingly been of the recentralisation of authoritarian-state powers and party discipline. Questioning both reform-era transition narratives and equally simplifying claims about their recent reversal, the paper argues for an enriched treatment of party–state spatiality, understood as a polymorphic and multi-scalar process, rather than simply a more complex one. In the emergent Greater Bay Area megaregion, 'new era' zoning strategies are being repurposed as drivers of pathfinding reforms animated by the party–state, in contrast to received readings of zones as single-purpose instruments of liberalisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Buyer's Efficient E-Sourcing Structure: Centralize or Decentralize?
- Author
-
Dai, Rui, Narasimhan, Sridhar, and WU, D. J.
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC sourcing ,PASS (Information retrieval system) ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,DELEGATION of authority ,BUSINESS communication ,INDUSTRIAL procurement - Abstract
Strategic sourcing, defined as a firm's key business process to identify, evaluate, configure, and negotiate purchases in important spend categories while managing long-term supplier relationships, is playing a significant role in sourcing strategies. The adoption of e-sourcing, defined as the use of business software (for example, using application service providers to conduct online procurement auctions) to automate or augment the aforementioned key business process, has been growing rapidly in recent years. One often-cited benefit of e-sourcing is the predicted savings, which is appealing, given the increasing pressure on cost competitiveness faced by firms. Using queuing techniques, this paper develops an economic model that captures fundamental trade-offs in a firm's e-sourcing business process as characterized by communication complexity, frequency of use, and cost of delay. This allows comparisons of two widely adopted structures for e-sourcing; the centralized structure versus the decentralized structure. Conditions under which the centralized structure is favored over the decentralized structure and vice versa are identified and illustrated with numerical examples and case evidence. These findings are robust in other settings. The paper concludes with a discussion of managerial implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Family Ties that Bind: Decentralisation, Local Elites and the Provincial Administrative Organisations in Thailand.
- Author
-
Nishizaki, Yoshinori
- Subjects
ELITE (Social sciences) ,DECENTRALIZATION in management - Abstract
Growing rapidly before the early 2000s, literature on provincial Thai politics has dwindled in recent years. This article makes a small attempt to redress this trend by highlighting one distinctive yet understudied emerging electoral dynamics in provincial Thailand. Specifically, drawing mainly on Thai-language primary sources, this paper shows that in the majority of Thailand’s provinces, the Provincial Administrative Organisation, an electoral institution that has received an unprecedented amount of state funding in the post-1997 age of decentralisation, has enabled influential political families to retain and even increase their power. As political and economic power has been decentralised from Bangkok, it has ironically been centralised in the hands of a limited number of oligarchic provincial elites. This phenomenon is not an historical aberration; rather, it should be viewed as one manifestation or product of Thailand’s enduring patrimonial culture, in which public officeholders’ positions are regarded as an extension of their personal or familial property. I conclude by discussing the Thai case theoretically and comparatively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Implications of the 7th NFC Award on Health Services in Pakistan.
- Author
-
Khan, Muhammad Bakhtiar, Malik, Zilakat Khan, and Malik, Wasim Shahid
- Subjects
HEALTH care industry ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,HEALTH status indicators ,SUBNATIONAL governments ,INFANT mortality - Abstract
Fiscal decentralization is aimed to improve Public Services Delivery as the subnational governments get control of additional revenue and expenditures responsibilities and are in a better position to provide basic services to the local people. The 7th NFC Award is considered as a big step toward fiscal federalism wherein the criteria for horizontal and vertical distribution of resources has been changed to accommodate major demands of the federating units. This research paper has been an attempt to identify that to what extent the new fiscal arrangements under the 7th NFC Award has been successful to improve health services delivery in Pakistan. For this study data on various health indicators has been collected for the period 2001 to 2019 divided into two groups i.e., pre 7th NFC period (2001 to 2010) and post 7th NFC Award period (2011 to 2019). To identify the impact of 7th NFC Award on health services delivery in Pakistan various variables were selected including Infant Mortality, Under Five Years' Mortality, Life Expectancy at Birth and Health Expenditures (%GDP) as dependent or endogenous variables at national level whereas for comparison at provincial level Life expectancy at birth and Under Five Years mortality were used as dependent variables. The variables were tested at the national level as well as the provincial level and interprovincial comparison was also performed. For the analysis purpose different techniques for trend analysis were applied including the Chow breakpoint test, recursive coefficient, Wald-Coefficient Restriction test, Equality of Variance test, trend estimates, Durbin Watson Test and Forecast analysis. Additionally, the Difference-in-Difference approach was also applied to compare other provinces as treatment groups i.e., Sindh, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Baluchistan with Punjab as a control group. The results suggest health indicators have responded positively to the additional funds' transfer and Life expectancy at birth, Infant mortality and Under Five years' mortality have improved at national level. Life expectancy and under five years' mortality has generally improved in all provinces except for life expectancy in KP. While comparing the performance of other provinces with Punjab it is found that life expectancy at birth, infant mortality and Under Five years' mortality have improved in Sindh and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa while Baluchistan did not improve health indicators in comparison to Punjab. However, to realize further benefits of the fiscal decentralization it is suggested that additional fund transfer is not a sufficient factor to bring change and should be complemented by administrative and legislative actions on part of the government. Innovations and the role of the private sector are crucial in improving public services delivery in health sector. Moreover, the capacity of the government machinery and the ability to develop plans and strategies is important to realize the benefits of the fiscal decentralization by the provinces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Strategically decentralise when encroaching on a dominant supplier.
- Author
-
Li, Gendao and Zhou, Yu
- Subjects
DECENTRALIZATION in management ,STRATEGIC planning ,SUPPLIERS ,ASSEMBLY line methods ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,DECISION making - Abstract
A manufacturer may encroach on his suppliers by developing substitutable components. In the presence of encroachment, the manufacturer could assemble products using (high-end) components purchased from the supplier, and assemble products using (low-end) components produced in-house. Thus, the manufacturer must deliberate on how to manage the expanded organisation consisting of competing product divisions. In this paper, we examine the quintessential organisational structure decision – the centralisation versus decentralisation choice – from the perspective of the manufacturer. Our model assumes that the supplier is a dominant player, moving first by pricing the high-end component, and consumers have a higher willingness-to-pay of the product containing the high-end component. In such a context, we find that the manufacturer may encroach on the supplier even if producing the low-end component costs more than producing the high-end one. The supplier should strategically price to deter or accommodate downstream encroachment contingent on the manufacturer’s organisational structure decision. If the unit cost of low-end components is high enough, product-based decentralisation is preferred to centralisation due to the supplier’s lower wholesale price. Furthermore, the manufacturer’s strategic decentralisation always hurts the supplier, always benefits the customers and could benefit or hurt the entire supply chain under certain conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Implementation of Participatory Forest Management in Kenya: A Case Study of Karima Forest.
- Author
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Thygesen, S.H., Løber, T., Skensved, E.M., and Hansen, C.P.
- Subjects
FOREST management ,RIGHTS ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,FORESTS & forestry ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
Copyright of International Forestry Review is the property of Commonwealth Forestry Association and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Development paradigms in the institutional configuration of vocational education and training in Chile (1964-2005).
- Author
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Valiente, Oscar, Sepúlveda, Leandro, and Zancajo, Adrián
- Subjects
VOCATIONAL education ,COMPARATIVE education ,CONSTRUCTIVISM (Education) ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,HISTORICAL institutionalism (Sociology) ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Mainstream approaches in comparative education have paid more attention to trends in donors' priorities than to policy processes in recipient countries, overlooking the agency of national governments in the institutional configuration of vocational education and training (VET) in developing contexts. Drawing on constructivist political economy and historical institutionalist frameworks, the paper analyses the role played by global development paradigms and ideas in the VET policy reforms adopted in Chile during the period between 1964 and 2005. The study shows how the selective adoption of international development ideas in Chile was mediated by the ideological orientation of national government administrations in each historical period. It also shows how the main goals of VET policies evolved as the economy tertiarised and the demand for education grew among lower social classes. Finally, the paper identifies the military dictatorship as a path-shaping moment in the institutional configuration of VET in Chile, as it was able to impose a radical transformation of the system from central planning to decentralised market competition. This profound transformation generated institutional path-dependencies that restricted the capacity of future democratic governments to reverse the market model in VET. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Impact of citizen participation on the tourism development of a region: case of Kabyle villages, Bejaia.
- Author
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Sonia, Alili and Zeineddine, Guenadez
- Subjects
POLITICAL participation ,REGIONAL development ,TOURISM economics ,DECENTRALIZATION in management - Abstract
Kabylia is a region of Algeria located on a mountainous part of the Mediterranean basin; it has a vernacular heritage with recognized socio-cultural, environmental and architectural qualities. Thanks to its assets, the development of tourism in the region will bring economic dynamism to the region. These villages are home to associations that used to exist under other names (Thajmaat, village committees). In this paper, we examine the real contribution of village associations to village tourism and the importance that citizen participation can have in a decentralized decision-making scheme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Centralization and decentralization of public procurement: Analysis for the role of General Authority for Governmental Services (GAGS) in Egypt.
- Author
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Aboelazm, Karem Sayed and Afandy, Attia
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT purchasing ,DECENTRALIZATION in government ,SOCIAL impact ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,MODEL theory - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to present and analyze the different concepts of centralized and decentralized procurement methods; identify the advantages and disadvantages of each method and the two methods of public procurement applied in the Arab Republic of Egypt in an attempt to overcome the disadvantages of the Egyptian system; and introduce a new framework for government procurement in Egypt. Design/methodology/approach: The descriptive approach was used in the framework of the presentation and analysis of the concepts of centralized public procurement and decentralized public procurement. The comparative approach was used for presenting some of the experiences of countries in using public procurement methods. The legal approach was also used in the analysis of the legal frameworks governing the public procurement methods in the Arab Republic of Egypt. In addition, the case study methodology was used to study the role of the General Authority for Governmental Services in Egypt in the centralized public procurement processes. Findings: This paper attempts to find the ideal method of public procurement in general and what is the method to be followed in the Egyptian case through the data presented and analysis of the Egyptian public procurement system. Research limitations/implications: This paper attempts to present a model or a theory on how to determine the public procurement methods that should be used in a given country and give sufficient flexibility for the conformity between the two methods upon application depending on the ecological factors of each country. Practical implications: This paper contributes to the development of the public procurement method in the Arab Republic of Egypt by showing the gap between the use of the centralized approach and the decentralized approach at all levels and providing solutions to bridge this gap. Social implications: This paper provides implications to reduce corruption, increase transparency and give the opportunity to the largest number of private shareholders to participate in public procurement. Originality/value: Although there is some literature on centralized and decentralized public procurement, there is a lack or scarcity of research and academic articles on this subject (Patrucco et al., 2017). This paper attempted to do so by filling this gap in this area of research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Restructuring Revisited Part 1: Competition in Electricity Distribution Systems.
- Author
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Burger, Scott P., Jenkins, Jesse D., Batlle, Carlos, and Pérez-Arriaga, Ignacio J.
- Subjects
ELECTRIC power distribution ,POWER resources ,ELECTRIC utilities ,ELECTRIC power transmission ,DECENTRALIZATION in management - Abstract
This paper addresses the implications of the emergence of distributed energy resources (DERs) for competition in the electricity distribution systems. The regulations on industry structures in place today were designed in an era characterized by centralized resources and relatively price inelastic demand. In light of the decentralization of the power sector, regulators and policy makers must carefully reconsider how industry structure at the distribution level affects competition, market development, and cost efficiency. We analyze the economic characteristics of distribution network owners and operators, DER owners, and aggregators and retailers. We translate the foundational theories in industrial organization and the lessons learned during the previous wave of power system restructuring to the modern context to provide insight into three questions. First, should distribution system operations be separated from distribution network ownership in order to ensure the neutrality of the DSO role? Second, should DNOs be allowed to own and operate DERs, or should DER ownership be left exclusively to competitive actors? Third, does the emergence of DERs necessitate a reconsideration of the role of competition in the provision of aggregation services such as retailing? This paper is the first part of a two-part series on competition and coordination in rapidly evolving electricity distribution systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Logistics as a Science - Central Research Questions in the Era of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
- Author
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Delfmann, W., Hompel, M. ten, Kersten, W., Schmidt, T., and Stölzle, W.
- Subjects
INDUSTRY 4.0 ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,LOGISTICS ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,DIGITIZATION - Abstract
Fourth Industrial Revolution or Industry 4.0 denotes a fundamental change on how production and business in general is perceived and organized. This paper questions the role of logistics within this context and raises a claim for a central role in future. It is a revision of a current position of the Scientific Advisory Board of Bundesvereinigung Logistik (BVL). Based on the insight that Logistics 4.0 is a crucial element for the implementation of Industry 4.0 three hypotheses are derived. In further elaboration, the paper introduces a total of 11 key research questions that are of central importance to the research community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Changing Authority Patterns: A Cultural Perspective.
- Author
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Heller, Trudy
- Subjects
DECENTRALIZATION in management ,SUPERIOR-subordinate relationship ,EMPLOYEE participation in management ,SOCIAL change ,LOCUS of control ,POWER (Social sciences) ,INFLUENCE ,SOCIAL responsibility of business ,INDUSTRIAL management & society ,INTERORGANIZATIONAL relations - Abstract
This paper focuses on the theme of "loss of authority" as it appears in the management literature. Drawing on longitudinal and descriptive studies, the paper discusses the "loss" to both organizations and the leaders who represent them. The treatment of this theme is contrasted with the perspective provided by a model of cultural change as a process of loss and substitution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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