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1

Enabling a simulation capability in the organisation. London: Springer, 2008.

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2

Sharma, Sunil. Relevance of resource based view themes for capability evolution. Ahmedabad: Indian Institute of Management, 2015.

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3

Bacic, Ivan Luiz Zilli. Demand-driven land evaluation: With case studies in Santa Catarina, Brazil. [Enschede, Netherlands]: Wageningen University, International Institute for Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation, 2003.

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4

Coast Guard deepwater capability replacement analysis: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation of the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, House of Representatives, One Hundred Fifth Congress, second session, May 19, 1998. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1998.

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5

A, Kane Rosalie, King Cheryl D, University of Minnesota. Long-Term Care DECISIONS Resource Center., and United States. Administration on Aging., eds. Deciding whether the client can decide: Assessment of decision-making capability. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Long-Term Care DECISIONS Resource Center, 1990.

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6

A, Kane Rosalie, King Cheryl D, University of Minnesota. Long-Term Care DECISIONS Resource Center, and United States. Administration on Aging, eds. Deciding whether the client can decide: Assessment of decision-making capability. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Long-Term Care DECISIONS Resource Center, 1990.

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7

A, Kane Rosalie, King Cheryl D, University of Minnesota. Long-Term Care DECISIONS Resource Center., and United States. Administration on Aging., eds. Deciding whether the client can decide: Assessment of decision-making capability. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Long-Term Care DECISIONS Resource Center, 1990.

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8

Huang, Kuei-Jung. Quality capability self-diagnosis: A multicriteria evaluation approach. 1994.

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9

Huang, Kuei-Jung. Quality capability self-diagnosis: A multicriteria evaluation approach. 1994.

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10

Toward Improved Management of Officer Retention: A New Capability for Assessing Policy Options. Rand, 2014.

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11

Szmukler, George. Emergencies, general medicine, ‘community treatment orders’, and ‘psychiatric advance statements’. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198801047.003.0012.

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The implications of the Fusion Law for general medicine, especially inpatient care when non-consensual and involuntary treatment is being considered, are examined in this chapter. The new burdens posed by regulation can be minimized by making requirements essentially parallel ‘good practice’. Involuntary psychiatric treatment in the community under the ‘decision-making capability–best interests (will and preferences)’ principles of the Fusion Law would be substantially different from the way it is commonly instituted today. The Fusion Law offers an important place for ‘advance statements’ and ‘advance directives’, supporting respect for a patient’s beliefs and values (or ‘will and preferences’). Illnesses that impair decision-making capacity, but that are relapsing-remitting—such as the majority of mental illnesses—are good candidates for such advance planning, yet such measures have rarely been employed to date.
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12

Gergel, Tania, and George Szmukler. The ethics of coercion in community mental health care. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198788065.003.0014.

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The specific context of community mental health care affects the debate surrounding coercion in psychiatry, not by raising radically new questions but by highlighting the complexity of this debate and some of the associated ethical difficulties. This chapter begins by looking at the varying conventional justifications for involuntary treatment and then considers the different mechanisms through which such ‘coercion’ is enforced within the community—from formal compulsion via community treatment orders (CTOs) through to ‘softer’ pressures, such as ‘persuasion’ or ‘interpersonal leverage’. Some commonly accepted ideas surrounding interventions such as ‘incentives’ and ‘threats’ are challenged. The chapter concludes with some broad suggestions as to a how a reformulated ‘decision-making capability and best interests’ approach may be one way to increase the ethical viability of community coercion.
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13

Evans, Charlotte, Anne Creaton, Marcus Kennedy, and Terry Martin, eds. Obstetrics and gynaecology. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198722168.003.0013.

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High acuity and critical care presentations in obstetrics and gynaecology are not uncommon, and when seen in the retrieval setting they present pathophysiology and risk avoidance challenges for the retrieval physician, coordinator, and system. The particular risks in obstetric retrieval which are associated with the consideration of infant risk, and the emotive implications of perinatal death, create additional pressure. The wellbeing of the mother is in all circumstances the priority, and it is important that this drives decision-making and planning. Careful consideration and consultation with specialist retrieval coordinators with obstetric experience and qualifications is important to optimize plans. These plans often revolve around the wisdom of intervention or delivery pre, post, or instead of high-risk transfer. Experience, perspective, and understanding of practitioner and system capability will inform best decisions and outcomes.
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14

Jolls, Christine. Bounded Rationality, Behavioral Economics, and the Law. Edited by Francesco Parisi. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199684267.013.005.

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Behavioural economics has become a leading force in applied economics, including in economic analysis of law. At the heart of behavioural economics is the concept of bounded rationality. Bounded rationality suggests that humans face important limitations in knowledge and decision-making capability. Such limitations have clear importance to both the understanding and the improvement of the legal system. Knowledge limitations present a particularly compelling area for legal analysis. Two case studies of debiasing through law in response to knowledge limitations reveal the potential mechanisms by which law may ease such limitations among boundedly rational actors. In such cases of debiasing through law, empirical evidence plays a pivotal role, as this evidence both identifies the existence of knowledge limitations in the first instance and provides a means by which to assess whether a given legal rule allays such limitations.
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15

Luhtakallio, Eeva, and Nina Eliasoph. Ethnography of Politics and Political Communication. Edited by Kate Kenski and Kathleen Hall Jamieson. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199793471.013.28.

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The ethnographic approach has particular potential for studying political communication through enlarging understandings of political institutions and expanding definitions of “politics.” First, widening institutional understanding takes advantage of ethnography’s capacity to open windows that traditional analysis of political institutions leaves shut. Second, ethnography is uniquely able to examine new forms of engagement that people have not yet defined as “politics.” Third, studying political communication ethnographically means expanding the modes of communication and activity examined to include nonverbal and virtual communication. Politics is one of the principal arenas in which “culture” unfolds and becomes observable, yet in ways that are not limited to political institutions or decision-making practices. Common to political ethnographies is the capability to show how “how” and “why” are linked: how a political process or practice takes place enables finding out why it does.
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16

Reed, Christopher Robert. The Struggle for Control over Black Politics and Protest. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036231.003.0006.

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The 1920s witnessed a dual black presence beyond tokenism in the chambers of the Chicago City Council as well as possessing the nation's sole black voice in the U.S. Congress. Further, the Illinois Senate, the Illinois Commerce Commission, the Cook County Municipal Court, and the Chicago Library Board accommodated a new African American membership. Among white racists, Chicago's City Hall even derisively carried the label of being “Uncle Tom's Cabin” because of extensive black employment and a small black decision-making capability. This chapter explores this occurrence. Focusing on economically regenerative politics and robust economics as integral features of the bedrock foundation for the heralded Black Metropolis, the chapter also explores the nexus of politics and nonpolitical economic protest, along with this pivotal relationship to the economic fabric of black Chicago in business, labor, associational linkages, the professions, and the underground economy.
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17

Hallman, William K. What the Public Thinks and Knows About Science—and Why It Matters. Edited by Kathleen Hall Jamieson, Dan M. Kahan, and Dietram A. Scheufele. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190497620.013.6.

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Modern conceptions of science literacy include knowledge of science facts; a grasp of scientific methods, norms, and practices; awareness of current discoveries and controversies involving science and refinement of the ability to comprehend and evaluate their implications; the capability to assess the priorities and actions of scientific institutions; and the capacity to engage in civic discourse and decision-making with regard to specific issues involving science. Advocates of increased science literacy maintain that widespread public understanding of science benefits individuals, culture, society, the economy, the nation, democracy, and science itself. This chapter argues that the relatively crude measures currently employed to assess science literacy are insufficient to demonstrate these outcomes. It is difficult to know whether these benefits are real and are independent of greater levels of education. Existing measures should be supplanted by multidimensional scales that are parsimonious, easy to administer, reliable, and valid over time and across cultures.
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18

Kallmeyer, Andrea, José Luis Zamorano, G. Locorotondo, Madalina Garbi, José Juan Gómez de Diego, and Miguel Ángel García Fernández. Non-invasive haemodynamic assessment. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199599639.003.0005.

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The diagnostic power of two-dimensional (2D) echocardiography resides not only in its capability of providing anatomical information and of studying myocardial contractile function, but also in the possibility of performing a non-invasive haemodynamic assessment. Such non-invasive haemodynamic assessment is the subject of this chapter.2D echocardiography, colour flow imaging, and Doppler modality make this haemodynamic assessment possible, by studying the following parameters: ◆ Blood flow velocities. ◆ Transvalvular pressure gradients. ◆ Valvular areas. ◆ Stroke volume, regurgitant volume, and regurgitant fraction. ◆ Cardiac function.The application of these concepts in clinical practice will be explained through this chapter. They can be summarized in the following points: ◆ The study of valvular insufficiencies. ◆ The study of the valvular stenosis. ◆ The study of intracardiac shunts. ◆ The study of myocardial systolic and diastolic function. ◆ The estimation of intracardiac pressures.Finally, non-invasive haemodynamic study represents an alternative to invasive procedures in some clinical circumstances and it is very important in the diagnostic and therapeutic decision making. Therefore, it is necessary for the cardiologist to understand how this echocardiographic study is performed, as well as its advantages and limitations.
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