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Journal articles on the topic 'Operate criticism'

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1

Neill, Sarah J., and Imelda Coyne. "The Role of Felt or Enacted Criticism in Parents’ Decision Making in Differing Contexts and Communities: Toward a Formal Grounded Theory." Journal of Family Nursing 24, no. 3 (2018): 443–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1074840718783488.

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Felt or enacted criticism was identified as a significant influence on White British parents’ decision making during acute childhood illness in a substantive grounded theory “Containing acute childhood illness within family life.” These parents sought to avoid further criticism, sometimes leading to delayed consultation. Using Glaserian grounded theory principles, we conducted a secondary analysis of data from three studies, to establish the transferability and modifiability of the original theory to other settings and communities in Ireland and England. Felt or enacted criticism was found to
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Fox, Kathryn R., Kaitlyn E. Toole, Joseph C. Franklin, and Jill M. Hooley. "Why Does Nonsuicidal Self-Injury Improve Mood? A Preliminary Test of Three Hypotheses." Clinical Psychological Science 5, no. 1 (2016): 111–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2167702616662270.

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People who engage in nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) often state that it helps them feel better. We tested three hypotheses through which this mood modification might occur. Following a negative mood induction, adults reporting past year NSSI were randomized into a control (i.e., sitting alone quietly), mild distraction, or pain condition. All participants completed mood ratings at regular intervals. No mood repair occurred in the control condition. However, distraction improved mood both during and after the activity. Participants who self-administered pain reported no overall mood change, sug
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Ghosh, Ritwik. "Marxism and Latin American Literature." SMART MOVES JOURNAL IJELLH 8, no. 4 (2020): 208. http://dx.doi.org/10.24113/ijellh.v8i4.10539.

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In the aftermath of the collapse of the U.S.S.R Marxism remains a viable and flourishing tradition of literary and cultural criticism. Marx believed economic and social forces shape human consciousness, and that the internal contradictions in capitalism would lead to its demise.[i] Marxist analyses can show how class interests operate through cultural forms.[ii] Marxist interpretations of cultural life have been done by critics such as C.L.R James and Raymond Williams.[iii]
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Herman, Edward S. "The Propaganda Model Revisited." Monthly Review 69, no. 8 (2018): 42. http://dx.doi.org/10.14452/mr-069-08-2018-01_4.

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In Manufacturing Consent (1988), Noam Chomsky and I put forward a "propaganda model" as a framework for understanding how and why the mainstream U.S. media operate within restricted assumptions, depend uncritically on elite sources, and participate in propaganda campaigns helpful to elite interests. In this article I describe the model, address some of the criticism leveled against it, and discuss how it holds up today.Click here to purchase a PDF version of this article at the Monthly Review website.
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Petkov, Stefan. "The Role Of Truth In Explanatory Understanding." Balkan Journal of Philosophy 12, no. 2 (2020): 87–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/bjp202012211.

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This paper discusses the polemical question of whether explanations that produce understanding must be true. It argues positively for the role of truth in reaching explanatory understanding, by presenting three lines of criticism of alternative accounts. The first is that by rejecting truth as a criterion for evaluating explanations, any non-factual account thereby effectively cuts ties with the central theories of explanations, which provide at least partial criteria for explanatory understanding. The second line of criticism is that some of the most well-known non-factual accounts implicitly
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Hess, Scott. "The Romantic Work of Genius: Author, Nature, Nation, and the “Genial Criticism” of Samuel Taylor Coleridge." Modern Language Quarterly 80, no. 3 (2019): 287–310. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00267929-7569624.

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Abstract This essay explores how genius in the nineteenth century simultaneously constituted both individual and collective national identity, helping to produce new forms of liberal democratic nationalist culture. It offers a Latourian interpretation of genius in terms of the kind of social work and connections that the term enabled. Genius became associated in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries with author, nature, and nation in ways that grounded new models of literature and identity in the supposedly transcendental truth of nature and in specific landscapes as “sites of mem
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Slobodin, Ortal. "Between the eye and the gaze: Maternal shame in the novel We Need to Talk about Kevin." Feminism & Psychology 29, no. 2 (2018): 214–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959353518783785.

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This paper seeks to understand the social power of maternal shame, using a framework that integrates feminist criticism of contemporary motherhood ideologies with philosophical theories that discuss shame in the broader context of visual perception. By using Lionel Shriver’s (2005) novel We Need to Talk about Kevin, the paper illustrates how shame operates in the interplay between the socio-cultural, gendered ideals of motherhood and mothers’ representations of these ideals. Specifically, the paper suggests that today’s mothers operate under a social gaze that expects them to meet the cultural
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Beaumont, Elizabeth. "Gender Justice v. The “Invisible Hand” of Gender Bias in Law and Society." Hypatia 31, no. 3 (2016): 668–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hypa.12260.

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How does so much gender inequality endure in an era when many laws and policies endorse principles of gender equality? This essay examines this dilemma by considering Susan Moller Okin's criticism of “false gender neutrality,” research on implicit bias, and the shifting relation of gender bias to American law. I argue that these are crucial elements of the modern cycle of gender inequality, enabling it to operate through a perverse “invisible‐hand” mechanism. This framework helps convey how underlying gender bias influences individual behaviors that generate, legitimate, and mask broad pattern
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Martinicorena, Sofía. "The Ideology of Self-making and the White Working Class in Rebecca Harding Davis’ "Life in the Iron Mills"." REDEN. Revista Española de Estudios Norteamericanos 2, no. 1 (2020): 59–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.37536/reden.2020.2.1383.

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Rebecca Harding Davis’ novella Life in the Iron Mills, published in 1861 in The Atlantic Monthly, is now considered a landmark of early American realism. This paper analyses the text’s depiction of the white working class and the ideological consequences of the myth of upward mobility and self-making, which are presented as an impossibility to Hugh Wolfe, the story’s main character. I will argue that Davis’ choice to offer a representation of the precarious lives of the workers of Northern industrial capitalism implies a criticism of the quintessentially American narrative of upward mobility,
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Dewi, Novita. "Postcolonial Hermeneutics: Concepts and Contribution to Understanding Socio-Religious Problems in Southeast Asia." IKAT : The Indonesian Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 2, no. 1 (2018): 47. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/ikat.v2i1.37392.

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Scrutiny of unequal power-relations between the “East” and the “West” in politics, culture, economy, and various aspects of life is the concern of postcolonial studies. Foucault's concept of power is central in postcolonial theory with which Edward Said is celebrated for his dismantling of Orientalist views. Postcolonial literature, likewise, has contributed to the growth and development of postcolonial criticism. The first objective of this article is to give a brief overview of different terms attached to the word “postcolonial”, i.e. postcolonial literary criticism, postcolonial literature
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Perreault, Gregory P., and Tim P. Vos. "The GamerGate controversy and journalistic paradigm maintenance." Journalism 19, no. 4 (2016): 553–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884916670932.

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GamerGate is a viral campaign that became an occasion, particularly from August 2014 to January 2015, to both question journalistic ethics and badger women involved in game development and gaming criticism. Gaming journalists thus found themselves managing a debate on two fronts: defending the probity of gaming journalism and remediating attacks on women. This study explores how gaming journalists undertook paradigm maintenance in the midst of the controversy. This was analyzed through interviews with gaming journalists as well as a discourse analysis of the texts responding to GamerGate that
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Bell, Stephen. "Do We Really Need a New ‘Constructivist Institutionalism’ to Explain Institutional Change?" British Journal of Political Science 41, no. 4 (2011): 883–906. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007123411000147.

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Rational choice, historical institutionalism and sociological institutionalism are under criticism from a new ‘constructivist institutionalism’ – with critics claiming that established positions cannot explain institutional change effectively, because agents are highly constrained by their institutional environments. These alleged problems in explaining institutional change are exaggerated and can be dealt with by using a suitably tailored historical institutionalism. This places active, interpretive agents at the centre of analysis, in institutional settings modelled as more flexible than tho
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Warren, Marilyn. "Unelected does not Equate with Undemocratic: Parliamentary Sovereignty and the Role of the Judiciary." Deakin Law Review 13, no. 2 (2008): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.21153/dlr2008vol13no2art158.

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<p>One feature of judicial life that strikes most appointees to judicial office early on is the silence of the Judiciary outside our judgments and statements in court. We are also struck, when we deliver our first judgment that raises controversy or higher public interest, by the vulnerability of the Judiciary to<br />criticism, sometimes vehement and trenchant. Judges do not answer back. With the exception of Chief Justices, judges are generally only heard in court, unless the speaking occasion involves an extra-curial or academic discussion on the law or judicial life. This is pr
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Thatcher, Tom. "(Re)Mark(S) On the Cross." Biblical Interpretation 4, no. 3 (1996): 346–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156851596x00086.

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AbstractThis essay seeks to analyze tensions in historical criticism by reviewing Raymond Brown's treatment of "the cry of dereliction" in The Death of the Messiah. Brown navigates a three-tiered reading of Mark 15: the text/surface level, an intertext level, and a historical Jesus level. The historical Jesus level will presumably operate as an extra-linguistic control which enhances the objectivity of Brown's reading of the surface text. But this "history" in Brown's reading actually refers to a sub-text generated by proposed intertextual links which Brown's own language renders unstable. The
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15

Kennedy, Mary Catherine. "Signs of Contradiction: Understanding the Church, the Papacy, and the World around Us through a Textual Analysis of HBO’s The Young Pope." Journal of Religion, Media and Digital Culture 9, no. 3 (2020): 279–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/21659214-bja10002.

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Abstract This paper examines hbo’s The Young Pope through a cultural approach and ritual view to communication first developed by James W. Carey (2009). After a discussion of mediatization of society and its impacts on culture, the essay explores the deeper meanings The Young Pope conveys about self-discovery and the power of love through a textual analysis of the mythic structure of the hero’s journey (Campbell, 1949/2008; Kluckhohn, 1959) in order to understand how religious belief systems and media content paired together can offer a particular view of the world to those who ascribe to them
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Hume, Naomi. "Avant-Garde Anachronisms: Prague's Group of Fine Artists and Viennese Art Theory." Slavic Review 71, no. 3 (2012): 516–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.5612/slavicreview.71.3.0516.

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The Czech Group of Fine Artists published their journal, Umělecký měsíčník (Art Monthly, 1911-1914) to justify their abstraction and their interest in French cubism in response to criticism that denigrated their work as incomprehensible and foreign. In this article, Naomi Hume argues that the Group's strategy was fundamentally at odds with how avantgardes have been understood to operate in scholarship on modernism. Rather than asserting a break with the past, the Group applied new Viennese art historical approaches—particularly those of Alois Riegl, Max Dvořák, and Vincenc Kramář—to draw paral
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KITSOPOULOS, K. P., P. W. SCOTT, and C. A. JEFFREY. "ISO 9000 quality assurance certification in the mining sector of Greece." Bulletin of the Geological Society of Greece 34, no. 3 (2001): 1059. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/bgsg.17153.

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All over the world, businesses have started moving towards Quality Assurance and the adoption of ISO 9000 Standards. In this study, we examined the status of the Quality Assurance Certification of companies which operate in the mining sector in Greece. It is certain that the companies have started working towards Quality Management and Quality Assurance Certification. The movement towards Quality Assurance is customer driven. The specific motives for implementing Quality Assurance Certification were customer satisfaction, to gain a competitive advantage and improve business efficiency. They an
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18

Hoogland, Renée C. "(Sub)textual Configurations: Sexual Ambivalences in Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar." Keeping Ourselves Alive 3, no. 2-3 (1993): 179–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jnlh.3.2-3.05sub.

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Abstract Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar (1963/1980) has become one of the classic 20th-century stories of female adolescence. Feminist critics have analyzed this tale of madness and self-destruction primarily in terms of gender conflicts. From a specifically lesbian feminist perspective, this article presents a "stressed read-ing"1 of The Bell Jar, arguing that it is not in the first place the operations of gender ideology, but rather the contradictions of female (hetero)sexuality that play a determining part. The resulting conflicts are shown to operate on the novel's narrative as well as discur
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Zitko, Mislav. "Models, fictions and explanations: A study in historical epistemology of economics." Filozofija i drustvo 24, no. 4 (2013): 84–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/fid1304084z.

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This paper examines the standard criticism of the neoclassical economic theory that takes mathematical formalism and the practice of modelling as the most problematic aspect of orthodox economics. The aim of the paper is to explore the epistemic properties of models in science (particularly in economics), and to incorporate the insights from the recent debates in the philosophy of science into the framework of historical epistemology of economics. The main claim of this paper is that history is important for understanding how economic models operate and why have they been accepted as legitimat
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20

Tiverios, Nicholas. "A Uniform Hermeneutic Thesis." University of Queensland Law Journal 40, no. 2 (2021): 181–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.38127/uqlj.v40i2.5483.

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At a broad level of generality, the orthodox approach to interpreting contracts, trusts, wills, security documents, company constitutions and so forth is the same: a search for the objective meaning to be attributed to the author or authors of the instrument (the ‘uniform hermeneutic thesis’). This article has two primary objectives. The first is to respond to a common criticism of this uniform objective approach. The criticism is that, as each species of legal obligation is different, different rules of interpretation should apply when the given legal context changes. For example, why not ask
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Troitskiy, Konstantin E. "Georg Simmel and the Idea of Moral Law." Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences 63, no. 8 (2020): 106–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.30727/0235-1188-2020-63-8-106-125.

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In the article, I analyze Georg Simmel’s essay on individual law and summarize his criticism of the concept of a universal moral law, which was developed by Immanuel Kant. Simmel identifies two ways of conceptualizing the concept of a moral law: as universal, referring to the regulation of the actions of all rational beings, and as individual, including a specific acting person in his integrity and connection with the world, which is, at the same time, absolute only for him. Kant became the personification of the first method for Simmel; Simmel put forward the second method as an alternative t
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Gadde, Lars-Erik, and Frida Lind. "Interactive resource development: implications for innovation policy." IMP Journal 10, no. 2 (2016): 317–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/imp-08-2015-0043.

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Purpose – Previous studies of innovation policy claim that there is a mismatch between the underlying assumptions of these policies and the reality of how firms involved in innovation operate. The purpose of this paper is to deepen the knowledge of actual innovation processes in order to contribute to the modification of innovation policies. Design/methodology/approach – The paper is based on: a literature study focusing on the criticism and suggestions for revision of mainstream policy; and two empirical illustrations of innovation through interactive resource development. The framework is ro
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BANERJEE, DWAIPAYAN, and JACOB COPEMAN. "Ungiven: Philanthropy as critique." Modern Asian Studies 52, no. 1 (2018): 325–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x17000245.

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AbstractDrawing on field research principally from contexts of medical blood donation in North India, this article describes how gifts that are given often critique—by obviation—those that remain ungiven: the care not provided by the Indian state for Bhopal survivors, the family members unwilling to donate blood for their transfusion-requiring relative, and so on. In this way, giving can come to look like a form of criticism. The critiques that acts of giving stage are of absences and deficits: we present cases where large paper hearts donated by survivors of the 1984 Bhopal Gas Disaster to th
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Ovechkin, Danila V., Gulnara F. Romashkina, and Vladimir A. Davydenko. "The Impact of Intellectual Capital on the Profitability of Russian Agricultural Firms." Agronomy 11, no. 2 (2021): 286. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11020286.

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Economic efficiency is a function of two types of resources: those that are presented in financial statements and those that are not. Non-balance sheet resources are referred as to intellectual capital (IC). The purpose of the paper is to investigate the relationship between IC, its components and the level of financial profitability. To conduct the analysis, we used the system generalized method of moments for a broad sample of Russian firms that operate in the agribusiness industry. We employed two financial approaches to IC estimation. The first one is the Value Added Intellectual Coefficie
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Prasad, Amit, and Srirupa Prasad. "Imaginative geography, neoliberal globalization, and colonial distinctions: docile and dangerous bodies in medical transcription ‘outsourcing’." cultural geographies 19, no. 3 (2012): 349–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1474474012445734.

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Information Technology (IT) ‘outsourcing,’ of which medical transcription in India is a part, has received relatively little attention from geographers. Most often, it has been bracketed more broadly within IT and its role in transforming transnational space-time configurations has been analyzed. IT outsourcing, more specifically, medical transcription outsourcing, which is the focus of this article, is not only marked by tensions, hierarchies, and ambivalences, it also reflects an emergent ‘imaginative geography’ of neoliberal globalization. This imaginative geography, as we argue in this art
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Bauer, Theresa. "Responsible lobbying: the impact of the institutional context." Journal of Global Responsibility 6, no. 2 (2015): 148–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jgr-07-2015-0012.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the impact of the institutional context on the awareness and practice of responsible lobbying and to compare relevant factors in the USA and the EU. This paper aims at integrating corporate social responsibility (CSR) and lobbying research. Design/methodology/approach – A conceptual framework is presented and exemplified by the USA and the EU context. The research is informed by institutional theory that points to external factors creating profoundly different contexts in which firms operate. Findings – The degree of responsible lobbying is lik
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Foster, Derek S. "Commemoration, Veneration, and Inspiration: Constituting the Terry Fox Public." Journal of Canadian Studies 53, no. 1 (2019): 1–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/jcs.2017-0060.

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There are few figures in Canada as widely known and loved and remembered as Terry Fox. This article highlights how this contemporary sensibility has been constituted by examining the rhetorical “stickiness” of Terry Fox in public memory as spearheaded by the Terry Fox Foundation. I consciously avoid analysis of Terry Fox monuments and the enfranchisement of Terry Fox within museums. Rather than interrogate these material sites associated with Terry Fox, I seek to understand how more intangible Terry Fox commemoration and ritualized acts operate within popular and public culture as affective pr
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Wiardi, Akram Harmoni, Effed Darta Hadi, and Herry Novrianda. "Perceived Value, Store Image and Satisfaction as Antecedents of Store Loyalty Moderated by Procedural Switching Costs." Media Ekonomi dan Manajemen 35, no. 1 (2020): 34. http://dx.doi.org/10.24856/mem.v35i1.1175.

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<p>The phenomenon of measuring behavioral loyalty on specific stores or merchants obviously popular, particularly despite the existence of structural and fundamental criticism on specific issue. The objectives of this research is to examine the antecedents of customer loyalty specifically on store loyalty. We operate survey method to gather primary data. The focus of the research is to examine the effect of perceived value, store image, and customer satisfaction on store loyalty. The results indicate that customer who perceive low perception of procedural switching costs and high percept
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FERDOWSIAN, HOPE, L. SYD M. JOHNSON, JANE JOHNSON, ANDREW FENTON, ADAM SHRIVER, and JOHN GLUCK. "A Belmont Report for Animals?" Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 29, no. 1 (2019): 19–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963180119000732.

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Abstract:Human and animal research both operate within established standards. In the United States, criticism of the human research environment and recorded abuses of human research subjects served as the impetus for the establishment of the National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research, and the resulting Belmont Report. The Belmont Report established key ethical principles to which human research should adhere: respect for autonomy, obligations to beneficence and justice, and special protections for vulnerable individuals and populations. While
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Taylor, Paul. "Prescribing for the reform of international organization: the logic of arguments for change." Review of International Studies 13, no. 1 (1987): 19–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0260210500113750.

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In this essay I examine the main characteristics of the proposals which have been put forward over the past few years for the reform of international institutions, particularly the United Nations. The latter's social and economic arrangements in particular have been subject to a series of incisive, hard hitting reports—the most recent being Maurice Bertrand's Report of December 19851—which have themselves become almost a matter of routine: nothing changes, even the intelligence and perception of the criticism. This essay is intended to provide a part of the answer to the question of why nothin
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Boyd Maunsell, Jerome. ""The Literary Interview as Autobiography"." European Journal of Life Writing 5 (June 22, 2016): MC23—MC42. http://dx.doi.org/10.5463/ejlw.5.194.

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This article examines how interviews with writers and artists operate as forms of autobiography, especially when collected and published in books. It briefly traces the history of the interview in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, alongside precursors in the earlier forms of dialogues and table talk. It argues that books of collected interviews, with examples including Frédéric Lefèvre’s Une heure avec… series (1924-33) and the Paris Review “Writers at Work” volumes, offer colloquial portraits which have distinctive qualities compared to more ‘written’ autobiographies. Avant-garde writer
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Welde, Tadelech Bubamo, and Baiq L. S. W. Wardhani. "Paradox of humanitarian intervention: A critical analysis of theory and practice." Masyarakat, Kebudayaan dan Politik 33, no. 3 (2020): 222. http://dx.doi.org/10.20473/mkp.v33i32020.222-237.

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Since the end of the Cold War, thoughtlessness act in conducting ‘humanitarian interventions’ has posed analytical challenges for international relations academicians. Traditional security advocators have tried to distinguished implications of ‘humanitarianism’ based on their interest and how it helps state in regaining the outcome. This research identified motivation of state in conducting humanitarian intervention. There are growing studies, as expressed by the constructivist, that humanitarianism is states’ political weapon that shifted the involvement patterns of policymakers and actors in
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Millward, Peter. "World Cup 2022 and Qatar’s construction projects: Relational power in networks and relational responsibilities to migrant workers." Current Sociology 65, no. 5 (2016): 756–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0011392116645382.

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This article explores the relational power and responsibilities to migrant workers on physical infrastructure projects in Qatar connected to the sovereign state hosting the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) World Cup 2022. Currently, these construction workers operate under the Kafala system, which is upheld in Qatar. However, large numbers of Qatar’s visiting migrant construction workers were recorded as injured or killed through incidents that were related to their work. Further still, many other migrant workers reported poor, unsanitary living conditions and being ‘tr
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Camargo, Laura, and Gabriela Tenorio. "Piano at the ground level." Journal of Public Space 2, no. 1 (2017): 57. http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/jps.v2i1.50.

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<p>From observing the current dynamics of cities and the development of contemporary architecture, great criticism arises in response to the creation of iconic buildings as formal experiments that do not contribute to the local experience. Motivated by this criticism, this paper aims to analyse and understand the importance and the participation of architecture in the construction of a better public realm. The analytical method seeks to understand, evaluate and manipulate the main attributes of a public space based on the features that make it a platform for public life. The analysis foc
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Morrow, John Andrew. "The Islamic Context of the Thousand and One Nights." American Journal of Islam and Society 28, no. 2 (2011): 138–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v28i2.1263.

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The Islamic Context of the Thousand and One Nights by Muhsin J. al-Musawicontains seven chapters, an introduction, and a conclusion. It addressesthe Islamic factor in global times, the unifying Islamic factor, the age ofthe Muslim empire, and the burgeoning of a text. It also examines the roleof the public, non-religious displacements in popular tradition, namely, theduality between Islam and culture—as well as the public role in narrativetheorizations, that is, the impact of literary criticism. Finally, the authorexplores Scheherazade’s nonverbal narratives in religious contexts, demonstratin
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Shapiro, Aaron. "Predictive Policing for Reform? Indeterminacy and Intervention in Big Data Policing." Surveillance & Society 17, no. 3/4 (2019): 456–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.24908/ss.v17i3/4.10410.

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Predictive analytics and artificial intelligence are applied widely across law enforcement agencies and the criminal justice system. Despite criticism that such tools reinforce inequality and structural discrimination, proponents insist that they will nonetheless improve the equality and fairness of outcomes by countering humans’ biased or capricious decision-making. How can predictive analytics be understood simultaneously as a source of, and solution to, discrimination and bias in criminal justice and law enforcement? The article provides a framework for understanding the techno-political ga
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Bering Solten, Therese. "Når troen får øjne. En studie i Grundtvigs salmer." Grundtvig-Studier 65, no. 1 (2015): 177–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/grs.v65i1.20952.

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Når troen får øjne. En studie i Grundtvigs salmerTherese Bering SoltenWhen Faith Gets Eyes – a Study in Grundtvig’s HymnsThis article summarizes main points from Therese Bering Solten’s PhD thesis about how, through the use of hermeneutics and genre criticism, Grundtvig’s hymns can be read as poetic theology. The hymns work thematicallythrough the relationship between the visible and the invisible, conceptions residing in a continuum stretching between the concrete, sensory images and abstract, intelligible concepts. How hymns operate is determined by how faith is depicted in images and ideas.
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Gilbert, Paul. "Evolutionary Approaches to Psychopathology and Cognitive Therapy." Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy 16, no. 3 (2002): 263–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/jcop.16.3.263.52515.

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This opening article outlines some key themes of an evolutionary approach to psychopathology, and explores possible implications for cognitive therapy. Evolutionary psychology suggests that many of our mental mechanisms are designed to promote survival and reproduction, not happiness, or even mental health, as such. This article focuses on the concept of evolved strategies and their phenotypic expressions, to fit specific niches. It suggests that evolved strategies and their phenotypic expressions partly operate through two psychobiological systems, called the defense and safeness systems, whi
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Tyler, C. W. "One Eye is Usually Centred Horizontally (and near the Golden Section Vertically) in Portraits over the Past 500 Years." Perception 26, no. 1_suppl (1997): 18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/v970376.

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Although the eyes are a key feature of facial portraits, compositional rules for the placement of the eyes relative to the frame are obscure. Two hypotheses of eye position in the portrait frame were compared: that the pair of eyes were symmetrically placed or that one eye was centred in the frame. Portraits were defined as paintings of a single person from the waist up without other dominant objects or animals in the scene. From all artists represented in seven source-books on portraiture over the past five centuries (eg from van Eyck to Picasso), the first portrait in which both eyes were vi
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Hagedoorn, Berber. "De poëtica van het verbeelden van geschiedenis op broadcast televisie." TMG Journal for Media History 20, no. 1 (2017): 78. http://dx.doi.org/10.18146/2213-7653.2017.282.

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In modern society, television is one of the most important media for presenting the past. This article focuses on the poetics of history on television broadcasts in relation to the manner in which these broadcasts present our past as well as our collective memory. This study rebuts criticism of television as a medium for historical accounts by demonstrating how professionals in the field actively display an extensive knowledge and understanding of the past, provide frameworks for the contextualization of audiovisual materials and depth, and apply and operate specific functions of different rep
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Del Turco, Roberto Rosselli. "Designing an advanced software tool for Digital Scholarly Editions:." Textual Cultures 12, no. 2 (2019): 91–111. http://dx.doi.org/10.14434/textual.v12i2.27690.

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 The increasing dissemination of Digital Scholarly Editions has highlighted not only the great potential of this method of publication, but also a good number of theoretical problems that affect both the DSEs as editorial products, and the impact of tools and methods of computer science on the methodology of textual criticism. On the one hand, the editions published so far are an evolution of the practice of ecdotics and represent not only a col- lection of interesting experiments, but also innovative and effective research tools. On the other hand, however, the limits with
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Doortmont, Michel R., John H. Hanson, Jan Jansen, and Dmitri van den Bersselaar. "The Next Step for a Journal of Method." History in Africa 37 (2010): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hia.2010.0025.

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For over thirty years, History in Africa: A Journal of Method has been at the forefront of publishing scholarship on textual analysis and criticism of African historical sources, historiographical essays on the literature concerning Africa's past, bibliographical essays on relevant historical topics, reflections on the role of theory in historical investigation, and archive reports. The new editorial team will maintain this profile with an emphasis on theory and method, while aiming to enhance the journal by focusing on issues that will expand its appeal beyond its current audience. We seek to
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Anderson, Jill E. ""Blown away like apples by the fickle wind of the Twentieth Century”: Counterculture Resistance and the Wilderness Condition in Richard Brautigan’s Trout Fishing in America // Resistencia contracultural en Trout Fishing in America." Ecozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment 4, no. 1 (2013): 30–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.37536/ecozona.2013.4.1.498.

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Abstract Many critics consider Richard Brautigan’s 1967 novel Trout Fishing in America a coming-of-age account of a wayward, outsider narrator discovering that the pastoral mode is no longer viable in mid-century America. However, these readings often ignore Brautigan’s explicit political affinity and his conscious engagement with a specific setting—southern California in the mid- to late-60s. This paper explores Brautigan’s Counterculture ethic, which critiques the mindless prevalence of mainstream, middle-class America’s habit of consumption, production, and destruction of the natural world.
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Gupta, Atul, Sara Bennett, Meghan Moss, and Angela Satya Gupta. "An Empirical Analysis of Employee Attitudes in Service Sector." International Journal of Human Resource Studies 3, no. 4 (2013): 231. http://dx.doi.org/10.5296/ijhrs.v3i4.4851.

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The purpose of this paper is to empirically examine the relationship between sense of belonging and job satisfaction in hospital-based nurses. By discovering what contributes to job satisfaction, organizations will be able to better retain their nurses. This empirical paper used a non-experimental design to test a proposed model based on a review of relevant literature. Working nurses in a hospital setting completed surveys capturing the constructs researched. The findings of this research suggest that sense of belonging leads to positive outcomes and higher job satisfaction. Older employees t
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Marques, Joan F. "Flawed organizational purpose? Changing the narrative in management education and practice." Development and Learning in Organizations: An International Journal 33, no. 5 (2019): 24–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/dlo-12-2018-0168.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to challenge current and future organizational managers toward engaging in a process of reflecting on the purpose of their performance and the purpose of the organization they serve and also to challenge management educators and coaches to reflect on the emphasis of their training of those who will step into management positions. Design/methodology/approach This paper reviews the current criticism on organizational management education and practice, and brings global inequality in the scope to underscore the importance of correcting a flawed system based on
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Zeldner, Alexey G., Sergey N. Silvestrov, and Vladimir S. Osipov. "Structure of State-owned Corporation’s Value Chain: Strategic Analysis." Theoretical and Practical Aspects of Management, no. 9 (August 24, 2020): 6–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.46486/0234-4505-2020-9-6-17.

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Relevance. The article discusses the structural and substantive aspects of state-owned corporations from the perspective of internal and external environment. The role of state-owned corporations in the Russian economy is growing more and more, individual industries are almost completely functioning on the basis of state-owned corporations, which makes a strategic analysis of such economic actors an urgent problem. The article provides a strategic analysis of the activities of state-owned corporations based on the value chain management methodology. Analysis of the external and internal enviro
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Heikkila, W. J. "Comment on Lockwood and Davis, "On the longitudinal extent of magnetopause reconnection pulses"." Annales Geophysicae 17, no. 2 (1999): 173–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00585-999-0173-7.

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Abstract. Lockwood and Davis (1996) present a concise description of magnetopause reconnection pulses, with the claimed support of three types of observations: (1) flux transfer events (FTE), (2) poleward-moving auroral forms on the dayside, and (3) steps in cusp ion dispersion characteristics. However, there are a number of errors and misconceptions in the paper that make their conclusions untenable. They do not properly take account of the fact that the relevant processes operate in the presence of a plasma. They fail to notice that the source of energy (a dynamo with E · J<0) must be clo
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Mawby, Rob I., and Kreseda Smith. "Civilian oversight of the police in England and Wales." International Journal of Police Science & Management 19, no. 1 (2016): 23–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1461355716677875.

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The creation of Police and Crime Commissioners (PCCs) in England and Wales in November 2012 by the Conservative/Liberal Democrat Coalition government, replacing the former police authorities, introduced a new mechanism for civilian oversight of the police. However, the new structure has been heavily criticised, both for the election process and for the ways in which newly elected PCCs have operated. Despite these criticisms, PCCs were retained by the new Conservative government, and the scheduled round of new elections took place in May 2016. This article assesses these elections and compares
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Singh, Avinash, Surya Pratap Singh, Arvind Kumar Maurya, and Upendra Nath Tripathi. "Combined Strategy for Cellular Traffic Congestion Management." International Journal of Emerging Research in Management and Technology 6, no. 8 (2018): 12. http://dx.doi.org/10.23956/ijermt.v6i8.113.

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In wireless media, congestion is usual phenomenon that arises due abruptly raised subscribers demand to establish connections congruently in particular cell at mean real time. Generally, the congestion problem occurs in cellular network traffic and almost persists in every generation. Every mobile network operators is facing this problem every day and struggling to resolve this issue but not being success yet. As more advance cellular devices are being in demand and its users are also being increasing which turns to demand larger bandwidth requirements from cellular subscriber. Presently for c
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Gupta, Atul, and Sara E. Bennett. "An empirical analysis of the effect of MBA programs on organizational success." International Journal of Educational Management 28, no. 4 (2014): 451–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijem-10-2012-0114.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to empirically examine the value of Masters of Business Administration (MBA) degree. The authors aim to bridge the gap between the theory and individual understanding of the value of an MBA program. Design/methodology/approach – This empirical paper used a non-experimental design to test a proposed model based on a review of relevant literature. MBA alumni completed surveys capturing the constructs researched. Findings – The findings of this research suggest that an MBA adds value to both MBA alumni as well as the organizations who hire them. The main sou
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