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Journal articles on the topic 'Shame resilience theory'

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1

Brown, Brené. "Shame Resilience Theory: A Grounded Theory Study on Women and Shame." Families in Society: The Journal of Contemporary Social Services 87, no. 1 (2006): 43–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1606/1044-3894.3483.

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Van Vliet, K. Jessica. "Shame and resilience in adulthood: A grounded theory study." Journal of Counseling Psychology 55, no. 2 (2008): 233–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0022-0167.55.2.233.

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Fatima, Tasneem, Mehwish Majeed, and Sadia Jahanzeb. "Supervisor undermining and submissive behavior: Shame resilience theory perspective." European Management Journal 38, no. 1 (2020): 191–203. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.emj.2019.07.003.

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Culp, Mara E., and Sara K. Jones. "Shame in Music Education: Starting the Conversation and Developing Resilience." Music Educators Journal 106, no. 4 (2020): 36–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0027432120906198.

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Feelings of shame may contribute to music teachers and music teacher educators being unwilling to discuss needs and concerns for fear of being judged or seen as inadequate. Shame or fear of feeling shame can also lead individuals to withdraw or perpetuate negative behaviors. Although shame is often a natural part of the human experience, the diverse nature of the content in music education, the wide variety of learners in various music education spaces, and music teachers’ beliefs and practices can be sources of shame among music teachers. This article aims to start a conversation about shame
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Yue, Jinwen. "Speaking Shame and Laughing It Off: Using Humorous Narrative to Conquer the Shame of Anorectal Illness." Qualitative Health Research 31, no. 5 (2021): 847–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1049732320987832.

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Patients with anorectal illness (AI) must deal with shame from social stigma and difficulties in the medical context. Recovering from shame is a challenge. Applying shame resilience theory (SRT) to the Chinese health care setting, this study explores how patients with AI develop resilience to shame using humor to facilitate the narrative’s five functions. The method is a thematic narrative analysis of 60 stories from a Chinese online community. Four main themes were identified: understanding shame events, normalizing them, shifting priorities, and transforming shame into pride. Storytellers ca
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Cairns, Kate. "Making Sense: The use of Theory and Research to Support Foster Care." Adoption & Fostering 26, no. 2 (2002): 6–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030857590202600203.

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In this article, based on themes from her recent book, Attachment, Trauma and Resilience (BAAF, 2002), Kate Cairns proposes that foster carers and adopters need theories and models drawn from or supported by research in order to make sense of their life with children who have experienced early adversity. A range of ‘great ideas’ are briefly presented and placed in the context of child development. Concepts drawn from attachment theory and affect theory are included, as well as issues of trust, shame and resilience, and ideas arising from research on brain development and traumatic stress.
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Moore, Amber. "“Blackboxing it”: A Poetic Min/d/ing the Gap of an Imposter Experience in Academia." Art/Research International: A Transdisciplinary Journal 3, no. 1 (2018): 30–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.18432/ari29358.

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Entering academia is a journey often fraught with many intense emotions, including shame, self-doubt, and fear. As such, this exploratory paper aims to expose and “dwell poetically” (James, 2009) on such feelings of novice academics, particularly the “imposter syndrome” experience, through an act of creative vulnerability and meaning making. Employing critical poetic inquiry, this paper offers and examines found poetry mined from a first year language and literacy education PhD student’s early academic writing. This poetry writing was done while simultaneously “minding the gap” existing in the
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Lury, Karen. "Children in an open world: Mobility as ontology in New Iranian and Turkish cinema." Feminist Theory 11, no. 3 (2010): 283–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464700110376279.

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In a series of non-Western films — Times and Winds, A Time for Drunken Horses, Turtles Can Fly and Buddha Collapsed out of Shame — contemporary child figures inhabit their world in a manner that demonstrates the child’s resilience and their intimacy with the land. Drawing on non-representational theory (NRT) and relating this to feminist theories of affect and subjectivity, the article suggests that these films present child figures for whom mobility has effectively become their ontology and that this demonstrates that there may be a different form of kinship between the natural world and the
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Bouchard, Lauren, and Lydia Manning. "Resilient Identity: How Aging Matters in Exploring Resilience." Innovation in Aging 4, Supplement_1 (2020): 832. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.3045.

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Abstract Defining resilience is complex given its multidimensional and contextualized nature within the gerontological literature. The construct has been described as a trait, state, and process, and less often, as a cultivated identity. Older adults are key in the understanding of resilience from their own point view as experts of their experiences with adversity. This presentation focuses upon the findings of qualitative research utilizing grounded theory methodology, which explores the way aging may shape “resilient identity.” Given the varying challenges across the life course, resilient i
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ZACZYK, Mateusz, and Filip LIEBERT. "The resilience of social logistics systems – introduction." Scientific Papers of Silesian University of Technology. Organization and Management Series 2020, no. 146 (2020): 543–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.29119/1641-3466.2020.146.39.

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Purpose: The article aims to formulate basic assumptions defining the resilience of complex systems falling within social logistics' scope of interest. The article emphasizes the importance of general systems theory for the contemporary understanding of management sciences, with particular emphasis on logistics. The authors of the article have also characterized, based on the current state of literature, the concept of social logistics as one of the three "clean" types of logistics, positioning it alongside military and economic logistics Design/methodology/approach: The article presents an ov
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Tyne, Julian A., David W. Johnston, Fredrik Christiansen, and Lars Bejder. "Temporally and spatially partitioned behaviours of spinner dolphins: implications for resilience to human disturbance." Royal Society Open Science 4, no. 1 (2017): 160626. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.160626.

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Selective forces shape the evolution of wildlife behavioural strategies and influence the spatial and temporal partitioning of behavioural activities to maximize individual fitness. Globally, wildlife is increasingly exposed to human activities which may affect their behavioural activities. The ability of wildlife to compensate for the effects of human activities may have implications for their resilience to disturbance. Resilience theory suggests that behavioural systems which are constrained in their repertoires are less resilient to disturbance than flexible systems. Using behavioural time-
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Ann Amaratunga, Carol. "Building community disaster resilience through a virtual community of practice (VCOP)." International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment 5, no. 1 (2014): 66–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijdrbe-05-2012-0012.

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Purpose – This paper aims to discuss a pilot in-progress project to promote community-based research (CBR) as a tool for disaster resilience planning in rural, remote and coastal communities. Using trans-disciplinary approaches, this project demonstrates how emergency and foresight planning in five rural Canadian pilot communities can be enhanced through the co-design of a pilot Web 2.0 “virtual community of practice” (VCOP). Design/methodology/approach – The VCOP initiative was designed with pilot and field site communities to facilitate knowledge generation and exchange and to enhance commun
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Schott, Robin May, and Eva Krause Jørgensen, oversætter. "Resiliens, normativitet og sårbarhed." Slagmark - Tidsskrift for idéhistorie, no. 73 (August 15, 2018): 103–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/sl.v0i73.107231.

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Does the critical discourse about resilience reiterate the problematic dichotomy between suffering and agency that the concept of resilience inscribes? In this discussion piece, I engage with Brad Evans’ and Julian Reid’s reflections on resilience. Although I share with Evans and Reid a normative critique of resilience, I am critical of their discussion of vulnerability. Rather than arguing that vulnerability precludes political transformation, as Evans and Reid do, or that vulnerability enables political coalition, as in Judith Butler’s account of precarity, one should ask: how is vulnerabili
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Skog, Kristine, Stine Eriksen, Christy Brekken, and Charles Francis. "Building Resilience in Social-Ecological Food Systems in Vermont." Sustainability 10, no. 12 (2018): 4813. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su10124813.

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There is an expanding interest in Local Food Systems (LFSs) in Vermont, along with a growing effort to create adaptive governance to facilitate action. In this case study, we investigate how adaptive governance of LFS can provide ideas and act as a catalyst for creating resilience in other social-ecological systems (SESs). By participating in meetings and interviewing stakeholders inside and outside the Vermont LFS network, we found that consumers were highly motivated to participate by supporting environmental issues, the local economy, and interactive communities, as well as building social
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Lértora, Ian M., and Jesse Starkey. "Tracking Thought Squirrels: A Relational Cultural Theoretical Approach to Counseling Couples." Family Journal 29, no. 2 (2021): 175–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1066480720986110.

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Relational-Cultural Theory (RCT) describes the process of connection and disconnection that is inevitable in relationship. Understanding how we can navigate and recover from connection and disconnection in our relationships with loved ones serves to develop relational resilience. In this article, the author will share an approach to couples communication, grounded in RCT, which may help increase the ability for couples to communicate their moments of connection and disconnection to one another to foster relational resilience. Two case examples are shared that exemplify the step by step process
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Ignagni, Esther, Eliza Chandler, Kim Collins, Andy Darby, and Kirsty Liddiard. "Designing Access Together: Surviving the Demand for Resilience." Canadian Journal of Disability Studies 8, no. 4 (2019): 293–320. http://dx.doi.org/10.15353/cjds.v8i4.536.

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Together we engaged in a project to co-design and co-create a fictional near-future world that would enable us to interrogate our present techno-social dilemmas. Accessibility was central to our workshop for the way that access is always central to enacting crip, mad, Deaf, and spoonie[1] communities. Without access, we cannot meet, discuss, share, struggle, fight, dismantle or create. Crucially, access was tied to our desire to co-create crip near-futures.
 
 [1] The term spoonie refers to those who live with chronic conditions. Miserandino, C. (n.d.). Retrieved from: https://butyou
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17

Edwards, Anne. "Working Collaboratively to Build Resilience: A CHAT Approach." Social Policy and Society 6, no. 2 (2007): 255–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1474746406003514.

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Evidence from two studies of social exclusion based in England are drawn on to suggest that responsible agency can be seen as a feature of resilience. I argue that this agency, or capacity to act effectively in the world, is developed relationally and is evident in people's thoughtful actions in their worlds, but is also contingent on the affordances for such action in any environment. That is, resilience can be seen as responsible engagement with one's world as well as a capacity to withstand difficulties. The theoretical basis of this argument is Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) wh
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Beech, Nick, David Devins, Jeff Gold, and Susan Beech. "In the family way: an exploration of family business resilience." International Journal of Organizational Analysis 28, no. 1 (2020): 160–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijoa-02-2019-1674.

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Purpose This paper aims to explore the concept of resilience set within a family business context and considers how familiness and the nature of noneconomic factors, such as relationship dynamics influence performance. This paper provides new insights into the nature and impact of familiness as a mediating device, uncovering the potential for reframing resilience theory and practice. Design/methodology/approach The paper draws on a review of the extant literature in the areas of resilience and familiness as a means of developing a deeper understanding of the social-ecological system of the fam
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19

Mandal, Santanu, Sourabh Bhattacharya, Venkateswara Rao Korasiga, and Rathin Sarathy. "The dominant influence of logistics capabilities on integration." International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment 8, no. 4 (2017): 357–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijdrbe-05-2016-0019.

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Purpose Using dynamic capabilities theory, this paper aims to posit logistics capabilities (namely information, demand, supply, cooperation and coordination) when integrated at the supply chain level gives rise to supply chain resilience. The current investigation explores further on the inter-relationship among dominant logistics capabilities and integrated logistics capabilities. Design/methodology/approach To test the proposed hypotheses, data were gathered from 339 supply chain professionals and were evaluated through structural equation modeling. The measures were pretested through explor
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20

Mignenan, Victor. "Collective Intelligence and Entrepreneurial Resilience in the Context of Covid-19." International Business Research 14, no. 9 (2021): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ibr.v14n9p1.

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Research on the covid-19 pandemic, conducted to date, has clearly shown its negative impact on entrepreneurs. However, there are few relevant studies on the resilience of these entrepreneurs. Even economic stimulus packages developed by governments ignore collective intelligence, which is seen as an appropriate posture and path that can lead to the resilience of entrepreneurs in unpredictable situations. Thanks to the theoretical anchoring of collaborative management, we have developed and tested a conceptual model through the approach of deconstructing collective intelligence into (i) the sha
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Nzinga, Jacinta, Mwanamvua Boga, Nancy Kagwanja, et al. "An innovative leadership development initiative to support building everyday resilience in health systems." Health Policy and Planning 36, no. 7 (2021): 1023–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czab056.

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Abstract Effective management and leadership are essential for everyday health system resilience, but actors charged with these roles are often underprepared and undersupported to perform them. Particular challenges have been observed in interpersonal and relational aspects of health managers’ work, including communication skills, emotional competence and supportive oversight. Within the Resilient and Responsive Health Systems (RESYST) consortium in Kenya, we worked with two county health and hospital management teams to adapt a package of leadership development interventions aimed at building
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22

Mussa, Arig. "The Longer we Dwell on our Misfortunes, the Greater is their Power to Harm us." New Medical Innovations and Research 2, no. 1 (2021): 01–02. http://dx.doi.org/10.31579/jnmir/003.

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Remarkably, there is no place for inaccuracies and errors in modern era of value-based care medicine. The high stress clinical setting and the challenging demands within the medical field, to enhance improvement in patient safety culture. It is a difficult experience for health care practitioners to witness expected patient tragedies, and affect the most resilient health providers. Intended harm and negligence due to vindictiveness is extremely rare; yet, we treat our caregivers who are involved in human error and system failures with blame, shame, and, what may be most destructive and abandon
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Monteverde, Settimio. "Undergraduate healthcare ethics education, moral resilience, and the role of ethical theories." Nursing Ethics 21, no. 4 (2013): 385–401. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0969733013505308.

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Background: This article combines foundational and empirical aspects of healthcare education and develops a framework for teaching ethical theories inspired by pragmatist learning theory and recent work on the concept of moral resilience. It describes an exemplary implementation and presents data from student evaluation. Objectives: After a pilot implementation in a regular ethics module, the feasibility and acceptance of the novel framework by students were evaluated. Research design: In addition to the regular online module evaluation, specific questions referring to the teaching of ethical
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Imai, Heide, and Yao Ji. "Social Capital, Innovation, and Local Resilience." Asian Studies 9, no. 1 (2021): 283–313. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/as.2021.9.1.283-313.

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This paper is based on research that centres on the city of Tokyo, a mature city that is experiencing various transformations, in order to show how social capital and innovation can help build up resilient communities. It presents two major topics: 1) the potential of localities and their social capital and social innovation to actively react to change, and 2) the role of localities for inclusive urban governance. By focusing on five small neighbourhoods in the south of Taito-ward in central-east Tokyo, the paper addresses the following questions: a) what kinds of social networks and interacti
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Imai, Heide, and Yao Ji. "Social Capital, Innovation, and Local Resilience." Asian Studies 9, no. 1 (2021): 283–313. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/as.2021.9.1.283-313.

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This paper is based on research that centres on the city of Tokyo, a mature city that is experiencing various transformations, in order to show how social capital and innovation can help build up resilient communities. It presents two major topics: 1) the potential of localities and their social capital and social innovation to actively react to change, and 2) the role of localities for inclusive urban governance. By focusing on five small neighbourhoods in the south of Taito-ward in central-east Tokyo, the paper addresses the following questions: a) what kinds of social networks and interacti
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Look, Cory, Erin Friedman, and Geneviève Godbout. "The Resilience of Land Tenure Regimes During Hurricane Irma: How Colonial Legacies Impact Disaster Response and Recovery in Antigua and Barbuda." Journal of Extreme Events 06, no. 01 (2019): 1940004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s2345737619400049.

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Antiguans and Barbudans have both raised concerns over the disaster recovery solutions put in place to mitigate damages sustained during Hurricane Irma in September 2017. In Barbuda, the potential loss of commonhold land ownership and the possibility of a land grab by foreign investors has tended to portray the island as a victim of disaster capitalism rather than as a resilient community. At the same time, neither island has addressed its vulnerabilities to future extreme events through any substantive legislative response, or immediate policy shifts. While it is vital that we attend to the e
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Duckworth, Melanie. "Genre, History, and the Stolen Generations: Three Australian Stories." International Research in Children's Literature 13, no. 2 (2020): 259–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/ircl.2020.0357.

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This article explores the role that genre plays in fictional depictions of the Stolen Generations (Australian Indigenous children removed from their homes) in three twenty-first-century Australian middle-grade novels: Who Am I?: The Diary of Mary Talence, Sydney 1937 by Anita Heiss (2001) ; The Poppy Stories: Four Books in One by Gabrielle Wang (2016) ; and Sister Heart by Sally Morgan (2016) . It argues that the genres of fictional diary, adventure story and verse novel invite different reading practices and approaches to history, and shape the ways in which the texts depict, for children, th
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Gligor, David, Nichole Gligor, Mary Holcomb, and Siddik Bozkurt. "Distinguishing between the concepts of supply chain agility and resilience." International Journal of Logistics Management 30, no. 2 (2019): 467–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijlm-10-2017-0259.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to add clarity to the multidimensional concepts of agility and resilience. In addition, this paper seeks to clarify the differences and similarities between the two concepts by integrating the distinct bodies of knowledge on agility and resilience. Design/methodology/approach A multidisciplinary systematic literature review is conducted. The concept of agility is explored through a review of the sports science, manufacturing, organizational, information systems and information systems development and supply chain literature bases. The concept of resilience
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Gibson, Chris. "Theorising tourism in crisis: Writing and relating in place." Tourist Studies 21, no. 1 (2021): 84–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468797621989218.

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Recent headline events – most notably the COVID-19 pandemic – have illustrated the fragility of tourism capitalism, prompting forward-looking analyses among critical scholars. While grappling with political and philosophical implications, commentaries have tended towards the prescriptive and general: contemplating the collapse of tourism as-we-know-it, and foregrounding opportunities to reconstitute more sustainable, resilient and inclusive forms of tourism. Heeding Haraway’s call to ‘stay with the trouble’, I briefly outline three sympathetic critiques, integrating insights from more-than-hum
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Gonzalès, Rodolphe, and Lael Parrott. "How stakeholders structure their collaborations to anticipate and tackle the threat of mountain pine beetle in the Jasper–Hinton (Alberta, Canada) area." Canadian Journal of Forest Research 49, no. 5 (2019): 480–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/cjfr-2018-0314.

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The resilience of resource-based communities facing natural disturbances partly depends on the capacity of a wide diversity of stakeholders to share their expertise, articulate their efforts, and develop solutions that are both effective and equitable. Structural methods from network theory can be used to measure how efficiently and thoroughly collaborations happen among stakeholders and to identify ways to improve information flow. We applied network theory to represent and analyse the collaborations between individuals dealing with a significant mountain pine beetle outbreak in the Jasper–Hi
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Wang, Chun-Kai, Chien-Ming Lee, Yue-Rong Hong, and Kan Cheng. "Assessment of Energy Transition Policy in Taiwan—A View of Sustainable Development Perspectives." Energies 14, no. 15 (2021): 4402. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en14154402.

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Energy transition has become a priority for adaptive policy and measures taken in response to climate change around the world. This is an opportunity and a challenge for the Taiwan government to establish a climate-resilient power generation mixed to ensure electricity security as well as climate change mitigation. This study adopted a sustainable development perspective and applied optimal control theory to establish a cost-effective model to evaluate a long-term (2050), climate-resilient power generation mix for Taiwan. Furthermore, this study applies the STIRPAT approach to predict the dema
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D. M. Hudson, Melanie, Lucinda S. Spaulding, Angela Y Ford, and Laura E Jones. "Growing Grit to Produce Doctoral Persistence." International Journal of Doctoral Studies 15 (2020): 705–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/4671.

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Aim/Purpose: The purpose of this systematic grounded theory study was to generate a model explaining how grit and a growth mindset develop and influence persistence in doctoral completers. Since doctoral attrition has historically plagued institutions of higher learning, with conflicting explanations reported in the literature, program leaders will benefit by understanding factors associated with persistence. Background: Although the initial literature regarding doctoral persistence relied on the more traditional student involvement and integration models of higher education, the changing land
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Chua, Ryan Yumin, Amudha Kadirvelu, Shajahan Yasin, and Miriam Sang-Ah Park. "An Exploratory Model of Family Resilience Processes and Functioning: A Cultural Perspective of the Semai Indigenous Communities in Perak, Malaysia." Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology 52, no. 6 (2021): 567–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00220221211028297.

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Given the challenges experienced by the Semai indigenous communities in Perak, Malaysia, and their distinct cultural beliefs, it is important to understand the role of the social and cultural networks in their resilience processes. In particular, further attention needs to be paid to how their families function and shape their beliefs about their lives, as there might be key mechanisms and processes that differ from existing general conceptualizations of family. This grounded theory analysis of 23 Semai Orang Asli (indigenous) community members established a model of the Semai’s family concept
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Chen, Bo, Jia Di Qiu, and Ming Ming Chen. "Designing Access Control Policy Using Formal Concept Analysis." Applied Mechanics and Materials 602-605 (August 2014): 3822–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.602-605.3822.

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The need to securely share information among collaborating entities is increasingly becoming important. It often needed to implement access control (AC) models. The objective of this paper is to design access control policy using formal concept analysis, which is based on mathematical lattice and order theory. We provide discussion on how FCA can be used to capture RBAC constraints. We show with FCA, we can express more intend constrains than it can be done in traditional RBAC approach. The experimental results show that the approach is more resilient to dynamic computer environment.
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Ajibade, Idowu, Mark Pelling, Julius Agboola, and Matthias Garschagen. "Sustainability Transitions: Exploring Risk Management and the Future of Adaptation in the Megacity of Lagos." Journal of Extreme Events 03, no. 03 (2016): 1650009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s2345737616500093.

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Lagos, a coastal megacity with more than 11 million inhabitants faces serious development challenges in addition to climatic risks and extreme weather events. There are uncertainties about future disaster risk trends and about how to manage and adapt to existing threats in ways that ensure a just and sustainable development trajectory. In this paper, we explore the changes that have occurred in risk management in Lagos over the last 20 years, as part of a broader endeavor towards sustainability. We draw on transition theory to analyze data collected from a scenario workshop and expert intervie
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Zhang, Xuhui, Meng Zuo, Wenjuan Yang, and Xiang Wan. "A Tri-Stable Piezoelectric Vibration Energy Harvester for Composite Shape Beam: Nonlinear Modeling and Analysis." Sensors 20, no. 5 (2020): 1370. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s20051370.

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To reveal the nonlinear mechanism of the tri-stable piezoelectric vibration energy harvester based on composite shape beam (TPEH-C) and its influence on the system response, the nonlinear restoring force and the nonlinear magnetic force are discussed and analyzed in this paper. The nonlinear magnetic model is acquired by using equivalent magnetizing current theory, and the nonlinear resilience model is obtained by fitting experimental data. The corresponding distributed parameter model based on generalized Hamiltonian variation principle has been established. Frequency response functions for t
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Sweet, Rachel. "Bureaucrats at war: The resilient state in the Congo." African Affairs 119, no. 475 (2020): 224–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/afraf/adaa001.

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Abstract Rebels often portray themselves as state-like to legitimize their rule, yet little is known about their on-the-ground relations with the administrators of state power—official bureaucrats. Drawing on internal armed group records from the Democratic Republic of Congo, this article argues that rebels’ state-like image is more than a simple veneer: Bureaucrats actively sustain state institutions and recruit rebel support during war. It develops a theory of the sources of leverage that bureaucrats use to negotiate with rebels. These interactions entail dual struggles to sustain the struct
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Hitchens, Brooklynn K., and Yasser Arafat Payne. "“Brenda’s Got a Baby”." Journal of Black Psychology 43, no. 1 (2016): 50–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0095798415619260.

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This secondary analysis examines low-income, street-identified single Black mothers aged 18 to 35 years in Wilmington, Delaware. This study is guided by the following question: To what extent do family composition and criminal record/street activity shape notions of Black single motherhood? “Sites of resilience” theory informs this study by providing a reconceptualization of street life and the phenomenological experiences of street-identified Black women. This analysis draws on 310 surveys, 6 individual interviews, 3 dual interviews, 2 group interviews, and extensive field observations. Findi
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Rhee, Stephanie. "Exploring Acculturation Experiences of Korean Immigrant Older Adults Through Expressive Writing." Innovation in Aging 4, Supplement_1 (2020): 505. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.1631.

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Abstract Korean immigrant older adults residing in areas without well-established Korean ethnic enclaves experience acculturative stress and depressive symptoms due to their lingual and cultural barriers. Expressive writing can be used as a culturally sensitive intervention to help those immigrants disclose their deepest thoughts and feelings related to their immigration and acculturation experiences. This study gathered qualitative data from the author’s experimental study using expressive writing for first-generation Korean immigrant adults 60 to 88 years of age residing in Midwestern cities
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Bodolica, Virginia, Martin Spraggon, and Nada Khaddage-Soboh. "Air-travel services industry in the post-COVID-19: the GPS (Guard-Potentiate-Shape) model for crisis navigation." Tourism Review 76, no. 4 (2021): 942–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/tr-12-2020-0603.

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Purpose Extant crisis response literature focuses on the survival and adaptation efforts of organizations, leaving the opportunity of deploying more proactive market-shaping strategies unexplored. This paper aims to examine the early strategic responses deployed by air-travel services players for navigating through the COVID-19 pandemic. Design/methodology/approach Drawing on a qualitative case study and grounded theory methods, this research analyzes how DUBZ – a purposefully selected company operating in the air-travel services sector in the emirate of Dubai (UAE) – responded to the coronavi
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GRAVEL, Nathalie, and Adama KONÉ. "The Guelph Water connection: The contribution of Actor-Network Theory (ANT) to the study of water management in Guelph, Ontario." Cahiers de géographie du Québec 61, no. 174 (2018): 489–512. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1053663ar.

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The application of Actor-Network Theory (ANT) to the case of water management in the municipality of Guelph, Ontario, located at the periphery of Toronto, highlights the interactions between the multiple water actors in Canada who, while organised as an informal network, build knowledge together on “blue” and resilient cities. It provides a cross-cutting look at water resource co-management and the process of multiscalar public policy development by considering exchanges and negotiations between administrative bodies, the pan-Canadian water network and the organized local civil society. The wa
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Lunansky, Gabriela, Claudia van Borkulo, and Denny Borsboom. "Personality, Resilience, and Psychopathology: A Model for the Interaction between Slow and Fast Network Processes in the Context of Mental Health." European Journal of Personality 34, no. 6 (2020): 969–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/per.2263.

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Network theories have been put forward for psychopathology (in which mental disorders originate from causal relations between symptoms) and for personality (in which personality factors originate from coupled equilibria of cognitions, affect states, behaviours, and environments). Here, we connect these theoretical strands in an overarching personality–resilience–psychopathology model. In this model, factors in personality networks control the shape of the dynamical landscape in which symptom networks evolve; for example, the neuroticism item ‘I often feel blue’ measures a general tendency to e
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Ayres, Jennifer R. "Cultivating the “unquiet heart”: Ecology, education, and Christian faith." Theology Today 74, no. 1 (2017): 57–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0040573616689836.

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In his 2015 encyclical, Pope Francis argued that Christianity stands in need of an “ecological conversion.” Conversion is an urgent kind of theological language, urging a resilient and ecologically grounded faith, a faith that turns on the capacities necessary to inhabit God’s world well. Drawing on the eschatological tension described by Jürgen Moltmann as the “unquiet heart,” this essay builds a practical theology for nurturing Christian faith in our vulnerable and changing ecological context. Engaging generative questions from the fields of theological anthropology, educational theory, and
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Jinks, Kristin I., Christopher J. Brown, Thomas A. Schlacher, et al. "Being Well-Connected Pays in a Disturbed World: Enhanced Herbivory in Better-Linked Habitats." Diversity 12, no. 11 (2020): 424. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d12110424.

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Seascapes are typically comprised of multiple components that are functionally linked by the movement of organisms and fluxes of matter. Changes to the number and spatial arrangement of these linkages affect biological connectivity that, in turn, can alter ecological functions. Herbivory is one such function, pivotal in controlling excessive algal growth when systems become disturbed. Here, we used microcosm experiments to test how the change to connectivity affects herbivory under different levels of disturbance. We applied network theory to measure types of connectivity at different scales (
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Curtis, Mary B., and Eileen Z. Taylor. "Developmental mentoring, affective organizational commitment, and knowledge sharing in public accounting firms." Journal of Knowledge Management 22, no. 1 (2018): 142–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jkm-03-2017-0097.

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Purpose This study aims to examine how public accounting firms can use developmental mentoring to increase knowledge sharing (KS) among employees directly and indirectly through affective organizational commitment. Design/methodology/approach This study uses a survey of public accounting professionals to elicit participants’ demographics and their perceptions of KS, mentoring relationships and organizational commitment in their workplace. Findings The findings support that two categories of challenges found in developmental mentoring, demonstrating dedication and resilience and career goal and
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Gui, Yutian, Chaitanya Bhure, Marcus Hughes, and Fareena Saqib. "A Delay-Based Machine Learning Model for DMA Attack Mitigation." Cryptography 5, no. 3 (2021): 18. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cryptography5030018.

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Direct Memory Access (DMA) is a state-of-the-art technique to optimize the speed of memory access and to efficiently use processing power during data transfers between the main system and a peripheral device. However, this advanced feature opens security vulnerabilities of access compromise and to manipulate the main memory of the victim host machine. The paper outlines a lightweight process that creates resilience against DMA attacks minimal modification to the configuration of the DMA protocol. The proposed scheme performs device identification of the trusted PCIe devices that have DMA capab
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Zhang, Bin, Lin Ya Liu, and Wen Jie Shao. "The Optimization of the Design of a Railway Wheel in Terms of the Acoustic Radiation under the Vertical Excitation." Advanced Materials Research 629 (December 2012): 548–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.629.548.

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Railway wheel acoustic radiation takes a large proportion of the wheel-rail noise . This paper mainly focuses the ways to reduce railway wheel acoustic radiation to control wheel-rail acoustic radiation, and ultimately to reduce the railway environmental noise. In this paper, Optimization mathematical model of wheel acoustic radiation is built according to the wheel vibration and acoustic radiation theory, and obtaining the section optimization and acoustic radiation power of wheel by drawing up the genetic algorithm (GA) program and analyzing the acoustic radiation of the wheel according to F
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Chabeda-Barthe, Jemaiyo, and Tobias Haller. "Resilience of Traditional Livelihood Approaches Despite Forest Grabbing: Ogiek to the West of Mau Forest, Uasin Gishu County." Land 7, no. 4 (2018): 140. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/land7040140.

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This paper is a summary of the findings of research work conducted in two case studies in the Rift Valley, Kenya. This study used the Neo-Institutional theory to interrogate how the rules and regulations (institutions involved) of the agrarian reform process in Kenya are constantly changing and helping to shape the livelihoods of social actors around Mau Forest. The first case study—Ndungulu, is a settlement scheme where the Ogiek ethnic community were resettled between 1995 and 1997 after the land clashes of 1992. The second case study is the Kamuyu cooperative farm, a post-colonial settlemen
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Cambardella, Claire, Brian D. Fath, Andrea Werdenigg, Christian Gulas, and Harald Katzmair. "Assessing the Operationalization of Cultural Theory through Surveys Investigating the Social Aspects of Climate Change Policy Making." Weather, Climate, and Society 12, no. 4 (2020): 651–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/wcas-d-19-0103.1.

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AbstractCultural theory (CT) provides a framework for understanding how social dimensions shape cultural bias and social relations of individuals, including values, view of the natural world, policy preferences, and risk perceptions. The five resulting cultural solidarities are each associated with a “myth of nature”—a concept of nature that aligns with the worldview of each solidarity. When applied to the problem of climate protection policy making, the relationships and beliefs outlined by CT can shed light on how members of the different cultural solidarities perceive their relationship to
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Germain, Alison, Catriona R. Mayland, and Barbara A. Jack. "The potential therapeutic value for bereaved relatives participating in research: An exploratory study." Palliative and Supportive Care 14, no. 5 (2015): 479–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1478951515001194.

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AbstractObjective:Conducting research with the bereaved presents an immediate ethical challenge, as they are undoubtedly a vulnerable group, associated with high levels of distress and susceptible to both physical and mental health issues. A comprehensive understanding of the potential therapeutic benefits for bereaved relatives participating in palliative care research is limited, and therefore the ethics of engaging this group remain questionable.Method:This paper describes a secondary analysis of qualitative data collected in the Care of the Dying Evaluation (CODE) project, examining the ex
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