728 results
Search Results
2. Commentary on the criterion problem in the US Department of Defense: Policy and operational considerations.
- Author
-
Velgach, Sofiya and Arabian, Jane M.
- Subjects
RESEARCH evaluation ,MILITARY medicine ,EMPLOYEE selection ,DECISION making ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MANAGEMENT ,POLICY sciences ,JOB performance ,MILITARY personnel - Abstract
Criterion measures are foundational to an effective selection and classification process and valid enlistment aptitude standards. The Department of Defense, when possible, considers eligibility standards based on empirical evidence of the relationship between recruit attributes and applicable performance to be best practice. Ensuring use and incorporation of appropriate criteria is critical to this process. However, this process is often complex and costly. Numerous policy related issues must be considered. This paper provides commentary on each of the technical papers included in this issue from a policy and operational perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Cultural policy and Australia's national cultural heritage: issues and challenges in the GLAM landscape.
- Author
-
Davis, Wendy and Howard, Katherine
- Subjects
CULTURAL policy ,CULTURAL property ,INFORMATION professionals ,LIBRARY administration ,ARCHIVES administration ,MUSEUM management ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
In 2012 the Australian Commonwealth government was scheduled to release the first dedicated policy for culture and the arts since the Keating government's Creative Nation (1994). Investing in a Creative Australia was to appear after a lengthy period of consultation between the Commonwealth government and all interested cultural sectors and organisations. When it eventuates, the policy will be of particular interest to those information professionals working in the GLAM (galleries, libraries, archives and museums) environment. GLAM is a cross-institutional field which seeks to find points of commonality among various cultural-heritage institutions, while still recognising their points of difference. Digitisation, collaboration and convergence are key themes and characteristics of the GLAM sector and its associated theoretical discipline. The GLAM movement has seen many institutions seeking to work together to create networks of practice that are beneficial to the cultural-heritage industry and sector. With a new Australian cultural policy imminent, it is timely to reflect on the issues and challenges that GLAM principles present to national cultural-heritage institutions by discussing their current practices. In doing so, it is possible to suggest productive ways forward for these institutions which could then be supported at a policy level by the Commonwealth government. Specifically, this paper examines four institutions: the National Gallery of Australia, the National Library of Australia, the National Archives of Australia and the National Museum of Australia. The paper reflects on their responses to the Commonwealth's 2011 Cultural Policy Discussion Paper. It argues that by encouraging and supporting collecting institutions to participate more fully in GLAM practices the Commonwealth government's cultural policy would enable far greater public access to, and participation in, Australia's cultural heritage. Furthermore, by considering these four institutions, the paper presents a discussion of the challenges and the opportunities that GLAM theoretical and disciplinary principles present to the cultural-heritage sector. Implications for Best Practice • GLAM is a developing field of theory and practice that encompasses many issues and challenges for practitioners in this area. • GLAM principles and practices are increasingly influencing the cultural-heritage sector. • Cultural policy is a key element in shaping the future of Australia's cultural-heritage sector and needs to incorporate GLAM principles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. How to use a systems diagram to analyse and structure complex problems for policy issue papers.
- Author
-
van der Lei, T. E., Enserink, B., Thissen, W. A. H., and Bekebrede, G.
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,STAKEHOLDERS ,POLICY analysis ,STUDY & teaching of operations research ,ENDS & means - Abstract
Many policy problems are complex in the sense that natural, technological, social and human elements interact. Problem exploration and structuring are essential as a basis for deliberate and focused approaches towards problem resolution. The results of problem exploration efforts can be laid down in the form of a policy issue paper. We have developed a systemic, stepwise approach, which has been elaborated and taught for over a decade to hundreds of students. This seven-step approach centers on the construction of a system diagram as a means to provide structure to the conceptualisation of a complex problem situation. The approach is based on a conscious combination of existing relatively straightforward analytical methods including objectives hierarchy, means-ends analysis, causal diagramming, stakeholder analysis, and contextual scenarios. The obtained insights are then summed up in a policy issue paper, which is the basis for further planning and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Bombay "city boss," Congress party treasurer, and union cabinet minister from Nehru to Indira: Sadashiv Kanoji Patil (1898–1981).
- Author
-
Ankit, Rakesh
- Subjects
CABINET officers ,FEDERAL government ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CIVIC leaders ,SPANISH-American War, 1898 - Abstract
S.K. Patil, quintessential Congressman of Bombay city and cabinet minister in three central governments from 1957 to 1963 and 1964 to 1967, was the kind of figure in Indian politics, who personified Rajni Kothari's Congress "system" of clients-patrons and chains-links. A Patelite, Patil was a thorn in Nehru's side. A leader of the business community, he identified with a network politics involving capital. He was an indifferent administrator, but an influential party apparatchik and his career peaked in 1964–1967, when he was a part of the all-important Congress "syndicate." Afterward, however, he struggled for relevance in the turbulent decade of the 1970s. In this research article based on Patil's personal papers, I offer these fragments from his political life as interesting prisms through which to view (a) aspects of intra-party and inter-ministerial conflictual culture, (b) issues concerning the top-down character of governance with implications for public policy and (c) the complex opposition to it, both inside and outside, thereby repaying this visit to an individual's trajectory in contemporary history with parallels for current politics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Promoting scholarship in a community-based internal medicine residency.
- Author
-
Fanciullo, Joseph, Hsu, Jennifer, and Stevens, Dennis C.
- Subjects
SCHOLARSHIPS ,COMMUNITY-based programs ,RESIDENTS (Medicine) ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The University of South Dakota Sanford School of Medicine Internal Medicine residency implemented a program to enhance scholarship among residents. This residency is part of a small Mid-Western community-based school. Background: A Director of Research was hired and developed a structured approach consisting of: 1. Independent study regarding research methods and statistical testing and 2. Mentoring of residents and faculty in scholarly pursuits starting in the first months of residency. Methods: Scholarship for two cohorts of residents for years July 2011-2014 and January 2014-2017 were followed. Products included papers accepted/published and papers accepted/presented at national or international meetings. Results: 7 (14.8%) of 47 residents in the first cohort published 12 papers (0.25 papers/resident) with 18 faculty as co-authors (1.5/paper). 20 (43.4%) of 46 residents in the second cohort (structured program) published 39 papers (0.85 papers/resident) with 80 faculty as co-authors (2.1/paper). The difference in papers was significant by chi-square analysis. Conclusion: A structured program requiring independent study in conjunction with individualized mentoring of scholarship starting early in the first postgraduate year was successful in significantly increasing the scholarly activity of our community-based internal medicine residents and faculty. With this program, the percentage of residents publishing exceeds national statistics recently reported. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Reflecting on our good intentions: A critical discourse analysis of women's health and empowerment discourses in sexual and gender-based violence policies relevant to southern Africa.
- Author
-
Breton, Nancy Nyutsem
- Subjects
VIOLENCE ,CRITICAL theory ,SELF-efficacy ,GENDER ,INTIMATE partner violence ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DISCOURSE analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,INTENTION ,WOMEN'S health ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
Decades of 'feminist' sexual- and gender-based violence (SGBV) policies have produced limited change in southern African SGBV rates. Recent critiques highlight ongoing colonial legacies in such policymaking, arguing that these legacies limit the potential for liberatory change. Further, reflecting on such discourses can highlight reasons behind global public health intervention failure. To promote reflexivity among public health actors who create, reproduce, and implement SGBV policies, this paper presents a critical discourse analysis of how women's empowerment is constructed in foundational global and national health and development policies bearing on SGBV in Zambia. The analysis identifies neoliberal feminist discourses of empowerment: (i) the protection of women, which perpetuates a saviour complex; (ii) the promotion of equality to men, which excludes those deemed unworthy; (iii) the eradication of harmful cultural norms, which challenge the preservation of African values; and (iv) (neoliberal) empowerment through women's attained employment and capital, which empowers women within unequal economic relations rather than liberating women from those relations. The author critiques such neoliberal empowerment discourses for failing to structurally transform the conditions for women's liberation. This paper offers a first step to the dismantling of colonial structures in SGBV policies by unpacking and promoting reflexivity about such discourses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Words count: taking a count of the changing language of British aid.
- Author
-
Alfini, Naomi and Chambers, Robert
- Subjects
POLITICAL planning ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC trends ,GOVERNMENT policy ,POLICY sciences ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
A word analysis of six UK government White Paper policy statements on aid (selected between 1960 and 2006) compares the top 20 words and key word pairs used in each document. Characteristic sentences are composed of the top 20s to represent the spirit of each paper. Results illuminate changes in the content of White Papers on aid, and point to trends in the history of the UK's approach to international development. A characteristic sentence to illustrate the 2005 Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness is contrasted with a sentence of words that did not appear in that document. Readers are invited and challenged to identify words they would like to be used and acted on more commonly in development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Sustainable green financial system perspective of environmental protection investment and the government's environmental policy or public participation: evidence from Chinese A-share listed companies.
- Author
-
Zhang, Lisi, Zhang, Ziwei, Bieryt, Karolina, and Aftab, Summiya
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PUBLIC investments ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Corporate environmental protection investment (EPI) is one of the ways to accelerate green development. This paper develops a theoretical model of EPI focusing on three factors: the government, the public, and the enterprises. It uses data from A-share listed Chinese companies from 2008 to 2014 to analyse the effects of the government environmental policy and public participation on the corporate EPI. Results of this research show that both the environmental regulations issued by the government and the demands put forward by public opinion encourage enterprises to increase investment in environmental protection. Moreover, the government's green policy efforts and public participation result in synergy in governance. Relevant regulations issued by the government improve the efficiency of actual public participation. However, redundant government intervention is not conducive to increasing corporate investment in environmental protection. According to this research, market-oriented reforms can boost the positive impact of government and public efforts on corporate EPI. In order to improve environmental governance and achieve green development, it is necessary to deepen market-oriented reforms and build a coordinated, complementary, and incentive-compatible governance system that deals with issues, demands, rights, and responsibilities of the government, the public, and enterprises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Digital competence across boundaries - beyond a common Nordic model of the digitalisation of K-12 schools?
- Author
-
Olofsson, Anders D., Lindberg, J. Ola, Young Pedersen, Alex, Arstorp, Ann-Thérèse, Dalsgaard, Christian, Einum, Even, Caviglia, Francesco, Ilomäki, Liisa, Veermans, Marjaana, Häkkinen, Päivi, and Willermark, Sara
- Subjects
SCHOOL rules & regulations ,GEOGRAPHIC boundaries ,GOVERNMENT policy ,TRANSLATING & interpreting - Abstract
This paper explores policy related to digital competence and the digitalisation of Nordic K-12 schools. Anchored in some key transnational policies on digital competence, it describes some current Nordic movements in the national policies of Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden. The concept of boundary objects is used as an analytical lens, for understanding digital competence as a plastic and temporal concept that can be used to discuss the multi-dimensional translation of this concept in these Nordic countries. The paper ends with a discussion of the potential to view digital competence as a unifying boundary object that, with its plasticity, temporality and n-dimensionality, can show signs of common Nordic efforts in the K-12 school policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Jayaprakash Narayan, domestic dissent and the unfolding of the Tibet crisis in Sino-Indian relations 1959-1961.
- Author
-
Sirkar, Tisyaketu
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENT policy , *DIPLOMATIC history , *PUBLIC opinion , *CRISES , *GESTURE - Abstract
The historical origins of the Tibet issue in Sino-Indian relations remain understudied. Most diplomatic histories on this subject focus on the highest levels of government, glossing over the immense role of domestic actors in shaping the Tibet question in the India-China relationship. This paper aims to address this gap by studying the domestic response to Dalai Lama's flight to India. Specifically, it analyses the domestic and international advocacy of the noted freedom fighter Jayaprakash Narayan. The paper highlights how Narayan's advocacy was critical in building global and public opinion on the Tibet question, culminating in the passage of Resolution 1723 at the United Nations. It argues that understanding his actions on Tibet is critical because of its negative impact on the Indian government's policy of preventing the issue from gaining international recognition – a gesture aimed at steadying the declining relationship with China. By hindering the government's efforts at damage control, the paper demonstrates how Jayaprakash Narayan's advocacy was a key factor explaining why Sino-Indian ties precipitously declined over the Tibet issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Rethinking governance through Samarco's dam collapse in Brazil: a critique from the STS perspective.
- Author
-
Branco, Luciana Landgraf Castelo
- Subjects
DAM failures ,SOCIAL classes ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DAMS ,DEPOLITICIZATION ,PRIVATE sector - Abstract
Copyright of Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology & Society is the property of Taylor & Francis Ltd 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
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The impact of financial development on economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa. Does institutional quality matter?
- Author
-
Asante, Grace Nkansa, Takyi, Paul Owusu, and Mensah, Gideon
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC expansion ,POLITICAL stability ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MOMENTS method (Statistics) - Abstract
It is hypothesized that a well-functioning financial market is necessary but not sufficient condition to achieve the expected economic growth. Therefore, policy instruments of government aimed at streamlining financial sector activity in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) are imperative. As a result, this paper explores the effect of financial development on economic growth by allowing the link between the two far variables to be mediated by the quality of institutions for the period 2000–2019. Using Twenty-nine (29) countries and the System-Generalized Method of Moments (system-GMM) estimation method, it is found that financial development has a positive and significant effect on economic growth. In addition, it is found that, when rule of law, political stability, and regulatory quality are highly effective, the positive effect of financial development on economic growth is magnified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Role of economic, and social parameters affecting life satisfaction and happiness during pre and post Covid era: a study with Marx's perspective.
- Author
-
Su, Yun and Muhammad, Azizan Sabjan
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,LIFE satisfaction ,HAPPINESS ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIAL support - Abstract
A cognitive, objective, and subjective evaluation of the judgment of one's perspective of looking at life defines as life satisfaction and happiness. There is a strong association between life satisfaction, joy, and external parameters, including environmental and socioeconomic factors and green innovation technologies. Marx's theory on life satisfaction provides an exciting insight and defines that economic resources are necessary to live comfortably. The core objective of this paper is to examine the effects of contributing parameters concerning life satisfaction and happiness (LSH) in China from 2005 to 2020. For this purpose, data collected for the dependent variable collect World Happiness Index and World Bank official website. Nine independent variables related to LSH discuss freedom to make life choices (FMLC); GDP growth; Social contribution (SC); Employment rate (ER); Social support (SS); Innovation and development (ID); Life expectancy (LE); Coverage of social safety (CSS); High qualification (HQ). The maximum LSH value is 5.77, with a mean value of 5.13. The highest coefficient correlation value with LSH is CO2, with a positive correlation coefficient value of 0.80, followed by GDPG, with a negative coefficient value of 0.80. PC1 explains 76.74% of results, whereas MLR produces 0.91 R2 (p-value: 0.093, Residual standard error: 0.181). There is a need to understand correlates and determinants in further detail to set up a framework that enables policy-makers to incorporate well-being and life satisfaction measures in carving new public policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Sovereign debt management in the face of climate liabilities: perspective of European Union member states.
- Author
-
Boitan, Iustina Alina and Marchewka-Bartkowiak, Kamilla
- Subjects
DEBT management ,PUBLIC spending ,EUROPEAN Sovereign Debt Crisis, 2009-2018 ,GOVERNMENT policy on climate change ,PUBLIC debts ,CLIMATE change ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Climate change impact on sovereign debt management has become an issue of great concern. The aim of this paper is to analyse the changes in the traditional approach of sovereign debt managers in the face of the pursued climate policy and different scenarios of climate liabilities for 2050. We follow a novel three-fold research approach: 1) assessment of the estimated level of current climate liabilities based on the Fiscal Risk Matrix; 2) performing forward-looking climate debt projections over the timeframe 2025-2050 for the EU countries; 3) conducting case study research on EU countries, to identify the sovereign climate debt management activities undertaken so far and to define a series of good-practice guidelines. Findings indicate a growing role of the climate financial mechanisms in sovereign debt management. In particular, our climate scenario approach reveals those scenarios in which a country's fiscal position indicators are more vulnerable from the standpoint of rising public expenditure due to the country's inability to manage CO
2 gas emissions. Each country is responsible for its climate pathway by 2050 and this will be mainly determined by the timeliness, efficacy and appropriateness of the public policies and measures implemented to mitigate climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Delivering education reform in Wales: a flexible route into teaching.
- Author
-
Glover, Alison and Hutchinson, Steven
- Subjects
BLENDED learning ,TEACHER development ,EDUCATIONAL change ,STUDENT teachers ,TEACHER education ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DRIVERS' licenses - Abstract
This discussion paper explores the development and implementation of a new flexible route into the teaching profession. This flexible route is offered within an education system in the midst of wide reform, which has partnership working between universities and schools at the centre of its Initial Teacher Education. Key elements of the new programme examined include how student teachers acquire the knowledge they need, with interconnectivity, immersive practice and blended learning of significance. This case study illustrates the importance of flexibility in the development of the student teacher's personal construct and communities of practice. The programme's adaptive learner-centred approach is delivering an alternative, flexible route into the teaching profession, broadening the experience base of the future teaching workforce and beginning to successfully address key government policy drivers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Beyond poverty? The new UK policy on international development and globalisation.
- Author
-
Hewitt, Adrian
- Subjects
POVERTY ,GLOBALIZATION ,GOVERNMENT policy ,RURAL poor - Abstract
This article looks at the British government policy document or White Paper, which focused on the issue of poverty. Concerns about globalisation is also included in the White Paper. It was said that globalisation can be seen as the third in a series of White Papers on poverty over 25 years. The first White Paper was presented to the Parliament in 1975 by Judith Hart. In the said White Paper, a basic needs approach was adopted and the rural poor was identified as the dominant group to be brought out of poverty. The 1975 White Paper promises more aid. The 2000 White Paper on globalisaation promises a new international development act. It was said that the latest White Paper marks the beginning of political maturity.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Study design: policy landscape analysis for sugar-sweetened beverage taxation in seven sub-Saharan African countries.
- Author
-
Thow, Anne-Marie, Erzse, Agnes, Asiki, Gershim, Mulindabigwi Ruhara, Charles, Ahaibwe, Gemma, Ngoma, Twalib, Justus Amukugo, Hans, Wanjohi, Milka N., Mukanu, Mulenga M., Gaogane, Lebogang, Abdool Karim, Safura, and Hofman, Karen
- Subjects
BEVERAGE laws ,HEALTH policy ,TAXATION ,NON-communicable diseases ,BEVERAGES ,RESEARCH methodology ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,INTERVIEWING ,PUBLIC health ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,QUALITATIVE research ,GOVERNMENT policy ,POLICY sciences ,CONTENT analysis ,STATISTICAL sampling ,POLITICAL participation ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
This paper reports on the design of a study to examine the policy landscape relevant to sugar-sweetened beverage taxation in seven sub-Saharan African countries. The study responds to the need for strong policy to address the rising burden of non-communicable diseases in the region. Sugar-sweetened beverage taxation has been widely recommended as a key component of a comprehensive policy approach to NCD prevention. However, it has proved a contentious policy intervention, with industry strongly opposing the introduction of such taxes. The aim was to identify opportunities to strengthen sugar-sweetened beverage taxation-related policy for the prevention of nutrition-related NCDs in a subset of Eastern and Southern African countries: Kenya, Tanzania, Botswana, Rwanda, Namibia, Zambia, Uganda. The study was conducted as a collaboration by researchers from nine institutions; including the seven study countries, South Africa, and Australia. The research protocol was collabora-tively developed, drawing on theories of the policy process to examine the existing availability of evidence, policy context, and stakeholder interests and influence. This paper describes the development of a method for a policy landscape analysis to strengthen policies relevant to NCD prevention, and specifically sugar-sweetened beverage taxation. This takes the form of a prospective policy analysis, based on systematic documentary analysis supplemented by consultations with policy actors, that is feasible in low-resource settings. Data were collected from policy documents, government and industry reports, survey documentation, webpages, and academic literature. Consultations were conducted to verify the completeness of the policy-relevant data collection. We analysed the frames and beliefs regarding the policy 'problems', the existing policy context and understandings of sugar-sweetened beverage taxation as a potential policy intervention, and the political context across relevant sectors, including industry interests and influence in the policy process. This study design will provide insights to inform public health action to support sugar-sweetened beverage taxation in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Negotiating the coexistence of mining and pastoralism in Mongolia.
- Author
-
Dalaibuyan, Byambajav
- Subjects
PASTORAL societies ,MINES & mineral resources ,COMMUNITY relations ,GOVERNMENT policy ,LOCAL government - Abstract
The relationship between mining developments and local communities has been highly contested. The role of the local population in Mongolia, which is largely comprised of herder households and communities, has not been adequately recognized in government mining policy and regulations. Since 2006, mining project proponents are required to establish local level agreements (LLAs) with local host governments in Mongolia. This paper examines how agreement mechanisms have been implemented and whether they have helped local communities protect their interests while coexisting with mining. The paper draws on a multi-year study on LLAs in Mongolia carried out by the author between 2013 - 2018. As the Mongolian case demonstrates, legal prescription by itself will not deliver the desired outcomes of greater benefits for local communities or improved relations between these communities and developers. The negotiation of coexistence of mining and pastoralism requires iterative, multilayered processes involving the communities affected by the project. Unless the rights and claims of project-affected pastoral communities are recognized in the LLA regulations, their meaningful participation in agreement-making will remain limited. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Student-teacher dialogue for lesson planning: inclusion in the context of national policy and local culture.
- Author
-
Hedegaard-Soerensen, Lotte and Penthin Grumloese, Sine
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,LESSON planning ,LOCAL culture ,STUDENTS ,ACTION research ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
This paper reports on the findings of an Erasmus project entitled 'ReHaRe' (Reaching the Hard to Reach). The aim of this project is to develop more inclusive learning environments. The project adopts an action research approach and gives school pupils a role as researchers who plan, evaluate and develop lesson plans in collaboration with their teachers. The paper describes the way in which this collaboration can increase the degree to which pupils participate in the planning of their teaching, including pupils who are normally regarded as being hard to reach. However, this action research approach also generates ethical dilemmas, especially when children are at the centre of inquiry. Equal partnerships in research (in this case teacher-pupil equality) require reflection on the underlying ideas of the teacher-pupil relation and an awareness of how these ideas affect collaboration, especially when teachers insist on maintaining their dominant role over pupils. The paper concludes that inclusive inquiry – which was the approach taken in this project – can expand participatory opportunities for children who are otherwise regarded as being on the margins of the education system. However, successful inclusive research also requires an understanding of the role of local professional cultures at schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Determinants of economic growth in East African countries: A dynamic panel model approach.
- Author
-
Hadush, Muuz, Gebregziabher, Kidanemariam, and Biruk, Sisay
- Subjects
ECONOMIC expansion ,FOREIGN investments ,DYNAMIC models ,PUBLIC debts ,BALANCE of payments ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MONETARY unions ,CONSUMER price indexes - Abstract
The purpose of this study is to analyze the determinant of economic growth in the region of East African countries from 2002 to 2018. In order to investigate empirically the key determinants of economic growth in East African countries, this study used a dynamic panel model. To improve efficiency, Generalized Moments Method (GMM) estimators are used. Based on panel data from the East African countries during the 2002–2018 period, this study, therefore, estimated the determinants of economic growth in the region. The result suggests that government expense, government revenue, volume of imports and exports of goods and services significantly contribute to the economic growth of the countries. However, the consumer price index, current account balance, gross government debt, and foreign direct investment lead to negative economic growth. The paper has three policy implications; first, promoting open trade and ensuring peace and stability in the region is a paramount policy to enhance the economic growth of the region. East African Countries should move forward in creating stability regionally and internally within the countries. Second, countries in East Africa are recommended to strengthen and sustain their policies on government expenses, government revenue and revise their policies on government debt, inflation and current account balance. Major reforms are required in foreign direct investment and general government debt within the region. Third, to address obstacles in trade, climate change and the tax collection system, political and economic integration is fundamental to the region and to making the region competitive in the international trade arena. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. An evaluation of the Australian Community Pharmacy Agreement from a public policy perspective: industry policy cloaked as health policy?
- Author
-
Jackson, John K., Scahill, Shane L., Mintrom, Michael, and Kirkpatrick, Carl M.
- Subjects
DRUGSTORES ,HEALTH policy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ADVOCACY coalition framework ,POLITICAL stability ,MEDICAL practice - Abstract
Background: A series of Community Pharmacy Agreements (Agreements) between the Federal government and a pharmacy-owners' body, the Pharmacy Guild of Australia (PGA) have been influential policy in Australian community pharmacy (CP) since 1990. While ostensibly to support the public's access and use of medicines, the core elements of the Agreements have been remuneration for dispensing and rules that limit the establishment of new pharmacies. Criticism has focused on the self-interest of pharmacy owners, the exclusion of other pharmacy stakeholders from the Agreement negotiations, the lack of transparency, and the impact on competition. The objective of this paper is to determine the true nature of the policy by examining the evolution of the CPA from a policy theory perspective. Methods: A qualitative evaluation of all seven Agreement documents and their impact was undertaken using policy theories including a linear policy development model, Multiple Streams Framework, Incremental Theory, the Advocacy Coalition Framework, the Theory of Economic Regulation, the Punctuated Equilibrium Framework, and Elite Theory. The Agreements were evaluated using four lenses: their objectives, evidentiary base, stakeholders and beneficiaries. Results: The PGA has acted as an elite organisation with long-standing influence on the policy's development and implementation. Notable has been the failure of other pharmacy stakeholders to establish broad-based advocacy coalitions in order to influence the Agreements. The incremental changes negotiated every 5 years to the core elements of the Agreements have supported the publics' access to medication, provided stability for the government, and security for existing pharmacy owners. Their impact on the evolution of pharmacists' scope of practice and through that, on the public's safe and appropriate use of medication, has been less clear. Conclusions: The Agreements can be characterised predominantly as industry policy benefiting pharmacy owners, rather than health policy. An emerging issue is whether incremental change will continue to be an adequate policy response to the social, political, and technological changes that are affecting health care, or whether policy disruption is likely to arise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Taking a step back for a leap forward: policy formation for the digitalisation of schools from the views of Swedish national policymakers.
- Author
-
Gustafsson, Ulrika
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,TEACHER training ,EDUCATION policy ,SCHOOL rules & regulations - Abstract
The modest impact of national policy efforts on school digitalisation relates to a gap between views among policy-makers and practitioners, giving rise to complexity in translating policy into action. Acknowledging changes in governing through alternative policy formation-processes, and Ward and Parr's (2011) arguing for the importance of strategic- and operational policy coherence, the focus of this paper is the forming of a national plan of action for the digitalisation of schools in Sweden (#skolDigiplan). Within this interview study, the views on policy work and challenges of digitalisation of schools are explored among an exclusive management group of non-traditional Swedish policy-makers appointed to produce the #skolDigiplan. Based on the findings, I conclude that national policy making regarding the digitalisation of schools may be conducted through a collective process, with several educational stakeholders contributing. Furthermore, I suggest that non-traditional national policy-makers, arguing a lack of digital competence knowledge concerning schools at the governing or authority level, may consider taking a step back in the policy-formation process as a supportive action. Teacher training programmes, despite being portrayed as important for the policy outcome, were declared distant in this policy process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Preferential policies for China's ethnic minorities at a crossroads.
- Author
-
Hoshino, Masahiro
- Subjects
MINORITIES ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ROAD interchanges & intersections ,POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
Background: The Chinese government's principle of regional ethnic autonomy has remained consistent since the founding of the PRC in 1949. However, some voices within the country are calling on the government to rethink the principle of ethnic autonomy. Purpose: This paper discusses two examples in support of the hypothesis that the system favoring ethnic minorities under the regional autonomy system implemented since the foundation of modern China has reached a turning point. Main Argument: The first example describes the government's handling of ethnic minority issues, in particular the July 2009 disturbances in Urumqi in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. The second outlines the political discussion of the regional ethnic autonomy system, with open discussion in the past few years about changing the system advanced by an individual formerly directly involved in formulating and implementing ethnic policies. Conclusion: The first example demonstrates that the government's policy of expanding preferential measures favoring ethnic minorities in order to stabilize restive autonomous regions has become untenable. The second highlights that the government's confidence in its hard-line measures, even to the extent of allowing open discussion within China of whether the regional ethnic autonomy system should be reevaluated. This paper's conclusion is that preferential policies for China's ethnic minorities are at a crossroads. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The governance of waste: formal and informal rules in the central region of Mexico.
- Author
-
Jiménez-Martínez, Nancy Merary
- Subjects
CORPORATE governance ,GOVERNMENT policy ,URBAN planning ,WASTE management ,DUMPSTER diving - Abstract
Integrated solid waste management (ISWM) is the strategy for waste policy in Mexico. It entails a complex reorganization of waste services that disrupts preceding action systems and ignores previous local practices, such as scavenging, an informal activity whose goal is the recovery of materials from waste. The objective of this paper is to understand the governance of waste in a context of formal and informal rules in the central region of Mexico. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. In the pursuit of economic growth: drivers and inhibitors of place-based partnerships.
- Author
-
Broadhurst, Kate
- Subjects
BUSINESS partnerships ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CORPORATE governance ,ECONOMIC development ,PUBLIC administration - Abstract
In the pursuit of economic growth, England has historically retained a level of centralized control despite policy attempts to decentralize. Consequently, attempts to create a subnational tier have struggled to establish a durable alternative. Reporting on the episode of localism, which began in 2010 and has involved the abolition of regional development agencies (RDAs) in favour of 38 voluntary local enterprise partnerships (LEPs) alongside the construction of a growing number of combined authorities, the research investigates a complex place-based economic landscape whereby the provision of guidance and sharing of practice in England remains limited. This paper draws on the existing literature to propose a conceptual model of place-based partnership that formed a scaffold for an empirical study involving 10 LEPs in the Midlands. A soft systems methodology was adopted to understand the factors that help and hinder these place-based partnerships. The paper advances the argument that the persistence of centralism limits the LEPs' capacity to fill the missing space and observes a strong influence of central government and reliance on local government. Beyond the LEPs, given the global trend of decentralization, further research into the interplay between the factors in the conceptual model is encouraged to support the development of place-based partnerships as they work towards securing collaborative advantage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. SECURITY REGULATIONS IN THE FIELD OF NUCLEAR RESEARCH.
- Author
-
Bok, Bart J., Friedman, Francis, and Weisskopf, Victor
- Subjects
NUCLEAR energy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,RESTRICTIONS ,SCIENTIFIC development ,SCIENTISTS ,GOVERNMENT programs ,OUTLINES - Abstract
The article presents a response to the letter addressed to David E. Lilienthal, chairman of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, requesting a statement about policies about the general subject of atomic research which includes the questions on the restrictions on free publication imposed on authors of scientific papers in the field of nuclear research and to what extent the scientist are permitted to discuss their work freely. The statement which defines in general terms the policies of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and an outline of its current program is presented.
- Published
- 1947
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. THINK LOCALLY, ACT LOCALLY: A CRITIQUE OF CHINA'S SPECIALTY TOWN PROGRAM IN PRACTICE.
- Author
-
Hu, Xiaohui, Xu, Wei, and Miao, Julie T.
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,INDUSTRIAL districts ,CITIES & towns ,AGENT (Philosophy) ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper provides a critique of the "specialty towns" program, a key constituent of China's current new-style urbanization campaign. It problematizes the contradictory accounts of the program, namely, emphasizing "place-based" strengths while simultaneously standardizing forms, functions, and goals with a strong "place-neutral" approach. We argue that three key building blocks are critical for understanding specialty towns: place dependence, embeddedness, and locational advantage. Through multiple-case studies in Zhejiang, evidence has shown that there is a mismatch between national policies and local practices in specialty town development. The latter has its own place-specific logic of development shaped by history, geography, institutions, and agency. In particular, existing small-scale growth settings (e.g., industrial parks, specialized markets) and characteristics of local agency are the main factors affecting local practices. This paper argues that without considering the specificities of places in a broader socioeconomic context, the program may fail to work as effectively as expected in its local implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Attention to the needs of women and girls in WASH: An analysis of WASH policies in selected sub-Saharan African countries.
- Author
-
Dogoli, Maurice Anfaara, Nunbogu, Abraham Marshall, and Elliott, Susan J.
- Subjects
MENSTRUATION ,SANITATION ,WATER ,HYGIENE ,VIOLENCE ,GENDER ,INTER-observer reliability ,ATTENTION ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CONTENT analysis ,DATA analysis software ,THEMATIC analysis ,HEALTH equity - Abstract
There has been a push for understanding gendered violence in WASH in recent times. Attention is therefore shifting to how these issues are conceptualised, considering their embeddedness in context. One step primarily is to understand how existing policies in WASH acknowledge the needs of women and girls in WASH. In doing this, we conducted a summative content analysis of selected policy documents on WASH: five at the international level and five each from Ghana, Uganda and Kenya. Findings suggest that existing policies inadequately acknowledge WASH related gender-based violence and pay little attention to the complex ways gender and WASH relations are intimately connected. Generally, a holistic policy approach for addressing gender-based violence in WASH is needed. The paper recommends a system policy approach to address the unique needs of women and girls in WASH in sub-Saharan Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Medical apartheid in Palestine.
- Author
-
Barhoush, Yazid and Amon, Joseph J.
- Subjects
RACISM ,VIOLENCE in the workplace ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH facilities ,HUMAN rights ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,RIGHT to health ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
The International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid (1974) and Article 7 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (1998) recognise apartheid as a crime against humanity, characterised by a practice of systematic oppression and violations of human rights with the intent of one racial group to maintain domination over another. The term 'medical apartheid', although without a formal definition in international human rights law, has been used similarly to refer to situations of pervasive segregation and discrimination in health care, based upon race, and characterised by stark inequality in health care accessibility, availability, acceptability, and quality. This paper, using a combination of literature review; data on attacks on Palestinian health facilities, workers, and transport; and information from Palestinian and Israeli government authorities on referrals to specialised health care services, examines the ways in which Israeli policies and practices can be understood to constitute a form of 'medical apartheid' that deprives Arab residents of the Palestinian territories the full realisation of their right to health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Explaining the role of the social determinants of health on health inequality in South Africa.
- Author
-
Ataguba, John Ele-Ojo, Day, Candy, and McIntyre, Di
- Subjects
CONFIDENCE intervals ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,SELF-evaluation ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CROSS-sectional method ,HEALTH & social status - Abstract
Background: Action on the social determinants of health (SDH) is relevant for reducing health inequalities. This is particularly the case for South Africa (SA) with its very high level of income inequality and inequalities in health and health outcomes. This paper provides evidence on the key SDH for reducing health inequalities in the country using a framework initially developed by the World Health Organization. Objective: This paper assesses health inequalities in SA and explains the factors (i.e. SDH and other individual level factors) that account for large disparities in health. The relative contribution of different SDH to health inequality is also assessed. Design: A cross-sectional design is used. Data come from the third wave of the nationally representative National Income Dynamics Study. A subsample of adults (18 years and older) is used. The main variable of interest is dichotomised good versus bad self-assessed health (SAH). Income-related health inequality is assessed using the standard concentration index (CI).ApositiveCI means that the rich report better health than the poor. A negative value signifies the opposite. The paper also decomposes the CI to assess its contributing factors. Results: Good SAH is significantly concentrated among the rich rather than the poor (CI=0.008; pB0.01). Decomposition of this result shows that social protection and employment (contribution=0.012; p>0.01), knowledge and education (0.005; p<0.01), and housing and infrastructure (_0.003; p<0.01) contribute significantly to the disparities in good SAH in SA. After accounting for these other variables, the contribution of income and poverty is negligible. Conclusions: Addressing health inequalities inter alia requires an increased government commitment in terms of budgetary allocations to key sectors (i.e. employment, social protection, education, housing, and other appropriate infrastructure). Attention should also be paid to equity in benefits from government expenditure. In addition, the health sector needs to play its role in providing a broad range of health services to reduce the burden of disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Collecting the Evidence: Improving Access to Grey Literature and Data for Public Policy and Practice.
- Author
-
Lawrence, Amanda, Thomas, Julian, Houghton, John, and Weldon, Paul
- Subjects
DIGITAL libraries ,DIGITAL preservation ,GREY literature ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ACCESS to knowledge movement - Abstract
The internet has profoundly changed how we produce, use and collect research and information for public policy and practice, with grey literature and data playing an increasingly important role. Reports, discussion papers, briefings and many other resources produced and published by organisations, without recourse to the commercial or scholarly publishing industry, are a key part of the evidence used for public policy and practice. Yet finding and accessing this material can be a time-consuming task made harder by poor production and management of resources and the lack of digital collecting services. Even knowing what is being collected and what collections exist is a difficult task. Based on research conducted as part of the Grey Literature Strategies ARC Linkage project, this article reports on the results of online surveys of users, producers and collectors of policy and research information with a particular focus on the results for collecting services. It discusses the state of collecting digital grey literature in Australia and the issues that need to be addressed to maximise the value of this public asset. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Accessibility and Age: Can Legibility Improve Opportunity to Process Advertising?
- Author
-
Nelson, Michelle R. and Cook, Kirby
- Subjects
OLDER people ,USER-centered system design ,VISUAL acuity ,CONSUMERS ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Inclusive design considers usability first: to design with the needs of everyone to decrease the mismatch between the end-user and the design object. In advertising, the mismatch may be in the opportunity to process an advertisement due to design strategies (i.e., executional ad cues). Based on the Motivation-Opportunity-Ability model of information processing, we focus on legibility as an important but underexplored encoding issue that can enhance consumers' opportunity to process ads based on visual clarity and lead to perceptual fluency effects. Visual acuity declines with age, so legibility is particularly important for older adults and those with vision loss. In line with recommended accessibility guidelines, we manipulated two advertising design factors believed to impact legibility—color contrast and font style—in the supers of a video advertisement for a pharmaceutical drug and tested the communication outcomes (cognition, persuasion). Across three studies with three different-aged populations, we show that legibility was positively related to awareness of information in the supers and to positive perceptions of the advertisement. In line with accessibility guidelines, legibility was rated the highest for most people in the high-color contrast sans serif font supers. Implications for theory, accessibility and older people, and public policy are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Oxytocin quality: evidence to support updated global recommendations on oxytocin for postpartum hemorrhage.
- Author
-
Lambert, Peter, McIntosh, Michelle P, Widmer, Mariana, Evans, Lawrence, Rauscher, Megan, Kuwana, Rutendo, Theunissen, Fiona, Yeager, Beth, and Petach, Helen
- Subjects
OXYTOCIN ,MISOPROSTOL ,MIDDLE-income countries ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH products ,POSTPARTUM hemorrhage - Abstract
Background: The use of quality injectable oxytocin effectively prevents and treats postpartum hemorrhage, the leading cause of maternal death worldwide. In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), characteristics of oxytocin—specifically its heat sensitivity—challenge efforts to ensure its quality throughout the health supply chain. In 2019, WHO, UNFPA and UNICEF released a joint-statement to clarify and recommend that oxytocin should be kept in the cold chain (between 2 and 8 °C) during transportation and storage; however, confusion among stakeholders in LMICs persists. Objectives and methods: To further support recommendations in the WHO/UNFPA/UNICEF joint-statement, this paper reviews results of oxytocin quality testing in LMICs, evaluates product stability considerations for its management and considers quality risks for oxytocin injection throughout the health supply chain. This paper concludes with a set of recommended actions to address the challenges in maintaining quality for a heat sensitive pharmaceutical product. Results: Due to the heat sensitivity of oxytocin, its quality may be degraded at numerous points along the health supply chain including: At the point of manufacture, due to poor quality active pharmaceutical ingredients; lack of sterile manufacturing environments; or low-quality manufacturing processes During storage and distribution, due to lack of temperature control in the supply chain, including cold chain at the end user health facility Safeguarding the quality of oxytocin falls under the purview of national medicines regulatory authorities; however, regulators in LMICs may not adhere to good regulatory practices. Conclusions: Storing oxytocin from 2 to 8 °C throughout the supply chain is important for maintaining its quality. While short temperature excursions may not harm product quality, the cumulative heat exposure is generally not tracked and leads to degradation. National and sub-national policies must prioritize procurement of quality oxytocin and require its appropriate storage and management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The policy effect of government assistance on the rice production in Southeast Asia: Comparative case studies of Thailand, Vietnam, and the Philippines.
- Author
-
Laiprakobsup, Thanapan
- Subjects
DOMESTIC economic assistance ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PRICE regulation ,TAX cuts ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Government in Southeast Asia plays a crucial role in the rice sector. It intervenes in rice production in order to increase the country's production and to achieve self-sufficiency in rice production. How does the government's policy affect rice production? This paper examines the policy effect of government assistance on rice production in Southeast Asian countries and it argues that the less likely government is to impose tax barriers on the rice sector and to control prices, the more likely is rice production to increase. Studying the relation between rice policy and rice production in Southeast Asia, the paper finds that a decline in the state's tax intervention in the rice sector helps to increase rice production in both rice exporting and importing countries. In addition, the results show that political liberalization leads to an increase in rice production. Therefore, a reduction in tax barriers and the abandonment of the state's price control are state policies that encourage rice production in the long run. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Outils d'aide à la décision pour la répartition de la ressource en eau en région Pays de la Loire.
- Author
-
Pedehour, Pauline
- Subjects
SOCIAL norms ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Copyright of LHB: Hydroscience Journal is the property of Taylor & Francis Ltd 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
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The Role of the Foreign-Language Press in Migrant Integration.
- Author
-
Zubrzycki, Jerzy
- Subjects
LANGUAGE & culture ,IMMIGRANTS ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIAL status ,SOCIAL psychology ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This article discusses the role of the foreign-language press in migrant integration. In studying transatlantic migration in the nineteenth century, one might analyse the rhythm of economic growth in the principal sending countries of Europe and attempt to find a relationship between the course of migration and the changes in pace of American economic development. One might also relate the findings of such an economic analysis to a set of demographic data showing. The results of such a study would be of interest to students of select disciplines like economics and demography. There is, however, a large body of social sciences including, for instance, history, sociology, social psychology, criminology and social geography, which contribute special tools for the study of cultural factors affecting the volume and direction of international migrations. Emotional attachments to a community and to acquaintances, to a culture or language, to political and social institutions or to a way of life must be considered as factors inhibiting Trans-Atlantic movement and affecting the adjustment of migrants in the U.S.
- Published
- 1958
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Franchise for Atomic Energy.
- Subjects
PUBLISHED reprints ,CORPORATE reorganizations ,NUCLEAR energy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SCIENCE & state - Abstract
The article presents a reprint of the article discussing the reorganization of the British Atomic Energy project that was published in "The Economist." It focuses on the White Paper issued by the British government, which describes the kind of organization to which the government has decided to entrust the development of atomic energy. It likewise offers information about the transfer of responsibility for atomic energy from the Ministry of Supply to the Lord President of Great Britain.
- Published
- 1954
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Geographic information technology usage in developing countries - A case study in Mozambique.
- Author
-
Amade, Nelson, Painho, Marco, and Oliveira, Tiago
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHIC information systems ,REMOTE sensing ,GLOBAL Positioning System ,LAND use ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Geographic information technologies (GIT) have matured, have become pervasive throughout many types of organizations over recent decades and gained a wide range of attention in diverse sectors of society. The goal of this paper is to identify the main drivers and uses of GIT in organizations and to give an overview of GIT uses in developing countries with a focus on a case study developed for Mozambique by analyzing the results of a survey of 123 Mozambican organizations that are current GIT users. The results show that the main drivers behind are compatibility, complexity, competitive pressure, donor pressure, government policy, intention to adopt, innovation, relative advantage, security, and technology competence. Organizations of the public and private sectors use GIT for customer/resource/risk management, decision support, education, research, monitoring, prediction, simulation, suitability analysis, sustainability, use and access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Rosser Reeves And The 1952 Eisenhower TV Spot Blitz.
- Author
-
Griese, Noel L.
- Subjects
POLITICAL advertising ,UNITED States presidential election, 1952 ,POLITICAL campaigns ,TELEVISION advertising ,MARKET saturation ,EFFECTIVE frequency of advertising ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The 1952 presidential campaign was the first in which TV spots were used by a White House hopeful. Rosser Reeves of Ted Bates and Company prepared the TV spot blitz for Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. The rival Democratic Volunteers for Stevenson organization tried to scuttle the proposed broadcast blitz by releasing a copy of the master plan for the TV campaign, charging that the Republican, planned to fill the airwaves with political soap suds and bubble gum and by asking the FCC to bar the campaign. The Republicans were undaunted. The spot blitz aired in the final weeks before the election. Saturation levels were attained in 11 states, and heavy to light schedules were aired in another 29 states. Scholarly studies of the effects of television on the outcome of the election by and large find that the TV spots had no effect on the landslide Eisenhower victory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Access to post-compulsory education and training: economic, sociological and political determinants and remaining research gaps.
- Author
-
Otero, Manuel Souto
- Subjects
RIGHT to education ,EDUCATIONAL finance ,RATE of return ,SELECTIVE admission (School) ,SOCIALIZATION ,HIGHER education of the working class ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper presents a review and assessment of existing theoretical accounts to explain differentials in access to education and training in advanced economies. These theories tend to focus on the analysis of the influence of a set of economic, sociological and political variables on access to education. Existing theories are criticized on two grounds. Firstly, they seldom take into consideration the crucial role of political-institutional factors, and in particular, welfare states' actions through direct investment and regulation in shaping access levels. Secondly, they focus narrowly on the analysis of different stages of education and training, and this does not reflect the current policy emphasis on lifelong learning. The paper concludes with an outline of a future research agenda to address these gaps, and also calls for a more rigorous analysis of the weight of the different factors affecting access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Euro Adoption in the New EU Member Countries.
- Author
-
Šaroch, Stanislav, Srholec, Martin, and Tomšík, Vladimír
- Subjects
CZECH economic policy ,EUROPEAN integration ,MONETARY unions ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper discusses the strategy of the Czech economic policy as regards the current enlargement process of the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). The authors discuss the validity of the Maastricht criteria for the new European Union (EU) member countries, as well as the risks and puzzles of both real and nominal convergence processes. The paper shows that current fiscal policy is the main limiting factor of the speed of the Czech Republic `s entry into the EMU. The paper concludes by arguing that the Czech Republic should endeavor to join the EMU as quickly as possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
43. A DSGE model of fiscal stabilizers and informality in Sub-Sahara Africa.
- Author
-
Bondzie, Eric Amoo and Armah, Mark Kojo
- Subjects
INFORMAL sector ,PUBLIC spending ,FISCAL policy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,TAX evasion ,INCOME tax ,MACROECONOMIC models - Abstract
This paper investigates the effects of fiscal impulses on macroeconomic variables within a New-Keynesian DSGE framework featuring an informal economy that allows for the examination of the effectiveness of automatic stabilizers in stimulating some selected sub-Saharan African (SSA) economies during crises. Stabilizers were modelled such that fiscal instruments react to their own lagged values and the official sector output. The results indicate that tax hikes lead to sizeable tax evasion and reallocation of factor inputs from the official sector to the shadow sector making the standard aggregate estimates of fiscal policies ineffective while government spending shocks slow down activities in the shadow sector. The findings also showed that automatic stabilizers on government spending (income taxes) stabilized the economy by reducing (raising) output levels even in the presence of the shadow economy. For policy implications, effective implementation of government policies should incorporate the informal sector in macroeconomic modelling, especially for countries with a large informal sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Landholdings, livelihood choices and household income in the Red River Delta, Vietnam.
- Author
-
Tran, Tuyen Quang, Vu, Quang, Nguyen, Dung Thuy Thi, and Nguyen, Huyen Thi
- Subjects
HOUSEHOLDS ,STANDARD of living ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,REGRESSION analysis ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Land scarcity has frequently been cited as the primary barrier preventing rural households from pursuing better livelihoods in Vietnam and other developing societies. In this paper, we investigate the role of landlessness and landholdings in the choice of livelihoods and in household income in the Red River Delta, the most densely populated region in Vietnam. Using data from the 2018 Vietnam Household Living Standard Survey, our cluster analysis classifies five livelihoods pursued by local households, namely informal wage-earning jobs, formal wage-earning jobs, nonfarm self-employment, agriculture, and non-labor livelihoods. Non-laboring, agricultural, or informal wage-earning households earn less per capita income on average than formal wage-earning or nonfarm self-employment households, according to both descriptive and inferential statistical analyses. Our regression analysis demonstrates that land scarcity is not a significant obstacle preventing rural people from seeking gainful livelihoods in the region. The finding suggests that improving education and supporting non-farm activities should be high-priority government policies for local households with limited land and education. Such policies are expected to help them not only transform their livelihoods but also improve their economic well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Content development footprints for the establishment of a National Bioethics Committee: lessons from Nigeria.
- Author
-
Princewill, Chitu Womehoma, Jegede, Ayodele Samuel, Malomo, Adefolarin, Ezeonu, Francis Chukwuemeka, Lawal, Abdulwahab Ademola, Adeleye, Omokhoa, and Onyia, Christie Oby
- Subjects
BIOETHICS ,AGRICULTURAL innovations ,SCIENTIFIC discoveries ,CLIMATE change ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Nigeria is experiencing, together with the rest of the world, consequences of relentlessly accelerating technological developments, in the contexts of relative lagging of developments in the Humanities, new discoveries in sciences and technological innovations, advances in medicine, changes in government policies and norms, rapid changes in the society, unhealthy practices in the area of food and agriculture, degradation of the environment as well as climate change. Furthermore, Nigeria as a Member State of UNESCO Bioethics is expected to have a National Bioethics Committee to enhance her participation in global concerns, as well as increase her opportunities to tap into global Bioethics resources. For this Committee to be established, the National Bioethics Framework and Policy Documents must be put in place. This paper discusses the rigorous process of developing the National Bioethics Framework and the National Bioethics Policy Documents as well as the need for a National Bioethics Committee in Nigeria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Constructing Knowledge Economy Composite Indicators using an MCA-DEA approach.
- Author
-
Guaita Martínez, José Manuel, Martín Martín, José María, Ostos Rey, María Sol, and de Castro Pardo, Mónica
- Subjects
INFORMATION economy ,POLICY analysis ,PUBLIC communication ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Composite indicators are a remarkably useful tool in policy analysis and public communication for assessing phenomena, such as Knowledge-Based Economy (KBE), that cannot be expressed by means of a simple indicator. The objective of this study is to propose and compare three MCA-DEA models from a "Benefit of Doubt" (BoD) approach in order to build KBE Composite Indicators. To show the effectiveness of the models, this paper proposes a case study of 36 European countries to assess the degree of development of KBE. The results revealed differences with respect to the optimal weights assigned to the sub-indicators, the discriminating power, the operability, and the participatory nature of the models. Model 1 yielded high scores for every country and low discriminating power. Model 2 favored the most efficient countries in terms of KBE and allows for the incorporation of expert knowledge, thereby giving flexibility to the process. Model 3 made it possible to construct composite indicators from an optimal balance approach and yielded low results overall. These results demonstrate the necessity to analyze the different choices for measuring KBE in order to determine which indicator is more suitable for each context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Transforming the wellbeing focus in education: A document analysis of policy in Aotearoa New Zealand.
- Author
-
Higgins, Joanna and Goodall, Suskya
- Subjects
WELL-being ,RESEARCH ,COMPUTER software ,EDUCATION ,MATHEMATICAL models ,HOLISTIC medicine ,GOVERNMENT policy ,THEORY ,STUDENTS ,CONTENT analysis ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA mining - Abstract
Purpose: Understanding the nature of wellbeing as multidimensional and complex provides a policy window to generate a strengths-based policy orientation to promote wellbeing in education settings. The purpose of this exploratory paper is to map how wellbeing is interpreted across public education policy documents in Aotearoa New Zealand. Method: To explore the narrative that this group of documents weave, we draw on models of holistic wellbeing, ecological systems and appreciative inquiry. Policy documents were analysed using text mining software to track notions of wellbeing; their occurrence and co-occurrence with related concepts. Results: Key findings include the predominance of wellbeing, the interrelatedness of wellbeing with relationships, and the predominance of student wellbeing over the wellbeing of other stakeholders, highlighting that current education policy does not interpret wellbeing as relational, complex or contextual. Conclusion: We argue that interpreting such documents through a wellbeing lens demonstrates the complexity and disparity of the conceptualization and contextualization. We assert that it is critical to explore possibilities for deliberate and ecological wellbeing connections within educational policy and practice for the good of all stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Vulnerable persons in society: an insider's perspective.
- Author
-
Numans, Wilma, Regenmortel, Tine Van, Schalk, René, and Boog, Juliette
- Subjects
SOCIAL participation ,WELL-being ,RESEARCH ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,SELF-perception ,RESEARCH methodology ,GROUNDED theory ,SELF-evaluation ,COMMUNITIES ,INTERVIEWING ,LIFE ,EXPERIENCE ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,AT-risk people ,GOVERNMENT policy ,THEMATIC analysis ,CONTENT analysis ,METROPOLITAN areas ,EMOTIONS ,SOCIAL integration ,SOCIAL case work ,MEDICAL coding - Abstract
Purpose: Self-reliance and social participation are strongly promoted by social policy. Both concepts are linked to the concept of vulnerability, for people who do not meet these standards are labelled "vulnerable people". In this paper, the insider's perspective takes central stage by seeking to explore what it means to be labelled a "vulnerable person", and through this to further our insight into the meaning of the concept of vulnerability. Method: Thirty-three in-depth interviews were conducted with 16 allegedly vulnerable people. The data were subjected to thematic content analysis. Results: Our analysis revealed three main dimensions and eight sub-dimensions of perceived vulnerability, outlining an insider's concept of vulnerability. This concept includes manifestations of vulnerability, feelings coexisting with vulnerability, and the image of vulnerable people. Conclusion: The perception of vulnerability changes when interacting with others in society, especially with social policy implementers. In this interaction, the perceived vulnerability increases and becomes societal vulnerability. It concerns a dependency situation in which one's strength and self-determination are not recognized, and the help needed is not provided. By acknowledging the insider's perspective, social policy can fulfil a more empowering role towards "vulnerable people" and contribute to people's well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Revisiting an information infrastructure for development: exploring the cost of information in Pacific Island development.
- Author
-
Tibben, William
- Subjects
INFORMATION & communication technologies ,INTERNET ,AGRICULTURAL development ,KNOWLEDGE transfer ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Information and communication technologies (ICTs) have been associated with development programmes for many decades. A theme of Lamberton’s commentary on such initiatives focuses on the lack of attention given to information as a key factor in the development process. His writing reiterated a number of arguments that he saw as being fundamental to the application of an information perspective to development issues. With a focus on agricultural development policy in the Pacific region, the paper uses a number of propositions that are suggested by Lamberton to analyse contemporary development initiatives in Pacific Island agriculture. These propositions focus attention on information costs that can influence the transfer of information and development of knowledge. Document analysis of selected published sources from a Pacific Island development programme are reviewed to illustrate the significance of information costs for development processes. The paper addresses the contention between traditional authority and knowledge and its significance for development. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Double punch to the better than nothing: physical activity participation of adolescents with autism spectrum disorder.
- Author
-
Gürkan, Rıfat Kerem and Koçak, Funda
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,AUTISM in adolescence ,PHYSICAL activity ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,GOVERNMENT policy ,THEMATIC analysis ,MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
Participation in physical activity (PA) occurs differently in each individual. Investigating how it comes about in adolescents with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is seen as an area that does not receive enough attention. In this paper, which was designed to get more information and contribute to the field, the participation of adolescents with ASD in PA was examined in line with the socio-ecological model through the opinions of 17 Turkish parents. Semi-structured interviews well-used to understand the perspective of parents', and as a main themes constraints and facilitating factors affecting participation of adolescents with ASD in PA were determined. When investigated in terms of intrapersonal factors, which are the first stage of the model, are examined, it is seen that ASD related problems as a constraint and experiences as a facilitator were the foremost themes. Interpersonal constraints were prejudice and family attitude while facilitators were family attitude and attitude of close surroundings. In environmental factors, the main constraints were adapted physical activity (APA) opportunities, while facilitators were neighborhood and facilities. While negative PA approaches of organizations was an institutional constraint, positive PA approach of organizations was a facilitator. In the final stages of the model, in terms of public policy, the constraint was not meeting expectations of current policies and the facilitator was improvements in policies. Consequently, it was understood that adolescents with ASD still participate in PA in some way even though they encounter many constraints when participating in physical activities, the constraints outweigh the facilitating factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.