3,105 results
Search Results
2. Will the Levelling Up White Paper (LUWP) drive reform of national innovation policy and practice?
- Author
-
Marlow, David
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,REFORMS ,INVESTMENT policy ,ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
The Levelling Up White Paper (LUWP) is intended to drive local economic growth and development, particularly in left-behind places. It proposes policies and investments in innovation infrastructure and services as an explicit mission and key component of the LU reform agenda. This paper, however, suggests that, without systemic behaviour and culture change in national innovation institutes and their funders, the LUWP will produce few if any results of game-changing significance. Based on a project to explore how a Research Council and one of its core funded institutes should improve local impact and prepare for the LUWP, the paper explores practical changes that need to be considered to make LUWP place-based innovation ambitions a reality. It discusses the structures and processes that national institutes and programmes might need to transition from interventions that have local impacts incidentally by accident of where they are taking place, to purposeful place-based growth and development. It then suggests the capabilities required to deliver this well – which has major implications for innovation funders. The LUWP's good intentions for more impactful place-based innovation requires new tools and techniques, experimentation and learning-by-doing, and proper resourcing – robustly tested and evaluated by Local Economy research and practitioner communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. COVID-19 Response of the Journal Public Health Reports (PHR), March 2020–March 2023.
- Author
-
Harada, Noelle M., Kuzmichev, Andrey, and Dean, Hazel D.
- Subjects
PUBLISHING ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,COVID-19 ,IMMUNIZATION ,SERIAL publications ,CONVALESCENCE ,PUBLIC health ,COMMUNITIES ,EMERGENCY management ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH equity ,CONTACT tracing ,INFORMATION needs ,AUTHORSHIP ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Objective: Publication science is the scholarly study of various aspects of the academic publishing process. Its applications to COVID-19 literature have been limited. Here, we describe COVID-19 submissions to, and resulting articles published by, the journal Public Health Reports (PHR), an important resource for US public health practice. Methods: We reviewed PHR 's COVID-19 submissions and articles published between March 27, 2020, and March 27, 2023. We coded each article for article type, author affiliation, the categories listed in PHR 's call for COVID-19 papers, and the public health emergency preparedness and response capabilities from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Results: During the study period, PHR received 1545 COVID-19 submissions and published 190 of those articles in a collection, COVID-19 Response. The COVID-19 Response collection included 102 research articles, 29 case study/practice articles, and 24 commentaries. The corresponding author of more than half (52.1%; n = 99) of the articles was affiliated with academia. By the categories listed in PHR 's call for COVID-19 papers, 51 articles addressed health disparities, 38 addressed public health surveillance, and 34 addressed COVID-19 vaccination. By the CDC public health emergency preparedness and response capabilities, 87 articles addressed public health surveillance and epidemiologic investigation, 38 addressed community preparedness, and 32 addressed community recovery. The percentage of articles focused on policy/law was higher early in the pandemic (2020-2021) than later (2022-2023) (9.5% vs <3.0%). During the latter period, articles largely focused on vaccination (12.8%) and contact tracing (10.6%). Conclusions: Articles published in PHR 's COVID-19 Response collection covered a broad range of topics and were authored by contributors from diverse organizations. Our characterization of the COVID-19 output of a representative US public health practice journal can help academic publishing better address informational needs of public health responders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Preparation of the Governance White Paper.
- Author
-
Sloat, Amanda
- Subjects
POLICY sciences ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The European Commission's White Paper on Governance initiated a Europe-wide debate about the principles and practices of good policymaking. This article, which draws from the author's work with the team that prepared the White Paper, provides a first-hand examination of how the document was produced. Following a discussion about the meaning of governance, the article focuses on the timeline of events, the consultation procedures, and some of the challenges (linguistic, practical, and political) that arose. It concludes by placing the governance debate in the context of the ongoing European Convention and 2004 IGC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Rhetorical pedagogy: Teaching students to write a stylistics paper.
- Author
-
Burke, Michael
- Subjects
- *
PROCEDURE manuals , *LINGUOSTYLISTICS , *GOVERNMENT policy , *RHETORICAL theory , *RHETORICAL criticism , *STANDARD operating procedure - Abstract
How can we help our students to think clearly and plan wisely so that they can write better stylistics papers? This article evaluates a set of rhetorical pedagogical guidelines that I made for my own undergraduate stylistics students in an attempt to address this question. The article primarily reproduces the guidelines I designed, but also a questionnaire that I drew up, and, crucially, reports the responses of the subjects in that questionnaire. It is hoped that such data might lead to better testing methods and ultimately an improved set of stylistics guidelines so that students can be empowered to perform better, with increased confidence and motivation, in the undergraduate stylistics classroom. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A tale of two White Papers.
- Author
-
Race, David G.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL efficiency , *LEARNING disabilities , *GOVERNMENT policy , *CROSS-cultural differences - Abstract
Cross-cultural differences in governance and policies for learning disability services are of interest. This article focuses on two UK government policy documents issued in 1971 and 2001. Their context, creation, principles, proposals and proposed implementation are examined, and lessons are drawn for an international audience as to the changing nature of services in the UK. The analysis reveals a move from a detailed and prescriptive policy in 1971, largely defined by professionals and bureaucrats, and aimed primarily at families with a disabled member, to statements of broad principles in 2001, devised in consultation with and aimed at a range of groups, including disabled people themselves. The article acknowledges progress in individual rights and choices for people with learning disabilities, but raises doubts about how significant this is in achieving a qualitative improvement in their lives. Some of these doubts relate to the governance process itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Evaluability Assessments: Reflections on a review of the literature.
- Author
-
Davies, Rick and Payne, Lina
- Subjects
WORKING papers ,GENDER differences (Psychology) ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
In 2012 the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (DFID) funded a review of the literature on Evaluability Assessments, which was undertaken by Rick Davies. Although the review focused on practical guidance Evaluability Assessments are not unproblematic. Evaluability Assessments involve an additional layer of cost and procedure. The diversity of evaluation approaches is a challenge to any categorical judgement about evaluability. The reach of an evaluability assessment can become over-extended. Evaluability questions asked of individual projects may not be so easily applied to larger portfolios of projects. The purpose of this article is to give more attention to the problematic aspects of Evaluability Assessments. In doing so it does not seek to revise the broad conclusions of the Working Paper, which unambiguously encouraged the wider use of Evaluability Assessments. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. "Lien On Me": State Policy Innovation in Response to Paper Terrorism.
- Author
-
Chamberlain, Robert and Haider-Markel, Donald P.
- Subjects
- *
COUNTERTERRORISM , *GOVERNMENT policy , *STATE regulation , *STATE governments , *TERRORISM , *POLITICAL science - Abstract
Within the current context of state governments searching for roles in the response to terrorism, we explore the nature of state policy response to recent domestic threats to government operations. We employ a general model of state diffusion of innovative policies in an effort to understand state adoption of laws against the use of frivolous liens. The use of such liens by right-wing Patriot groups grew in the 1990s, leading us to focus on key issues related to policy diffusion—the extent of the problem or threat, and the characteristics of regional response. To test specific hypotheses we use Event History Analysis on a state-level dataset from 1995 to 1999. Our results suggest that state adoption of lien laws is mostly driven by regional forces, including the regional threat posed by Patriot groups and the adoption of lien laws by other states in the region, rather than national forces or factors internal to a state. We conclude that previous research has been too limited in its conceptualization of regional influences and that these same forces will likely drive future state-level response to the threat of terrorism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Policy Advocacy and Nursing Organizations: A Scoping Review.
- Author
-
Chiu, Patrick, Cummings, Greta G., Thorne, Sally, and Schick-Makaroff, Kara
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,CINAHL database ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,GOVERNMENT policy ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,NURSES' associations ,LOBBYING - Abstract
Policy advocacy is a fundamental component of nursing's social mandate. While it has become a core function of nursing organizations across the globe, the discourse around advocacy has focused largely on the responsibilities and accountabilities of individual nurses, with little attention to the policy advocacy work undertaken by nursing organizations. To strengthen this critical function, an understanding of the extant literature is needed to identify areas that require further research. We conducted a scoping review to examine the nature, extent, and range of scholarly work focused on nursing organizations and policy advocacy. A systematic search of six databases produced 4,731 papers and 68 were included for analysis and synthesis. Findings suggest that the literature has been increasing over the years, is largely non-empirical, and covers a broad range of topics ranging from the role and purpose of nursing organizations in policy advocacy, the identity of nursing organizations, the development and process of policy advocacy initiatives, the policy advocacy products of nursing organizations, and the impact and evaluation of organizations' policy advocacy work. Based on the review, we identify several research gaps and propose areas for further research to strengthen the influence and impact of this critical function undertaken by nursing organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. “Paper Abuse”: When All Else Fails, Batterers Use Procedural Stalking.
- Author
-
Miller, Susan L. and Smolter, Nicole L.
- Subjects
INTIMATE partner violence -- Law & legislation ,ABUSED women ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,COURTS ,CRIMINALS ,CUSTODY of children ,INTERVIEWING ,LEGAL procedure ,RESEARCH ,STALKING ,QUALITATIVE research ,GOVERNMENT policy ,NARRATIVES - Abstract
Using data from in-depth interviews with women who have exited violent relationships, attorneys, and practitioners/policy specialists, this research note explores the continuation of control as women encounter “paper abuse.” The barrage of men’s frivolous lawsuits, false reports of child abuse, and other system-related manipulations exerts power, forces contact, and financially burdens their ex-partners. Although these acts are not new, the significance of this continuing abuse has not been fully explored by researchers. Yet attorneys and practitioners recognize the need for better documentation to strengthen protections for women still forced to contend with their former batterers. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Trash or Recycle? How Product Distortion Leads to Categorization Error During Disposal.
- Author
-
Trudel, Remi, Argo, Jennifer J., and Meng, Matthew D.
- Subjects
WASTE management ,LANDFILLS ,HAZARDOUS wastes ,RECYCLABLE material ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
Much of what ends up in our landfills is recyclable material, exposing the urgent need to understand the psychological processes behind recycling behavior. Results from four studies suggest that consumers often trash well-known recyclable products due to the product being erroneously categorized as trash after it has been distorted (e.g., paper after it has been cut, torn, or crumpled). However, this categorization error can be somewhat mitigated by the presence of signage depicting the different distorted forms the recyclable product can take. Through prompting, consumers are able to correctly categorize a recyclable product when disposing of it, regardless of the level of distortion. These results provide an explanation for, and potential solution to, the issue of recyclable materials making their way into our landfills every day. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Collective Housing Subsidies: A Public Policy Proposal for Sustainability.
- Author
-
Rodríguez-Reyes, Luis Raúl and Cortés Lara, Mara Alejandra
- Subjects
HOUSING subsidies ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ECOLOGICAL houses ,COMMUNITY housing ,MARKETING - Abstract
One way in which governments foster sustainable homebuilding and housing is by subsidizing single homes' investment in sustainability technologies. The problem with these programs is that they incentivize inefficient investment by supporting technologies that make technical and economic sense on a small scale. Furthermore, this arrangement constitutes a flawed marketing system, producing a limited impact on global well-being and sustainability in the long term, as it rules out more efficient sustainability technologies. This paper addresses these shortcomings by designing a public policy proposal based on a contract between the government and homeowners that incentivizes the adoption of collective sustainable technologies, changing the marketing system with a shift in the behavior of a dominant actor, the government. Results indicate that an equilibrium in which the homeowners choose to participate in the new collective program in exchange for a subsidy is feasible and stable. Moreover, the generalization of the proposed program may generate a new way to incentivize the more efficient use of sustainable home technologies in the long run. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Dynamics of Partisan Competition for Legislative Majorities in the U.S. House & Senate, 1959–2020.
- Author
-
Algara, Carlos
- Subjects
ELECTIONS ,PUBLIC opinion ,REFERENDUM ,POPULAR vote ,GOVERNMENT policy ,BALLOTS - Abstract
What drives partisan competition over the pursuit of legislative majorities in contemporary congressional elections? While conventional wisdom suggests that the chances of a legislative majority is largely predicated on the public's ideological policy preferences or national standing of the president, there is little work assessing the dynamics of partisan competition over the course of the electoral cycle. Leveraging over 60 years of new generic congressional ballot data measuring the monthly preference of the mass public's partisan presence for the congressional majority, this paper finds that partisan competition for the majority largely centers on the national policy mood and the public perception of presidential performance rather than partisan conflict. This paper validates the importance of these findings relating to partisan competition for the legislative majority by showing that this electoral competition plays a significant role in predicting the national normal popular vote and partisan seat turnover from 1960 to 2020. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Motivating people to adopt electricity management system based on push–pull–mooring model.
- Author
-
Ho, Chien-Wei
- Subjects
VALUE (Economics) ,EVIDENCE gaps ,PERSONAL belongings ,CITIZENS ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ELECTRICITY - Abstract
With growing concerns about power and environment issues, smart grid technology, such as meter data management systems, can be viewed as a great solution to handle issues of the environment and energy efficiency. Based on the push–pull–mooring (PPM) model, this research views dissatisfaction, personal innovativeness, information quality, locatability, economic benefits, and perceived value as predictors to examine their impact on switch intention to an electricity management system. The analysis results display that dissatisfaction has no significant effect on switch intention. As a mooring variable, personal innovativeness not only influences switch intention positively, but also moderates the relationship between perceived value and switch intention. Moreover, through perceived value, locatability and economic benefits influence switch intention positively. This research fills the gap in government policies as well as energy companies and provides ponderable suggestions if a government and energy companies would like to change citizens' behavior from paper-based bill to electricity management system. The government and energy companies should not overlook the effect of personal innovativeness and perceived value and put more effort to publicize the advantages of locatability and economic benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. AI is Changing the World: Achieving the Promise, Minimizing the Peril.
- Author
-
Grewal, Dhruv, Guha, Abhijit, and Becker, Marc
- Subjects
ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,RESEARCH personnel ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HAZARDS ,DEDICATIONS - Abstract
Grewal, Guha, and Becker (2024; GGB) provided an initial position paper, outlining the promises and perils of AI, as well as three grand societal challenges linked to AI. Seven sets of researchers have provided insightful commentaries in response to GGB (2024), in efforts that introduce new themes or else challenge some of the initial claims. With this response paper, we summarize those commentaries, clarify points of agreement and contrast, and augment the themes in GGB (2024) based on the insights gained from the commentaries. Specifically, we present two additional grand societal challenges linked to AI, reflecting our continued dedication to broadening discussions about both the promises and the perils of AI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The Steel White Paper of 1973: An Idiographic Study in Public Policy Making.
- Author
-
Chapman, Richard A. and Cockerill, Tony
- Subjects
PUBLIC administration ,GOVERNMENT policy ,GOVERNMENT ownership ,MUNICIPAL corporations ,POLITICAL planning ,CONTRACT proposals ,STEEL industry - Abstract
In 1960 Professor William Robson, the leading specialist on the study of nationalized industry and public ownership, wrote: 'The real character of the relationship between Ministers and public corporations is only gradually becoming known to the public' (Robson, 1962: 142). It seems that advances in knowledge of this subject have been no more than modest in the past 50 years. This article is an idiographic study (Riggs, 1962; Chapman, 1966) intended to contribute to that advance. It is a study, in as much depth as possible, of the gestation of the 1973 White Paper on the Steel Industry and of the implementation of its main proposals. It contributes not only to an understanding of the British Steel Corporation but also to the history of a particularly significant development in policy-making and administration in the 1970s and later. The main sources for the study have been: government files in the Public Record Office (PRO) at the National Archives; published commentaries and analysis, both contemporary with the White Paper and later. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Working with Indigenous science(s) frameworks and methods: Challenging the ontological hegemony of 'western' science and the axiological biases of its practitioners.
- Author
-
Harriden, Kate
- Subjects
COLONIAL administration ,HEGEMONY ,INSTITUTIONAL care ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SCIENTIFIC method - Abstract
Globally, Indigenous scientific frameworks and methods have been damaged and derided by 'western' science, a strategy of the colonial project. Contemporary Australia is no exception, with the transmission of the suite of scientific values and practices formed over millennia in and for this place being actively prevented by legislation, government policies and colonial opprobrium. This paper shows how two crucial Indigenous science(s) frameworks, used alongside two Indigenous research methods, can transform hegemonic scientific research and fieldwork priorities and practices. This transformation occurs because of the focus of each framework. The first, centring country, requires decentring the human to bring forth the needs of the web of relationships that is country. The second framework, relational accountability, is about tending to a broad range of relationships, are often kin-based and including the other-than-human, with yindyamarra (or local equivalent). Relational accountability also offers an inbuilt ethic of care superior to institutional ethics protocols. By describing these frameworks and methods and discussing how and when to use them, this paper supports their greater understanding and more widespread use, particularly by Indigenous practitioners, so we may continue to (re)build what colonisation has damaged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Outstanding Paper Award of 2019.
- Author
-
Wang, Shu, Merriman, David, and Chaloupka, Frank
- Subjects
STAMP duties ,PUBLIC finance ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CIGARETTE tax ,TAX rates - Abstract
The Editorial Board of I Public Finance Review i ( I PFR i ) is delighted to announce that Shu Wang, David Merriman, and Frank Chaloupka are the recipients of the annual "Outstanding Paper Award", awarded among manuscripts published in I PFR i in the year 2019. Dr. Wang, Dr. Merriman, and Dr. Chaloupka contribute to this literature by constructing and leveraging a national U.S. sample of littered cigarette packs that have potentially identifying tax-jurisdictional information on the packs (tax stamps). However, Dr. Wang, Dr. Merriman, and Dr. Chaloupka also find that although increased noncompliance is associated with higher cigarette tax rates, the increased noncompliance is still low enough such that total tax revenues collected by jurisdictions can increase with increases in tax rates. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The social policy preferences of EU employers' organizations: An exploratory analysis.
- Author
-
Guardiancich, Igor, Terlizzi, Andrea, and Natali, David
- Subjects
SOCIAL policy ,PUBLIC welfare policy ,COST control ,GOVERNMENT policy ,EMPLOYERS ,WELFARE state ,POWER resources - Abstract
Despite decades of European social dialogue, little is known about the social policy preferences of EU employers' organizations (EEOs). Building on the literature on industrial relations and the role of business in welfare state development, this article explores the preferences of key EEOs (BusinessEurope, SGI Europe and SMEunited) in vocational education and training (VET), active and passive labour market policies, pensions and work–family reconciliation. Software-based qualitative content analysis of 75 position papers and 19 joint declarations, triangulated with four elite semi-structured interviews, is employed to assess employers' preferences along four national and two European dimensions. Largely in line with the power resources theory, EEOs favour cost containment and social investment, by strengthening labour market flexicurity and reducing skills mismatches through VET. Conflicting logics of membership and influence guide the actions of EEOs: members are wary of legislation impinging on national social policy traditions; yet, greater European assertiveness makes lobbying efforts unavoidable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Analyzing the Importance of the Determinants of Public Debt and Its Policy Implications: A Survey of Literature.
- Author
-
Cifuentes-Faura, Javier and Simionescu, Mihaela
- Subjects
PUBLIC debts ,GOVERNMENT policy ,FISCAL policy ,TAX collection ,INFRASTRUCTURE funds ,PUBLIC policy (Law) - Abstract
Public debt is a key issue for government institutions, both because of the amount of its revenues, which partly compensate for the possible shortfall in tax collection, and because it is an essential instrument of fiscal policy for the government. This paper reviews the literature on the determinants of public debt in order to identify the explanatory variables of public debt according to the main theoretical and empirical studies. This work will support policy makers who have to obtain financial resources to cover essential and very necessary expenditures nowadays, such as health, education, or infrastructure investment, by controlling debt levels and fiscal pressure. The main policy implication we can derive from these results is that governments should use some of these instruments to reduce general government debt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. From Metropolitanization to Megaregionalization: Intentionality in the Urban Restructuring of Java's North Coast, Indonesia.
- Author
-
Hudalah, Delik, Octifanny, Yustina, Talitha, Tessa, Firman, Tommy, and Phelps, Nicholas A.
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,CENTRAL economic planning ,REGIONAL planning ,COASTS ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Planning Education & Research is the property of Sage Publications Inc. 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
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Advance directives need full legal status in persons with dementia.
- Author
-
Hart, Dean Evan
- Subjects
ADVANCE directives (Medical care) -- Law & legislation ,PATIENT autonomy ,POLICY sciences ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,GOVERNMENT policy ,BENEVOLENCE ,DIGNITY ,BIOETHICS ,ETHICS ,INDIVIDUALITY ,PUBLIC health ,ADVANCE directives (Medical care) ,DEMENTIA patients ,AUTHORITY - Abstract
Currently, in the United States, there is no legal obligation for medical professionals or civil courts to uphold patients' Advance Directives (ADs) regarding end-of-life care. The applicability and standing of ADs prepared by Alzheimer's patients is a persistent issue in bioethics. Those who argue against giving ADs full status take two main approaches: (1) appealing to beneficence on behalf of the Alzheimer's patient and (2) claiming that there is no longer any personal equivalence between the AD's creator and the subject of the AD. In this paper, I present profound arguments against both approaches. Firstly, I argue that the principle of beneficence cannot apply in the case of Alzheimer's patients, and, secondly, that the moral and legal authority of the AD need not depend on strict equivalence of personal identity. I conclude by arguing that valid ADs protect the dignity and autonomy of Alzheimer's patients and that, therefore, there are moral obligations to uphold ADs which should be reflected in public policy and legislation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The purpose of primary physical education: The views of teacher educators.
- Author
-
Jess, Mike, Parker, Melissa, Carse, Nicola, Douglass, Andrew, Keay, Jeanne, Martinez Alvarez, Lucio, Murray, Alison, Pearson, Julie, Randall, Vicky, and Sweeney, Tony
- Subjects
PHYSICAL education (Primary) ,TEACHER educators ,VIGNETTES (Teaching technique) ,SOCIAL learning ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper reports on the first phase of a longitudinal project investigating the perceived purposes that different stakeholders have for primary physical education (PE). In the study, the views of 19 teacher educators from seven countries across Europe were sought. While teacher educators may have some influence across the layers of an education system, little is known about this stakeholder group and their views about primary PE. Analysis of focus group conversations depicts that, while the teacher educators come from a wide range of contexts, their views on the purposes of primary PE were more similar than different. With primary PE in danger of disconnecting into different schools of thought, this finding is important because it suggests that more coherent and connected approaches have the potential to be developed. In line with most government policies from the seven countries, similarities focused on both an educational and outward-looking view of primary PE. Significantly, while the teacher educators recognised the key role of physical learning in primary PE, they also highlighted how children's social, emotional, and cognitive learning form part of an integrated view of primary PE. Teacher educators recognised the importance of primary PE expanding beyond the hall/gymnasium and into classroom, school, and community settings. However, some concerns were voiced about the influence of outsourcing and sport agendas that currently dominate. The views of these teacher educators offer a useful starting point for further investigation, particularly as they present the purposes of primary PE from both an integrated and educational perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Capital and Crime–Corruption Nexus in the Shadow of the Law: A Theoretical Analysis of Public Policy.
- Author
-
Khan, Rohan Kanti, Mahata, Sushobhan, and Nag, Ranjanendra Narayan
- Subjects
ORGANIZED crime ,POLITICAL corruption ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CAPITAL investments ,PUBLIC sector - Abstract
Corruption is a symptom of wider political dynamics intertwined with sectors prone to criminal activities. This arises due to the laxity of legal enforcement or a dysfunctional political system. This paper analytically demonstrates the nexus between organized crime and corruption in the presence of the public sector. The relevant questions at this juncture are: (i) How does capital investment in the industrial sectors affect the crime–corruption nexus? (ii) Why a more stringent law-and-order enforcement may produce counterproductive outcomes? and (iii) Whether the creation of alternative income opportunities in the legally approved sectors by the government will lower corruption and decriminalize society? What we will try to show is that when corruption becomes necessary to sustain the criminal sector, capital expansion and deterrence policy augment crime and corruption. This crucially depends on a multitude of general equilibrium factors including the labor relocation effect, capital relocation effect, and factor intensity of sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Patient and family perspectives on rural palliative care models: A systematic review and meta-synthesis.
- Author
-
Marshall, Claire, Virdun, Claudia, and Phillips, Jane L.
- Subjects
PALLIATIVE treatment ,GOVERNMENT policy ,QUALITATIVE research ,MEDICAL care ,META-analysis ,COMMUNITIES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,FAMILY attitudes ,RURAL health services ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,THEMATIC analysis ,RURAL population ,RURAL conditions ,FAMILY support ,DATA analysis software ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,RURAL nursing - Abstract
Background: Almost half the world's population lives in rural areas. How best to provide palliative care to rural populations is unclear. Privileging rural patient and family voices about their experiences of receiving care delivered via rural palliative care models is necessary. Aim: To identify the key palliative care elements that rural patients with palliative care needs and their families perceive to be critical to receiving the care and support they need to live well. Design and Data Sources: A systematic review and meta-synthesis registered with Prospero (CRD42020154273). Three databases were searched in June 2024. Raw qualitative data were extracted and analysed using Thomas and Harden's three-stage thematic synthesis methodology. Findings reported according to the PRISMA statement. Results: Of the 10,834 identified papers, 11 met the inclusion criteria. Meta-synthesis of extracted, raw quotes (n = 209) revealed three major themes: (1) Honouring the patient's existing relationship with their General Practitioner (GP); (2) strategically timed access to specialist services, clinicians and equipment is critical; and (3) a need to feel safe, prepared and supported. Conclusion: The strategic inclusion of specialists alongside primary care providers is integral to optimising rural palliative care models. General Practioners are central to these models, through being embedded in their communities and as the conduit to specialist palliative care services. Rural palliative care patients and families value responsive care, trajectory signposting, effective communication, 24/7 support and recognise the value of virtual health. Globally, positive public policy and funding is critical to ensuring access to GP-led, specialist-supported, rural palliative care models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Toward a Sociology of Plasma Products.
- Author
-
Holloway, Kelly and Grundy, Quinn
- Subjects
BLOOD testing ,RED blood cell transfusion ,HEALTH services accessibility ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,BLOOD collection ,BIOETHICS ,BLOOD plasma ,SOCIOLOGY ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Over the past 20 years, plasma has become a medical treatment characterized as "liquid gold" to signal its lifesaving potential. Through a manufacturing process termed fractionation, plasma, collected through blood donation, is turned into Plasma Derived Medical Products (PDMPs). The World Health Organization (WHO) has underlined the importance of PDMPs for global health care, including a number of PDMPs on the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines. The process of collecting plasma from a donor, manufacturing plasma derived treatments, and distributing those treatments globally requires the coordination of multiple social actors operating in different social, political and economic contexts, but has received little attention in scholarly literature on public policy or the social sciences. This paper will introduce a set of analytic questions and concepts that can direct a sociology of plasma products. We build on the behavioral turn in the policy sciences to identify relevant policy questions emerging from this field and offer the analytic tools necessary to investigate how different social actors in this space make meaning of plasma. To do this, we will draw on key concepts in the sociology of health and illness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Tonic Immobility as a Defensive Trauma Response to Rape: Bridging Public Health and Law.
- Author
-
de Heer, Brooke A. and Jones, Lynn C.
- Subjects
PUBLIC health laws ,MOTOR ability ,FEAR ,SOCIAL justice ,SEX crimes ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DEFENSE mechanisms (Psychology) ,SEX offenders ,RAPE ,EMOTIONAL trauma ,CRIME victims ,NEUROBIOLOGY ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,LAW ,LEGISLATION - Abstract
There is widespread scientific evidence that validates tonic immobility (TI) as part of the trauma response in victims of rape, and criminal justice practitioners are increasingly trained in trauma-informed approaches. Yet, legal and policy definitions of consent do not fully recognize TI during the incident as evidence of nonconsent. Using a systematic review of U.S. law and policy regarding sexual violence and consent, this paper analyzes the substantial legal reform of rape law and definitions of consent, suggesting ways to further integrate TI into existing law and legal practices to improve public health approaches and justice responses for victims. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Editorial: Levelling up the United Kingdom? A useful mantra but too little substance or delivery?
- Author
-
Liddle, Joyce, Shutt, John, and Addidle, Gareth
- Subjects
APPRENTICESHIP programs ,NUMERACY ,GOVERNMENT policy ,REGIONAL economic disparities ,EQUALITY ,COMMUNITY development - Abstract
The commitment to community economic development has in fact been superficial in terms of financial commitments and the UK Community Renewal Fund has been only a bridging gap between the end of the EU funding regime and the start of the new UKSPF regime post-Brexit - it remains to be seen how the commitment to community economic development maintains itself. Levelling up, White Paper, inequality, north-south divide, left behind places, new funding regime, UKSPF Keywords: levelling up; White Paper; inequality; left behind places; new funding regime; UKSPF; north-south divide EN levelling up White Paper inequality left behind places new funding regime UKSPF north-south divide 3 12 10 06/24/22 20220201 NES 220201 Introduction At the time of writing (April 2022), globally, the effects of COVID 19 are still very real for the National Health Service, and other health services across the world; the Brexit aftermath continues to reverberate across Europe; and an energy crisis is looming in the wake of the on-going Ukrainian War. UKSPF is related to the government's 12 mission statements in the Levelling Up White Paper and local authorities are now to bring forward Investment plans for their allocations for the rest of 2022/3, to sit alongside the £4.8 billion in the Levelling up Fund and Round 2. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Inclusion of palliative care in health care policy for older people: A directed documentary analysis in 13 of the most rapidly ageing countries worldwide.
- Author
-
Pivodic, Lara, Smets, Tinne, Gott, Merryn, Sleeman, Katherine E, Arrue, Borja, Cardenas Turanzas, Marylou, Pechova, Karolina, Kodba Čeh, Hana, Lo, Tong Jen, Nakanishi, Miharu, Rhee, YongJoo, ten Koppel, Maud, Wilson, Donna M, and Van den Block, Lieve
- Subjects
COMMUNICATION ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CONTINUUM of care ,DOCUMENTATION ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,HEALTH policy ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,WORLD health ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HUMAN services programs - Abstract
Background: Palliative care is insufficiently integrated in the continuum of care for older people. It is unclear to what extent healthcare policy for older people includes elements of palliative care and thus supports its integration. Aim: (1) To develop a reference framework for identifying palliative care contents in policy documents; (2) to determine inclusion of palliative care in public policy documents on healthcare for older people in 13 rapidly ageing countries. Design: Directed documentary analysis of public policy documents (legislation, policies/strategies, guidelines, white papers) on healthcare for older people. Using existing literature, we developed a reference framework and data extraction form assessing 10 criteria of palliative care inclusion. Country experts identified documents and extracted data. Setting: Austria, Belgium, Canada, Czech Republic, England, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Singapore, Slovenia, South Korea, Spain. Results: Of 139 identified documents, 50 met inclusion criteria. The most frequently addressed palliative care elements were coordination and continuity of care (12 countries), communication and care planning, care for family, and ethical and legal aspects (11 countries). Documents in 10 countries explicitly mentioned palliative care, nine addressed symptom management, eight mentioned end-of-life care, and five referred to existing palliative care strategies (out of nine that had them). Conclusions: Health care policies for older people need revising to include reference to end-of-life care and dying and ensure linkage to existing national or regional palliative care strategies. The strong policy focus on care coordination and continuity in policies for older people is an opportunity window for palliative care advocacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Building an island of state capacity: How the UK state implemented the Thames Tideway Tunnel with market-based finance.
- Author
-
Findeisen, Francesco
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,INVESTMENT risk ,GOVERNMENT policy ,INDUSTRIAL capacity ,ISLANDS - Abstract
This article contributes to the literature on state capacity in financialized political economies by studying the market-based investment setting for the Thames Tideway Tunnel, a £4.2 billion sewer, built underneath central London to prevent raw sewage from spilling into the River Thames. Most analyses conclude that financial statecraft undermines state capacities, as it empowers finance and exposes states to uncontrollable risks. This article moves beyond these accounts by arguing that public policy officials engage with finance instrumentally, taking on risks to solve the governing challenges they face. It demonstrates that state action can build islands of state capacity with financial statecraft in fragmented policy environments. Based on expert interviews and documentary analysis, the article traces how the UK's Ministry of the Environment experimented with a policy instrument and used investment capacities from different levels of government, to implement the Thames Tideway Tunnel through institutional equity investment and share risks in the privatized and financialized environmental sector. The paper concludes that under the current conjuncture, financial statecraft will play an important role in addressing the climate crisis. Therefore, further comparative research is required to explore its normative paradox. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. China's pandemic-time public diplomacy in the Balkans and the challenge to the EU's regional leadership.
- Author
-
Ushkovska, Mare
- Subjects
DIPLOMACY ,GOVERNMENT policy ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,FOREIGN partnerships - Abstract
This paper explores how China's assistance to countries in the Western Balkans during the pandemic boosted their reputation in the region, through the case studies of Serbia, Macedonia, and Albania. The COVID-19 crisis has tested EU's reputation of solidarity and partnership to the Western Balkans, with Balkan political leaders accusing the bloc of selfishness due to its decision in 2020 to restrict exports of medical equipment to candidate states and the perceived neglect of the region during the vaccine distribution in early 2021. Simultaniously, China sent planes containing tonnes of medical supplies, respirators, medical personnel, and later vaccines, that would be received with great pomp and live media coverage, in a powerful public diplomacy and vaccine diplomacy offensive. This paper argues that this helped improve public opinion and reshape narratives on China in the Western Balkans. Still, attitudes vary between states, with Serbians having the most favourable views on China as a foreign partner. On the other hand, while public perceptions on China have seen a positive shift in Macedonia and Albania, this has not translated in a change in their pro-EU stance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Reconceptualizing users: The roles and activities of people as they engage with digital technologies.
- Author
-
Baskerville, Richard L. and Myers, Michael D.
- Subjects
INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,DIGITAL technology ,PROFESSIONALISM ,GOVERNMENT policy ,INFORMATION services - Abstract
The concept of the user has persisted in information systems research and practice since the field’s inception in the 1950s. However, the roles that people play and the activities they perform have changed considerably over time. People now engage with digital technologies for all kinds of activities and in all kinds of ways, including for both personal and professional purposes. Hence, the purpose of this paper is to reconceptualize the term “user.” We discuss the various activities that people engage in with digital technologies, the myriad roles they play, and an essential shift in what the term “user” means. Users might be active in shaping how a particular information system is used, they might be partners with an information system, they might be used by an information system, and they may spend sizable parts of their lives living essentially within information systems. We conclude by discussing the implications for the IS discipline of reconceptualizing the term “user.” [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Industrial policies, strategy and the UK's Levelling Up agenda.
- Author
-
Sunley, Peter, Harris, Jack L, Pike, Andy, Harris, Richard, Martin, Ron, and Evenhuis, Emil
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL policy ,INFRASTRUCTURE policy ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,GOVERNMENT policy ,COLUMNS - Abstract
In the context of the UK economy's slow and unbalanced growth, this paper discusses the degree to which recent Conservative Governments in the UK have moved towards the adoption of a strategic and coherent set of industrial policies to enhance economic performance across the country. It starts by outlining the priorities and principles of new forms of industrial strategy which emphasises the importance of cross-sectoral goals, intensive dialogue between government and the private sector, co-ordination between different policies and levels of government, directions to address societal and environmental challenges and the role of place-based policy making. The paper discusses the degree to which these principles have shaped, or been largely absent from, recent industrial policy development in the UK and particularly the interface between industrial and regional policies. It discusses the May Government's move to set up an Industrial Strategy with a place 'pillar' and the influence of a mission approach. It then reviews the Johnson's Government's 'Plan for Growth' industrial policy agenda, focussing on the recent Levelling Up White Paper and examines how far and in what ways it has embedded these reforming principles. It finds that despite reflecting some of these principles in its rhetoric, the current government programme has substituted innovation and infrastructure policies for an actual industrial strategy, and continues to rely mainly on a top-down and technologically driven type of approach. The agenda lacks the capacity to deliver its levelling up goals due to inadequate funding, an incomplete devolution agenda and insufficiently developed place-based capacities and policies. Future development needs to move the principles from rhetoric into industrial policy direction and design, and to remedy the continuing lack of local and regional collaboration and co-ordination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Why Digital Preservation Should Be Treated as Public Policy.
- Author
-
Silva, Wellington da
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,DIGITAL preservation ,INTERNET security ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
This persuasive position paper aims to discuss the public policy gaps in digital preservation identified by UNESCO and persuade the development of the current digital public policies. To evidence these gaps, the principal topics of digital public policies (digital strategy) from four countries were analyzed: Brazil, France, Spain, and the United Kingdom. The analysis evidence that these digital public policies are focused on the modernization of public administration and cybersecurity; they do not contemplate digital preservation. To support the position, current legislation in record management is indicated to connect the preservation of physical and digital documents. The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development is also used to persuade because digital preservation is an indispensable component of sustainable development. That is because today, large amounts of cultural heritage are created and only available digitally, and never "fixed" in a physical form, museums, archives, and libraries, also embarking on an epic journey to digitization and "no development is sustainable without considering culture." Digital culture heritage must be available for future generations, and only digital preservation can guarantee that; therefore, digital preservation must be treated as a public policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Political Advocacy: Psychology's Most Underutilized Resource.
- Author
-
Kelly, Jennifer F.
- Subjects
WORK ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,INSTITUTIONAL racism ,EDUCATION ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,PEOPLE of color ,SCIENCE ,PATIENT advocacy ,PSYCHOLOGY ,EARLY intervention (Education) ,CHILD development ,CRIMINAL justice system ,HEALTH equity ,POLITICAL participation - Abstract
In 2020, the American Psychological Association undertook the task of examining the deleterious effects of systemic racism on people of color in the United States. This extensive examination led to the passing of three historic resolutions in October 2021, by the APA Council of Representatives, including the resolution, Role of Psychology, and APA in Dismantling Systemic Racism Against People of Color in the United States. In the resolution, there was a focus on education, science, healthcare, work and economic opportunities, criminal and juvenile justice, early childhood development, and government and public policy. These resolutions set a foundation for the field in moving forward. To effectively address systemic racism, there must be dedication and deliberate action to address the policies, structures, and practices that contribute to inequities. The primary focus of this paper is advocacy; specifically, political advocacy for psychologists to address these policies and structures, in achieving the goals of dismantling systemic racism and creating a more equitable society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Advances in Research on Abused Women in China: Bibliometric Analysis by CiteSpace.
- Author
-
Han, Xiao and Wei, Dong
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of abused women ,PUBLISHING ,COMPUTER software ,MARRIAGE ,SOCIAL support ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,PRISONERS ,DOMESTIC violence ,BIBLIOGRAPHY ,CONFLICT (Psychology) ,BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
China has made remarkable progress in preventing and intervening in domestic violence against women. Scholars have reported on this development. Methodologically, this paper, which draws on 3362 references selected from the China National Knowledge Infrastructure, uses the bibliometric method to summarize the characteristics, evolution, and frontiers of key topics into research on abused women in China between 1993 and 2020. The paper has three key findings. (1) The volume of literature has grown continuously, but in three stages: initial, rapid growth, and peak fluctuation; (2) the topic has five research hotspots: fundamental issues in domestic violence against women; new legislation, notably the 2015 Anti-Domestic Violence Law ; social support for abused women; matrimonial disputes involving abused women; and conviction and sentencing of abused women who kill their husbands; and (3) the current research frontiers lie within the defects of the Anti-Domestic Violence Law and challenges in the implementation of the law. In addition, the paper examines characteristics and limitations of the study on abused women in China and suggests changes in practice, policy, and directions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Breeding 'unicorns': Tracing the rise of the European investor state in the European venture capital market.
- Author
-
Mocanu, Dan and Thiemann, Matthias
- Subjects
VENTURE capital ,CAPITAL market ,GOVERNMENT policy ,NEW business enterprises ,INVESTMENT policy - Abstract
This paper takes the recent public policy innovations of the European Commission to foster the growth of 'unicorns' through direct interventions as an entry point to inquire into the changing role of the EU in the European Venture Capital Market. Based on a reconstruction of EU public policy interventions from the 1990s onwards, we show the constitutive, yet changing role of EU public actors in that market. The latest engagement of EU public policy, aiming to select and nurture start-ups with the potential to become unicorns, we argue, must be understood as a new layer in this trajectory of foundational market investment. Moving from an initial 'market crafting' approach (1990–2000) to 'market fixing' (2001–2013), this new mode of intervention represents a qualitatively new level, which seeks to shape innovation outcomes along a European investment chain. We identify this modality of intervention as a new form of economic statecraft, driven by the goal of securing technological sovereignty, which together with the two other layers forms the basis of the European Investor State. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Efficacy of Outsourced Employment Services for Adults Exiting Australian Prisons.
- Author
-
Ollerton, Janice, Giles, Margaret J., Baldry, Eileen, and Cale, Jesse
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT agencies ,AUSTRALIANS ,CRIME statistics ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,PRISON population ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PRISONS - Abstract
Crime rates in Australia have declined or been steady over the past decade yet prison populations are at all-time highs. Similarly, unemployment rates have been low but unemployment for those ex-prisoners seeking work is very high. In this paper, we draw on the findings of an Australia-wide survey of government-funded employment service providers who support working-aged Australians including ex-prisoners in their search for work. We find that the heterogeneity of the needs of ex-prisoners coupled with the frugality and inflexibility of government policies and practices frustrates the abilities of these agencies to provide services to this target group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The U.S. Government's Program of Welfare for the Wealthy.
- Author
-
Benton Jr., Raymond and Stasch, Stanley F.
- Subjects
WEALTH inequality ,GOVERNMENT programs ,ECONOMICS of war ,INCOME inequality ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
It is important that macromarketers understand how income and wealth inequality affect the way people think, live, and die. It is also important that they understand the source(s) of that inequality. This paper discusses how the power elite and the rich used the law to strategically withhold from the bottom 99 percent of the population the wealth generated in the post-World War II economy. This included more than a dozen specific stealth activities the U.S. government enacted from 1970 to 2010, although only a few are highlighted in this commentary. These activities created a Program of Welfare for the Wealthy that worked against the general welfare of the American people. We refer to these as stealth activities because much of what happens in government occurs behind the scenes, in the dark. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Participation of girls and women in community sport in Ghana: Cultural and structural barriers.
- Author
-
Charway, Derrick and Strandbu, Åse
- Subjects
WOMEN'S empowerment ,GENDER inequality ,WOMEN'S sports ,COMMUNITY involvement ,SPORTS participation ,WOMEN leaders ,PARTICIPATION ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Despite numerous international and national policy documents promoting girls' and women's empowerment and participation in community sports, the actual access to sport for women and girls is still restricted in several countries. This paper explores the situation in Ghana. Through the analytical lens of Cooky and Messner's theory of 'the unevenness of social change', we analyse the cultural and structural barriers that prevent girls and women from participating in sport in Ghanaian communities. The data material is document analysis, focus groups and semi-structured interviews with male and female officials representing state-funded regional and district sports organisations as well as non-state sports organisations in Ghana. The findings reveal that cultural barriers, rooted in deep-seated cultural norms and structural hindrances that undermine gender-inclusive policies, contribute to the limited participation of girls and women in community sport. Furthermore, the interplay between these cultural and structural factors leads to gender-specific practices and fewer women in leadership positions. Based on our analyses, we suggest that structural changes (enforcing and implementing gender policies) can result in cultural changes (positive gender equality outcomes) over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Exploring Trust in the Police in South Korea During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Does Fear of the COVID-19 Matter?
- Author
-
Nam, Yongjae, Maskály, Jon, Ivković, Sanja Kutnjak, and Neyroud, Peter
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,COMMUNITIES ,HUMAN behavior ,RESTRICTIONS ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, governments restricted community members' activities and, in turn, patterns of human behavior, both legal and illegal, changed. In many countries, the police have been entrusted to enforce these new COVID-19 related restrictions and were often perceived as the main enforcers of these sometimes unpopular measures. In this paper, we study four types of factors that may affect the public's trust in the police during the COVID-19 pandemic: traditional factors, such as interactions with the police during the pandemic, assessments of the police effectiveness in dealing with the pandemic, COVID-19 related factors, such as instrumental concerns for their personal health, and the adherence to the conspiracy theories. Specifically, using data from a sample of 527 respondents from the Seoul metropolitan area in South Korea, collected in the fall of 2021, we estimate the effects of the factors listed above. The results indicate that trust in the Korean National Police was strengthened when the police were perceived to have effectively dealt with the challenges of the pandemic and addressed the instrumental concerns of the community in the protection of public health. No demographic variables were significantly independently associated with trust in the police during the pandemic. The theoretical and policy implications of the findings are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. From the Editor.
- Author
-
Little, Richard G.
- Subjects
POLICY sciences ,INFRASTRUCTURE policy ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SEA level - Abstract
The article introduces the latest issue of Public Works Management and Policy, which covers a range of topics related to infrastructure and public policy. The first paper examines corruption in infrastructure development and proposes measures to mitigate it. The second paper focuses on how coastal counties in the southeastern United States are planning for sea level rise, emphasizing the importance of robust risk management. The third paper analyzes New Orleans' Adopt-A-Catch Basin Program and highlights the need for better communication and stakeholder involvement. The fourth paper explores the perceptions of farmers who have experience with automated technology and their implications for autonomous vehicles. The final paper evaluates a congestion management concept for the Capital Beltway in Washington, DC. The issue concludes with a book review. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Bulletin Board.
- Subjects
HOUSING ,HOUSING management ,HUMAN settlements ,URBAN planning ,GOVERNMENT policy ,LOW-income housing ,HOUSING policy - Abstract
This issue of I Environment and Urbanization i is looking for papers that address these and other relevant issues. Discounted Prices and Electronic Access to Environment and Urbanization All papers published in I Environment and Urbanization i since its first issue in 1989 are available at http://journals.sagepub.com/home/eau, and all but those published during the last two years are open access and so available electronically free of charge. With regard to electronic access, there are schemes that allow access to I Environment and Urbanization i for universities and research centres in low- and middle-income nations - see Research4Life (http://www.research4life.org). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The Role of Industry Studies and Public Policies in Production and Operations Management.
- Author
-
Joglekar, Nitin R., Davies, Jane, and Anderson, Edward G.
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,OPERATIONS management ,PRODUCTION management (Manufacturing) ,DECISION making in business ,COORDINATION (Human services) ,LABOR-management committees - Abstract
The research domain Industry Studies and Public Policy ( IS& PP) seeks to further our understanding of industrial practices and managerial challenges by explicitly considering contextual details in the design and interpretation of research studies. These details can be vital considerations when shaping public policies. This article reviews a sample of IS& PP publications and analyzes the content of 180 selected papers-85 papers published in the Production and Operations Management ( POM) journal and 95 papers published in related journals between 1992 and 2014. Our analysis of the sample dataset and examination of exemplar papers provide four findings. First, studies in different industries emphasize different themes of operational decisions. This difference in emphasis reveals potential research opportunities, especially for conducting inter-industry studies. Second, our analysis reveals a shift in focus over time. Earlier studies contain a mix of benchmarks and inter-industry comparisons, while later studies tend to be context-specific, intra-industry studies. Third, we report on empirics → analytics → empirics cycles that reveal gaps for building novel theories. Finally, we observe that the relationship between POM decisions and public policy is bi-directional. This highlights the need to jointly examine operational decisions with policy considerations, especially in information goods, healthcare, sustainable operations and high-tech manufacturing industries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Conducting a Large, Longitudinal, Multi-Site Qualitative Study Within a Mixed Methods Evaluation of a UK National Health Policy: Reflections From the GPED Study.
- Author
-
Scantlebury, Arabella and Adamson, Joy
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,EVALUATION methodology ,QUALITATIVE research ,CLIMATE research - Abstract
Over the past decade, there has been a growing trend towards the use of 'big qualitative data' in applied health research, particularly when used as part of mixed methods evaluations of health policy in England. These 'big qualitative' studies tend to be longitudinal, complex (multi-site and multi-stakeholder) and involve the use of multiple methods (interviews, observations, documents) and large numbers of participants (n = 100+). Despite their growing popularity, there is no methodological guidance or methodological reflection on how to undertake such studies. Qualitative researchers are therefore faced with a series of unknowns when designing large qualitative studies, particularly in terms of knowing whether existing qualitative sampling and analysis methods are appropriate in this context. In this paper, we use our experience of undertaking a big qualitative study, as part of a national mixed methods evaluation of a health policy in England to reflect on some of the key challenges that we faced in our qualitative study, which broadly related to: sample size, data analysis and the role of patient and public engagement. Underpinning these difficulties was the challenge of being flexible and innovative within the largely positivist research climate of applied health research and being comfortable with uncertainty relating to the three issues outlined. The reflections we present are not to be viewed as a method 'how to' guide, but rather as a platform to raise key issues relating to the qualitative methods that we found challenging, in order to stimulate discussion and debate amongst the qualitative community. Through this paper, we therefore hope to demystify what it is like to undertake such a study and hope to spark much needed discussion and innovation to support the future design and conduct of qualitative research at scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Homeless People in Public Space and the Politics of (In)visibility.
- Author
-
Pospěch, Pavel
- Subjects
PUBLIC spaces ,HOMELESS persons ,HOMELESSNESS ,GOVERNMENT policy ,LEGAL instruments - Abstract
Homeless people were a new sight in the post-1989 Czech Republic, as the previous regime effectively criminalized homelessness. Thus, in the 1990s, the new visibility of homeless people was a shock to the public eye. This paper is based on a longitudinal study of how, based on this new visibility, the representations of homeless people developed throughout the 1989–2015 period. The paper focuses on the interplay between physical visibility of homelessness and its visibility for public policy. It introduces a threefold theoretical model of how the former is transformed into the latter: I argue that, to be recognized as "problematic" in public space, a group must (a) be recognized as a distinct category (categorical visibility), (b) be recognized as a threat to the civil order (moral visibility), and (c) that public policy must have legal instruments to perceive and address the issue (the eyes and arms of public policy). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. How co-production contributes to urban equality: retrospective lessons from Dar es Salaam.
- Author
-
Wilbard, Kombe, Kyessi, Alphonce Gabriel, and Limbumba, Tatu Mtwangi
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,EQUALITY ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,DEVELOPING countries ,POLICY discourse - Abstract
Despite varying conceptions of what co-production entails, there is a growing consensus in research, practice and public policy discourse that co-production is a preferred strategy for leveraging resources to deliver basic infrastructure services in low-income settlements. Using largely qualitative data, this paper explores the adaption of co-production in the low-income settlement of Hanna Nassif in Dar es Salaam, implemented 20 years ago by state actors, international agencies and grassroots actors, with attention to basic infrastructure and local employment. The findings reveal that co-production engendered partnerships and platforms and transformed sociocultural norms and values that made inroads toward urban equality in the settlement, although it failed to address inequalities among the partners, or to be replicated subsequently. The paper argues that meaningful co-production of basic infrastructure services in low-income settlements of the global South requires a focus on the context-specific pro-poor concerns and priorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Addressing gender inequality: Stumbling blocks and roads ahead.
- Author
-
Morgenroth, Thekla and Ryan, Michelle K.
- Subjects
BIODIVERSITY ,GENDER inequality ,SEXISM ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PROPORTIONAL representation - Abstract
Despite many positive changes in terms of gender equality in recent decades, women remain underrepresented in positions of power and prestige, and continue to shoulder disproportionate amounts of unpaid domestic labor. This special issue brings together an examination of the different ways in which gender inequality can be addressed, the efficacy of such approaches, and the consequences these approaches can have. In this introduction to the special issue, we discuss the focus of past and present gender research and outline issues which have received less attention. We further give an overview of the papers in this special issue, which focus on a diverse range of ways in which gender inequality can be addressed, such as collective action, workplace diversity initiatives and parental leave policies, gender-fair language, and government policies. Taken together, these papers illustrate (a) the importance of ensuring that initiatives are evidence-based, (b) the ways in which we can maximize the effectiveness of interventions, and (c) the need to understand when these initiatives may inadvertently backfire. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Network utility price regulation in Australia in the pre-first world war years.
- Author
-
Abbott, Malcolm
- Subjects
WORLD War I ,MARKET power ,PRICE levels ,ELECTRIC utilities ,PRICE regulation ,GAS companies ,GOVERNMENT policy ,COMMERCIAL law - Abstract
Australia has a long history of privately owned utility price regulation, one that is little known. This price control was designed to restrain the market power of several utilities (gas, rail, tramways, electricity, and water). The purpose of this paper, therefore, is to establish what types of price control that were used in Australia in the utilities sector before the First World War and to determine the degree to which this price control influenced efficiency. As price levels in this era were set in legislation, the lack of flexibility led to less-than-optimal outcomes, and eventually and led to new approaches were developed after 1912 to the utilities that remained in private ownership, and in some cases influenced the movement in Australia towards government control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Laboratory analyses for poisoned patients: joint position paper.
- Author
-
Watson, Ian
- Subjects
FORENSIC toxicology ,GOVERNMENT policy ,BEST practices ,CLINICAL biochemistry ,CLINICAL chemistry laboratories ,GREAT Britain. National Poisons Information Service - Abstract
To enable consistency of investigation and the establishment of best practice standards, consensus guidelines have been formulated jointly by the UK National Poisons Information Service (NPIS) and the Association of Clinical Biochemists (ACB). The types of laboratory investigation required for poisoned patients were categorized as either (a) essential common laboratory investigations or (b) specific toxicological assays, and also as either (i) common or (ii) specialist or infrequent. Tests in categories (a) and (bi) are expected to be available 24 h per day, with a maximum turnaround time of 2 h. For the specialist assays, i.e. category (bii), availability and turnaround times have been specified individually. The basis for selection of these times has been clinical utility. The adoption of these guidelines, along with the use of the NPIS online poisons information resource TOXBASE (www.spib.axl.co.uk), will enable the poisoned patient to receive appropriate, 'best practice' investigations according to their clinical needs and will avoid the use of unnecessary investigations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.