1,221 results
Search Results
102. Accounts of self-gift giving: nature, context and emotions.
- Author
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Heath, Teresa Pereira, Tynan, Caroline, and Ennew, Christine
- Subjects
GIFT giving ,EMOTIONS ,SOCIAL context ,CONSUMER behavior ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) - Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to provide a contextualized view of participants’ accounts of self-gift consumer behaviour (SGCB) throughout the consumption cycle, from the motivations to the emotions that follow. Design/methodology/approach – This paper uses an interpretive approach, focused on participants’ constructions of meanings, using 99 critical incident technique interviews, which followed 16 in-depth interviews. Findings – This paper identifies the following self-gift motivations: To Reward Myself (and Others); To celebrate; To remember or get closer; To forget or part; To feel loved or cheered up; and To enjoy life. It also uncovers a compensatory/therapeutic dimension in most self-gifts. The authors identify changes in emotional responses to SGCB over time, and suggest a relationship between these emotions and the contexts that drive self-gifts. Self-gifts are conceptualized as pleasure-oriented, symbolic and special consumption experiences, which are self-directed, or both self- and others-directed; perceived by the consumer to be justified by the contexts in which they occur; and driven and followed by context-dependent emotions. Originality/value – This manuscript offers novel insights into participants’ uses of both SGCB and the act of labelling purchases “self-gifts”. It uncovers how consumers are concerned with accounting for indulgent spending and how this problematizes the concept of “self-gift”. It challenges the idea of a single context for SGCB, showing how interacting motivations explain it. It also introduces a temporal dimension to self-gift theory by considering emotional responses at different times. Finally, it offers a new conceptualization of and theoretical framework for SGCB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
103. (Im)Mobilities of Older Pakistani Female Migrants and Material Culture: a Multigenerational Perspective on Gift-Giving.
- Author
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Ali, Nazia and Suleman, Rukeya
- Subjects
CULTURAL surveys ,CULTURAL centers ,CULTURAL movements ,RADICALISM ,CULTURAL production ,GIFT giving - Abstract
The purpose of the paper is to discuss, from a multigenerational perspective, the (im)mobilities of older Pakistani women migrants in the UK and the material culture of gift-giving, which moves with (and without) them to and from the ancestral homeland of Pakistan. A multigenerational perspective allows us to comprehend the collective importance of the mobilities of older Pakistani female migrants in upholding the culturally significant ritualistic custom of gift-giving. The research is situated within the theoretical context of the 'New Mobilities Paradigm' to understand the mobility patterns of older migrants and the mobilisation of material culture. We find that the process of coordinating and exchanging gifts leads to a great deal of physical mobility, within localities and national spaces, but also internationally across different diasporic locations. In doing so, older Pakistani women migrants perform an important role as 'gift agents' in the host and home countries, assuring their own social status as well as that of their families. Importantly, the resulting mobility of older Pakistani women empowers their less mobile peers to also participate in gift-giving. This paper concludes by extending the concept of 'mobility practices' to include the mobility of gifts as a practice, which can compensate for physical immobility in older age due to ill-health, fragility, or other factors. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
104. Participation of older adults in the intra-household decision-making activities: evidence from the longitudinal ageing study in India.
- Author
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CV, Irshad, Behera, Deepak Kumar, and Dash, Umakant
- Subjects
HOME environment ,STATISTICS ,SALES personnel ,SOCIAL participation ,LIFESTYLES ,PATIENT participation ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MARRIAGE ,EDUCATION ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PROPERTY ,GIFT giving ,FAMILIES ,POPULATION geography ,HEALTH status indicators ,SURVEYS ,SEX distribution ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PATIENT-family relations ,DECISION making ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,AGING ,SPECIAL days ,STATISTICAL models ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ODDS ratio ,DATA analysis software ,EMPIRICAL research ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RURAL population - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to document the participation of intra-household decision-making activities by older adults in India. Design/methodology/approach: This study has used a nationally representative sample of 21,662 older adults (aged 60 and above) from the Longitudinal Ageing Study of India data of 2017–2018. Intra-household decision-making participation is measured based on decision-making activities that includes marriage of daughter/son, buying and selling of property, giving a gift to the family, education of family member and arrangement of social/religious events. This paper used bivariate analysis and binary logistic regression model to examine the factors associated with the participation of older adults in the intra-household decision-making activities. Findings: The result has shown that older persons' participation declined with increased age. This study has also found a difference in the participation of intra-households decision-making activities between male and female, rural and urban older adults, poor and rich older adults. Older adults with good health status who maintain social engagement and a good lifestyle are more likely to participate in the household's decision-making activities. Practical implications: Older adults with better economic and social status are more likely to participate in intra-household decision-making activities that make their life happier than the counterpart. Therefore, emphasis should be given to those vulnerable older adults who do not have any social and economic security in the society. Originality/value: There are limited studies available on intra-household decision-making participation by older adults. This paper documents the intra-household decision-making participation by older adults in India with a nationally representative large sample. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
105. GIFTS OF DUBROVNIK ENVOYS TO ZETA RULERS – THE BALŠIĆ – BETWEEN 1360 AND 1403.
- Author
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PREMOVIĆ, Marijan
- Subjects
AMBASSADORS ,GIFT giving ,HEADS of state ,NONVERBAL communication ,UNPUBLISHED materials ,STATE government archives ,FRIENDSHIP - Abstract
Copyright of Acta Histriae is the property of Historical Society of Southern Primorska of Koper and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
106. FOREIGNERS AND RELIGION AT UGARIT.
- Author
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Válek, František
- Subjects
NONCITIZENS ,ART materials ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,CULTS ,BRONZE Age ,GIFT giving - Abstract
During the Late Bronze Age, Syria was mostly dominated by the larger powers of the ancient Near East-Mitanni (the Hurrians), the Hittite Empire, and Egypt. The ancient city of Ugarit yielded numerous texts and artifacts that attest to the presence of foreigners and their influences on local religious traditions. Textually, the best-preserved influences are those of Hurrian origin, although these were probably promoted thanks to the Hittites, who incorporated many Hurrian deities and cults. Hurrian traditions thus influenced both Ugaritic cults and divine pantheons. Egyptian influences, in contrast, are observable mostly in art and material evidence. Art of Egyptian origin was considered prestigious and because of that was prominently seen in trade and international exchange gifts, but it also entered the religious sphere in the form of cultic statues and ex-voto gifts for deities. Egyptian art was also often imitated by local artists. The same can be said of art from the Mediterranean area. Some evidence suggests that foreigners actively related to local traditions as well. Ritual tablets from Ugarit (namely KTU3 1.40 and its variants) illustrate that there were always frictions in a multicultural/national society. These tablets also indicate that such frictions could have been dealt with through ritual action, and thus emphasize the role religion played. The city of Ugarit is used in this paper to illuminate some processes that can be observed in the whole of ancient Syria. Nevertheless, every site has its own outcome of interactions with other cultures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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107. A terrible beauty is burned: gifts, sacrifice and community in Northern Ireland.
- Author
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Downey, Hilary and Sherry, Jr, John F.
- Subjects
COMMUNITIES ,SOCIAL impact ,GIFT giving ,SOCIAL bonds ,CHIMNEYS - Abstract
Purpose: Sacrifice, integral to gift giving, remains unexplored and undertheorized in marketing. This paper aims to address this shortfall by analyzing the dynamics of sacrifice and theorizing how it serves as an engine of the gift chimney. Design/methodology/approach: The ethnographic investigation of public ceremonial gift giving in sectarian Northern Ireland describes and interprets the complex nature of the gift. Findings: The authors show that sacrifice is a plausible mechanism of the gift chimney and that the co-occurrence of monadic, dyadic and systemic giving in the same ritual acts as an accelerant. Social implications: The authors analyze how public ceremonial gift giving induces sectarian communities to risk convocation, enabling them to exorcize trauma sustained at one another's hands and to build a platform for future cross-community cohesion in a context of ineffective institutional efforts. Originality/value: Sacrifice propels circulation of the gift, creating a social bond between antagonists whose ethos of mutuality depends upon ritualized reciprocal recognition of entangled loss. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
108. Pernicious custom? Corruption, culture, and the efficacy of anti-corruption campaigning in China.
- Author
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Lee, Tony C.
- Subjects
CORRUPTION prevention ,CORRUPTION policy ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,GIFT giving ,SOCIAL belonging - Abstract
This paper argues that using a legal approach to fight against corruption having a cultural root is unlikely to be effective. By analyzing the Eight-point Regulation, one of Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption measures, the present study shows that the efficacy of the Regulation is limited, notably when it comes to non-economic types of corruption. In fact, the Regulation does not halt the culture of gift giving, which is a common practice for the Chinese to establish guanxi (social connection) for potential or actual corruption. Based on the findings, this paper proposes complementary measures to curb corruption in addition to legal approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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109. Industry relations with emergency medicine graduate medical education programs
- Author
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Terry, Kowalenko, Douglas, Char, Catherine, Marco, Shellie, Asher, Ali, Raja, Sue, Farrell, Peter E, Sokolove, and Jim, Weber
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Medical education ,ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,Drug Industry ,business.industry ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Conflict of Interest ,Interprofessional Relations ,Graduate medical education ,Internship and Residency ,General Medicine ,Gift Giving ,Organizational Policy ,United States ,Education, Medical, Graduate ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Emergency Medicine ,Position paper ,Humans ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,business ,Pharmaceutical industry - Abstract
A panel of physicians from the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) Graduate Medical Education (GME), Ethics, and Industry Relations Committees were asked by the SAEM Board of Directors to write a position paper on the relationship of emergency medicine (EM) GME with industry. Using multiple sources as references, the team derived a set of guidelines that all EM GME training programs can use when interacting with industry representatives. In addition, the team used a question-answer format to provide educators and residents with a practical approach to these interactions. The SAEM Board of Directors endorsed the guidelines in June 2009.
- Published
- 2009
110. CubeMuseum AR: A Tangible Augmented Reality Interface for Cultural Heritage Learning and Museum Gifting.
- Author
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Xu, Ningning, Li, Yue, Wei, Xingbo, Xie, Letian, Yu, Lingyun, and Liang, Hai-Ning
- Subjects
- *
CULTURAL property , *GIFT giving , *AUGMENTED reality , *BLENDED learning , *USER interfaces , *MUSEUMS - Abstract
Museum artifacts are the main way for visitors to experience and learn about cultural heritage. Augmented reality (AR) allows for high interactivity and is increasingly applied in museums to improve tourists' experience and learning. It also supports the extension of museum experience to outside of the physical museum space, contributing to the visiting trajectory and takeaway experience. In this paper, we present our design of two tangible AR interfaces for cultural artifacts: Postcard AR and CubeMuseum AR, followed by three user studies that evaluate and optimize the design. In Study 1, we conducted a within-subjects study (N = 24) that compares the two AR interfaces with a baseline condition (Leaflet). Our results demonstrate the positive effects of tangible AR interfaces on users' motivation and engagement in learning cultural heritage. In Study 2, we further explored how to optimize CubeMuseum AR by adopting a user-centered design approach. Through the analysis of expert interviews (N = 7) and an online survey (N = 207), the results specify a series of requirements and design guidelines for tangible AR interfaces to be used as a learning tool and a hybrid gift. Based on the findings, the design of the CubeMuseum AR was optimized and evaluated in Study 3. A between-subjects user study was conducted (N = 32) to compare the optimized design with the initial design. The results verified the positive effects of gamified tangible AR interfaces on users' motivation, engagement, and performance in learning cultural heritage. We present our design and evaluation results, and discuss the implications of designing tangible AR interfaces for cultural heritage learning and museum gifting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
111. The use and significance of social capital and informal learning in postsecondary STEM education.
- Author
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Han, Caleb Seung‐hyun and Chai, Dae Seok
- Subjects
- *
NONFORMAL education , *STEM education , *POSTSECONDARY education , *SOCIAL capital , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *GIFT giving - Abstract
Despite intense interest in how social capital can facilitate informal learning, few attempts have been made to synthesize the interface between social capital and informal learning. Social capital is an important factor in the application of informal learning, especially in postsecondary science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education. This paper first presents a review of the literature that has explored the relationship between social capital and informal learning in STEM education. We then present two case studies illustrating how social capital plays a pivotal role in enhancing informal learning outcomes in postsecondary STEM education. These cases offer insights on how to promote optimal informal learning in STEM education. Implications for understanding the importance of social capital in informal learning are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
112. The Impact of Former President Trump's Presidential Agenda on the U.S.-Mexican Border.
- Author
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Collins, Kimberly
- Subjects
- *
EX-presidents , *BORDERLANDS , *PHYSICAL distribution of goods , *PRESIDENTIAL administrations , *GIFT giving ,MEXICO-United States relations - Abstract
This paper argues that to understand the impact of former U.S. President Donald Trump on the U.S.-Mexico border, his presidential agenda needs to be compared with other presidential administrations from the 1990s to the present. It looks at presidential policy agendas, as seen in executive orders, legislative policies, binational initiatives, deployment of the National Guard and military, presidential visits, and use of the bully pulpit with visits to the border region. These are compared to border operations indicators, highlighting formal and informal crossings of people and movement of goods. Though Mr. Trump has been specifically negative and aggressive toward the border, the securitization of the region has been part of presidential agendas since the 1990s. A key takeaway is to think about and discuss these results to ensure the border is livable, manageable and ready for the challenges of the 21st century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
113. From bribes to bequests and gifts to gratuities: The black, white, and shades of gray of how and why consumers pay what they want.
- Author
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Raghubir, Priya and Bluvstein, Shirley
- Subjects
- *
GIFT giving , *TIPS & tipping (Gratuities) , *BRIBERY , *CONSUMERS , *CHARITABLE giving , *SOCIAL norms , *PRICES , *CROWDSOURCING - Abstract
This conceptual paper presents a framework that integrates 11 forms of voluntary payments as seemingly disparate as bribes and bequests, and gifts and gratuities to show that "voluntary" payments vary in the shades of gray not only in terms of how much like bribes they are but also in terms of how voluntary they actually are. We provocatively suggest that these payment types might be susceptible to becoming entrenched through self‐reinforcing norms because the voluntary payments are not necessarily voluntary and to an extent akin to bribes. Specifically, it provides an overarching framework to showcase the similarities and differences between bribes, lobbying efforts, suggested fees, pay what you want, tips, bequests, legacies, charity, crowdsourcing, dowry, and gifts, identifying gaps in domains that are under‐researched. Starting with the question as to whether a service has been, is being, or will be performed for the voluntary payment, and whether payments are made to an individual or a cause, the framework highlights the following: (1) the differences in the purpose underlying these payments, (2) the different modes of payment used; (3) the economic and social norms governing the payments; and (4) external and internal emotions associated with these payment types. The integrative framework allows for an amalgam of disparate literatures ranging from morality and behavioral pricing to charity and gift giving. The process model suggests a multitude of areas for future research in the domain of consumers' voluntary payment decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
114. The impact of price and image warnings on the social perception of gifting cigarettes in China.
- Author
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Guang Xu, Yibin Shi, Kecheng Du, Gang Wang, and Liyun Wu
- Subjects
COLLEGE students ,GIFT giving ,CONSUMER attitudes ,PUBLIC health ,LABELS ,SURVEYS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,TOBACCO products ,INTENTION ,STATISTICAL sampling ,CULTURAL values ,SOCIAL control ,PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
INTRODUCTION The tobacco gift-giving culture in China poses a significant challenge to public health; however, there is limited research on effectively curbing the tobacco gift-giving culture and its associated tobacco gift consumption. This study examines the potential impact of two tobacco control measures that the Chinese government may consider adopting on cigarette gifting behavior in the future in Chinese society. METHODS This study employed a randomized survey experiment to examine the effects of cigarette price treatment and pictorial health warning labels (HWLs) on cigarette gifting. The total sample size of this study is 1035. Four groups of participants were presented with representative cigarettes categorized into high-, medium-, and low-priced products, along with different prices (normal and double) or external packaging imagery (normal and pictorial HWL versions). RESULTS The price of cigarettes for personal consumption forms an L-shaped distribution, and the price of cigarette gifts forms a W-shaped distribution. Increasing cigarette prices reduces smokers' willingness to gift high-priced cigarettes but stimulates the consumption of low-price cigarettes as gifts. Pictorial HWLs do not directly influence smokers' intentions to gift cigarettes, but they enhance the effectiveness of price regulation concerning medium-priced cigarette products. CONCLUSIONS If the price variance of cigarettes is not reduced, the effect of price regulation will be very limited. Implementing combined interventions of pictorial HWLs and price regulation or modifying the pricing structure of tobacco products may yield stronger control outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
115. A Contribution to the History of Ottoman-English Diplomatic and Commercial Relations: The Ahdname of 1612.
- Author
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Tekin, Ahmet
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,DIPLOMATIC history ,GIFT giving ,POLITICAL economic analysis ,TRADE regulation - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
116. The evolutionary extortion game of multiple groups in hypernetworks.
- Author
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Shen, Aizhong, Gao, Zilin, Gao, Xiang, and Cui, Dan
- Subjects
EXTORTION ,GIFT giving ,GAMES ,DEFECTORS - Abstract
As a type of zero-determinant strategies, the extortion strategy was found to be an evolutionarily stable strategy in structural groups. However, instead of complex networks structure, this paper focus on a multi-group game in hypernetworks, using the framework of a gift giving game driven by replicator-like dynamics. We find that the extortion is evolutionarily stable in the hypernetwork structure. The extortion game in hypernetworks can promote the emergence of the cooperative behavior compared to the traditional dual-strategy game and the extortion game in complex networks. The results show that the cooperation behavior attracts most of the groups for the smaller benefit value. With the increase of benefit value, cooperators turn into defectors and extortioners, but cooperation behavior still survives in hypernetworks under extreme conditions. Moreover, small-scale groups are more conducive to cooperation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
117. Social Relationships through Gifts: A Study of Religious Gift-Giving Practices in a Hindu Temple.
- Author
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Mayumi Iizuka
- Subjects
HINDU temples ,PATRONAGE ,PRIESTS ,GIFT giving ,RELIGIOUS studies ,SOCIAL change ,TEMPLES ,FANS (Persons) - Abstract
This paper describes how the practice of religious gift-giving facilitates the building of social relationships in a traditional Hindu temple in contemporary South India. The author analyzes the patron-client relationship between the temple priests and their devotees, focusing on the Hindu religious terms bhakti and prasāda. Though the lives of the priests and the management of the temple are economically dependent on donations from the devotee (kattalai), these religious norms can work to prevent a relationship of dependence, enabling the priests to maintain their dignity. These norms are also related to the imagination and creation of a society in which their god participates in social relationships through involvement as an actor in the giftgiving interaction. This paper clarifies the potentiality of these religious terms and examines how they are imagined and refined in person-to-person gift-giving practices, which vary with economic, political, and social changes and the religious ideals of the temple. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
118. Kratka kulturna biografija grafitov in likovne ulične umetnosti ter razlikovanje med njima na podlagi teorije družbenega življenja stvari.
- Author
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Konda, Helena
- Subjects
STREET art ,ART ,ART history ,INSTITUTIONAL racism ,ART theory ,GIFT giving ,SOCIAL unrest - Abstract
Copyright of Ars & Humanitas is the property of Ars & Humanitas and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
119. When do consumers value ethical attributes? The role of perceived quality in gift-giving.
- Author
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Das, Gopal, Peloza, John, Varshneya, Geetika, and Green, Todd
- Subjects
CONSUMER behavior ,GIFT giving ,PERCEIVED quality ,CONSUMER ethics ,CONSUMER preferences - Abstract
Purpose: Although research demonstrates the importance of ethical product attributes for consumers, a prior study has not examined the role of consumption target (i.e. self-purchases vs gift-giving) on consumers' preference for products with ethical attributes. Notably, consumers' preference for quality can differ between self-purchases and gifts, and the presence of ethical attributes can impact product quality perceptions. The purpose of this paper is to examine how the presence of ethical attributes alters decision-making in a gift-giving context using perceptions of product quality as an explanatory variable for these differences. Design/methodology/approach: One field study and two controlled experiments test the proposed hypotheses. The experiments were conducted across different product categories and samples. Findings: Results showed that the presence of an ethical attribute leads to higher purchase intentions for products in a gift-giving context compared to self-purchase. Perceived quality mediates this effect. Further process evidence through moderation, including resource synergy beliefs, support the findings. This paper discusses the theoretical, managerial and societal implications of these results. Research limitations/implications: Although care was taken to select products to enhance generalizability, the studies presented here are limited to two products. Further, although the present research includes a field study with actual charity-related purchases, the role of time pressures is not explicitly explored. Finally, the role of brand-self connections is not explored in the current research. The ability for a donor to integrate the mission of a charity into their self-perception or the potential for social normative influences to impact behaviors remains open for exploration. Practical implications: Charities are facing increasing pressures to raise sustainable funds to support their missions. The research provides guidance to marketers and fundraisers in the non-profit sector that allows them to direct more focused fundraising appeals to donors and adapt their fundraising efforts to create a fit between their audience and fundraising appeals. Originality/value: This research demonstrates that consumption target (purchasing for the self versus purchasing for others) is a vital contextual factor that influences customer preference for ethical attributes. These results complement the extant literature by exploring the underlying mechanism behind consumers' responses to the ethical attributes in the case of self-purchase and other-purchase. The underlying effect is supported theoretically by resource synergy beliefs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
120. Innen vor Außen? Eine Schätzung der Innenentwicklung in nordrhein-westfälischen Gemeinden, 1979 bis 2011.
- Author
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Eichhorn, Sebastian and Siedentop, Stefan
- Subjects
URBAN growth ,CITIES & towns ,RURAL-urban differences ,HOUSE construction ,BUILDING design & construction ,GIFT giving - Abstract
Copyright of Raumforschung und Raumordnung is the property of Oekom Verlag GmbH and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
121. Free tumbler in Snapchat vs coffee tasting ticket in Instagram: the impact of gift type and message type on B2C gift-giving on different social media platforms.
- Author
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Kim, Dong Hoo, Lee, So Young, Sung, Yoon Hi, and Um, Nam-Hyun
- Subjects
HYACINTHOIDES ,SOCIAL media ,BUSINESS to consumer transactions ,SOCIAL media in business ,TICKETS ,SOCIAL media in marketing ,ADVERTISING media planning ,GIFT giving - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to examine the differential effects of the type of gift (material vs experiential) offered on Snapchat and Instagram (Study 1) and how the impacts of gift type and message type (informational vs emotional) vary by the two different image-sharing social media platform in a business-to-consumer (B2C) gift-giving context (Study 2). Design/methodology/approach: Study 1 used a two (social media: Snapchat vs Instagram) by two (gift type: material vs experiential) between-subject factorial design, whereas Study 2 used a two (social media: Snapchat vs Instagram) by two (gift type: material vs experiential) by two (message type: informational vs emotional) between-subject factorial design. A series of analyses of covariance was conducted to test the suggested hypotheses. Findings: Study 1 demonstrated that the promotion of material gifts was more effective on Snapchat than on Instagram, while the promotion of experiential gifts was more effective on Instagram than on Snapchat. Study 2 showed that the impacts of gift type and message type varied by social media platform. The promotion of an experiential gift with an emotional ad appeal was found to be more effective on Instagram than on Snapchat, while the promotion of a material gift using an informational ad appeal was found to be more effective on Snapchat than on Instagram. Research limitations/implications: This research used a college student sample for the experiments. However, to extend the generalizability of the results, it is recommended that future experiments be conducted with nonstudent samples. Also, the current research manipulated the two different social media conditions, Snapchat vs Instagram, by enforcing participants to use their social media and then provided experimental stimuli in a different screen from their social media account. If the stimuli were distributed through participants' real social media account, the external validity of this research could be enhanced. Finally, future research should apply this framework to other countries with different social media platforms to confirm the generalizability of the study's findings. Practical implications: This research can thus contribute to the development of new guidelines for planning social media marketing in the business gift-giving context. By leveraging findings that the fit effect of gift types and advertising appeals differs based on social media platform, practitioners can create a more effective social media plan for their advertising campaigns. Given that copywriting and media plans are among the most important and difficult work in the business of advertising, this study's findings would assist advertising practitioners in planning and executing the most effective advertising campaigns. Originality/value: The findings of this study provide valuable insights for the development of effective brand promotion strategies for B2C gift-giving via social media. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
122. Crowdfunding as a Market-Fostering Gift System.
- Author
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Maciel, Andre F and Weinberger, Michelle F
- Subjects
CROWD funding ,CONSUMER behavior ,PROSOCIAL behavior ,CAPITAL ,ELECTRONIC money ,GIFT giving ,INNOVATION management ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,DEMOCRATIZATION - Abstract
Reward-based crowdfunding has enabled an unprecedented number of consumers to provision capital for commercial and artistic ventures. Each year, consumers use digital platforms to transfer billions of dollars to entrepreneurs and artists to help them develop a wide range of market innovations. Notably, these consumers obtain no financial benefits, no formal guarantee that their money will be used aptly, and no reimbursement options. Under such materially unfavorable conditions, why do consumers transfer their money to these producers? The present research answers this question by introducing the concept of a "market-fostering gift system": a social contract that entices consumers to fund the creation and enhancement of market offerings by mobilizing the logic and practices of gift-giving. This conceptualization includes the core stakeholders, processes, outcomes, and shortcomings of reward-based crowdfunding, providing theoretical structure to this consequential articulation of platform capitalism. In addition, this conceptualization advances theory about how gift and market economies intersect. Whereas previous research emphasizes the tensions that characterize their interface, this article brings to the fore the complementary, scalable relationship between gift-giving and market exchange. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
123. Qualitative approaches to life course research: Linking life story to gift giving.
- Author
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Minowa, Yuko and Belk, Russell W.
- Subjects
LIFE course approach ,GIFT giving ,MARKETING research ,CURRICULUM ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Global Scholars of Marketing Science is the property of Taylor & Francis Ltd and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
124. Hijabs, Gifts and the Creation and Operation of Social Relationships: Gifting Relations Amongst Muslim Women in Contemporary Finland.
- Author
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Almila, Anna-Mari and Inglis, David
- Subjects
MUSLIM women ,GIFT giving ,SOCIAL bonds - Abstract
There have been relatively few analyses of Muslim women's veiling practices in the Finnish context. This paper examines some micro-dynamics of women's veiling-related practices in the Greater Helsinki area. Gift theory and research, deriving from the original insights of Marcel Mauss, are used to understand the multiple layers of significance that are involved when veiling garments are passed on as gifts from one woman to another, or from a group of women to a recipient. While forms of politics are involved in such processes, the giving of veiling garments also works to create intimate forms of social bonding, encompassing familial, friendship and community elements. The "gifting" of hijabs can establish, maintain, reform or repair relationships between Muslim women, and between the latter and non-Muslim women. The paper considers gifting of garments between Muslims, from Muslims to Finnish (would-be) converts, and from non-Muslim Finns to Finnish converts. While veiling garments are widely understood to be in various ways problems, when such objects are gifted by women to each other, they may also be experienced and narrated as solutions to socially-shaped challenges, affording transitions towards more manageable social situations. The gifting of Islamic garments often figures as a means not only for donors to influence recipients, but also for both donors and recipients to finesse potentially troubling or awkward social scenarios. Cheaper, mass-produced garments seem to be particularly chosen and passed on by donors who seem to be aiming at influencing recipients' conduct, in the direction of adopting stricter forms of dress and religious observance. Conversely, the choosing of more expensive, bespoke garments is more associated with maintaining or repairing relationships between donors and recipients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
125. Consumption narratives of extended possessions and the extended self.
- Author
-
Wong, Phoebe, Hogg, MargaretK., and Vanharanta, Markus
- Subjects
CONSUMERS ,NARRATIVE inquiry (Research method) ,PERSONAL property ,GIFT giving ,STORYTELLING -- Social aspects ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper investigates the nature of the boundaries between the extended self and possessions (including potentially extended possessions) in the context of gift giving for Hong Kong Chinese consumers. Our findings showed that informants narrated stories not only about the gifts that they themselves had received as being their important possessions and thus constituting part of their extended self, but they also described objects that they had given as gifts to close others as part of their own possessions. These extended possessions potentially constituted part of their own extended selves. In addition, by the virtue of their material presence, these extended possessions acted as continuous reminders of these extended selves. The extended possessions hence provided the informants with an anchoring point to increase the relatively stability of their relationships with others, thereby countering the labile nature of ever-changing identity narratives. This paper contributes to current debates concerning the relationships between the self, possessions, and gift giving providing a richer explanation and extending previous work on possessions and the extended self. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
126. Can't Buy Me Love: Gift‐Giving Among Members of Criminal Organizations.
- Author
-
Bar‐Lev, Shirly and Morag, Michal
- Subjects
- *
GIFT giving , *GENEROSITY , *SYMBOLIC interactionism , *POLICE reports , *SOCIAL goals , *POLICE , *CRIMINALS - Abstract
This paper problematizes gift relations in criminal organizations. It adopts a symbolic interaction perspective to focus scholarly attention on the way in which actants skillfully maneuver within the social expectations inherent in gift‐giving relations. The study is based on insights from twenty interviews with ex‐convicts and ten interviews with police officers or associates, and an in‐depth analysis of memoirs, police reports, and newspaper articles. Our study expands the scope of symbolic interactionism by considering how the exchange of gifts and favors is emotionally stylized to achieve both social and operative goals. We aim to carefully deconstruct the performance of gift‐giving and favor exchange in Israeli crime organizations, to understand how it is orchestrated to elicit genuine feelings among givers and recipients, as well as to control the use of violence. Finally, we identify gift‐giving as a double‐edged sword designed to lure recruits into a network of binding obligations, only to form a durable system of credit and debt wherein any transgressions are strictly punished. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
127. Being there without being there: Gifts compensate for lack of in‐person support.
- Author
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Wiener, Hillary J. D., Howe, Holly S., and Chartrand, Tanya L.
- Subjects
GIFTS ,SOCIAL support ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,GIFT giving ,GUILT (Psychology) ,SOCIAL distancing - Abstract
Providing social support is a critical part of being in a relationship with someone, but people often struggle to support loved ones in person. In this paper, we show how givers can use gifts to compensate for not providing in‐person social support. Study 1 shows that when it is prohibitively difficult for givers to provide in‐person support, they give more expensive gifts. Study 2 replicates this effect for likelihood to give a gift and shows it is not due to social desirability. Studies 3, 4a, and 4b find that guilt over not having provided adequate support drives people to give gifts, and that giving gifts partially relieves givers' feelings of guilt. Studies 5 and 6 examine moderation. In Study 5, people only compensate for a lack of in‐person support with a gift when they have a strong obligation to support the recipient because they are close to them. Study 6 shows that money does not substitute for in‐person support. We show the role of gifts in enhancing givers' wellbeing and provide new customer insights to managers on reasons people purchase gifts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
128. Differentiating between gift giving and bribing in China: a guanxi perspective.
- Author
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Li, Peikai, Sun, Jian-Min, and Taris, Toon W.
- Subjects
CORRUPTION ,CULTURE ,GIFT giving ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior ,EMPLOYEES ,STUDENTS - Abstract
Although scholars have long been interested in distinguishing gift giving from bribery, the impact of the degree of guanxi between a giver and a recipient on this distinction remains unclear. Drawing on a bystander perspective, this paper investigates how people distinguish between two types of giving behavior: gift giving and bribing. In three studies, we examined how guanxi (Study 1, n = 143 Chinese students), the price of a present (Study 2, including 106 students and 55 employees), and the motivation for giving a present (Study 3, n = 33 Chinese students) influence people's perception of a present (i.e., as a gift or a bribe). The results largely supported our expectation that presents were more likely to be considered a bribe when guanxi utility was high, if the present held high economic value, and if the giving motivation was instrumental-oriented. Implications of our findings for future research and business practitioners in Chinese culture are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
129. "孙子比老人大": 阿卡礼中的 祖孙关系及其扩展的亲属世界.
- Author
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王瑞静
- Subjects
GRANDPARENT-grandchild relationships ,GRANDPARENTS ,ANCESTOR worship ,GIFT giving ,GRANDCHILDREN ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Copyright of Society: Chinese Journal of Sociology / Shehui is the property of Society: Chinese Journal of Sociology and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
130. Impact of donors' financial fairness perception on donation intention in nonprofit organizations after COVID-19 outbreak.
- Author
-
Li X and Feng L
- Subjects
- Adult, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 psychology, COVID-19 virology, Female, Humans, Intention, Male, Middle Aged, Organizations, Nonprofit ethics, Organizations, Nonprofit statistics & numerical data, Pandemics ethics, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, COVID-19 economics, Gift Giving ethics, Motivation ethics, Organizations, Nonprofit economics, Pandemics economics, Perception ethics, SARS-CoV-2 isolation & purification
- Abstract
Based on the investigation of financial fairness perception and donation intention of individual donors in non-profit organizations (NPOs), this paper uses structural equation model to analyze the impact of individual donors' financial fairness perception on donation intention. The results show that individual donors' perceptions on financial result fairness, financial procedure fairness and financial information fairness all have positive impact on donation intention; among which the perception on financial result fairness only has direct impact on individual donation intention, while the perceptions on financial procedure fairness and financial information fairness have direct and indirect impact on individual donation intention., Competing Interests: These no potential competing interests in our paper. And all authors have seen the manuscript and approved to submit to your journal. We confirm that the content of the manuscript has not been published or submitted for publication elsewhere.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
131. Rules and Resistance: A Commentary on "An Archeology of Corruption in Medicine".
- Author
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MacKay, Kathryn
- Subjects
SOCIAL values ,GIFT giving ,MEDICAL care ,RESPONSIBILITY ,PHARMACEUTICAL industry ,DECEPTION - Abstract
In the paper "An archeology of corruption in medicine" (2018), Miles Little, Wendy Lipworth, and Ian Kerridge ("the authors" or "Little et al.") present an account of corruption and describe its prevalent forms in medicine. In presenting an individual-focused account of corruption found within "social entities" (organizations, institutions, and systems), Little et al. argue that these entities are corruptible by nature and that certain individuals are prone to take advantage of the corruptibility of social entities to pursue their own ends. The authors state that this is not preventable, so the way to remedy corruption is via management and, where necessary, punishment. This commentary will briefly lay out the key features and functions of corruption as presented by Little et al., before providing a critical discussion that will focus on whether corruptibility is a necessary feature of social entities. I will propose that it is not a necessary feature, though it may frequently arise where individualistic values are unchecked. Corruption can be prevented within social entities by enhancing structures that direct toward virtue and which promote and reward cooperation instead of competition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
132. Kadınların hediye alma ve verme davranışları ve ritüelleri üzerine bir literatür çalışması.
- Author
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DOGAN, Caner and AKDENİZ AR, Aybeniz
- Subjects
- *
GIFT giving , *CONSUMERS , *SOCIOLOGY , *GENEROSITY , *CONSUMER behavior , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGY , *CULTURE - Abstract
The gift tradition is a universal and functional culture pattern that is encountered in all cultures. This tradition has been maintained in both primitive and contemporary cultures. In modern cultures, gift-giving has been offering more opportunities to consumers than previous eras In the gift of gift tradition, it is necessary to be brought together fields such as consumer behavior, history of economy, psychology, sociology, anthropology, and culture in order to be able to examine the behavior of women in buying gifts, giving gifts, and accepting gifts from the others. The purpose of this paper is to try to understand the feelings, thoughts and expectations of women about gift-giving. For this purpose, firstly the concept of gift-giving, and in this direction the thoughts, attitudes, and behaviors of women in gift-giving were thoroughly examined from the past to the present and new suggestions were made as stated in the results obtained from this paper [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
133. Healthcare professionals and interactions with the medical devices industry.
- Author
-
Purnell, Paris
- Subjects
MEDICAL equipment ,BUSINESS ,CUSTOMER relations ,FRAUD ,INCOME ,NURSES ,NURSING ethics ,PATIENTS ,TRAVEL ,MANUFACTURING industries ,GIFT giving - Abstract
Compliance laws for healthcare professional practices are evolving continuously. It can therefore remain difficult to remain abreast of all laws that apply across all countries. This paper serves as guidance for best practice for healthcare professionals (HCPs) working alongside the medical devices industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
134. Considering boundaries when doing therapeutic work with people who are seeking asylum: a reflective case study.
- Author
-
Cowles, Megan and Griggs, Mary
- Subjects
WOUND care ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,COGNITIVE therapy ,CRITICAL thinking ,EMOTIONS ,EXPERIENCE ,HUMAN rights ,NEEDS assessment ,PERSONAL space ,PROFESSIONAL ethics ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,PSYCHOLOGY of refugees ,RISK assessment ,SELF-disclosure ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,SUPERVISION of employees ,CULTURAL awareness ,GIFT giving ,CLIENT relations ,SOCIAL boundaries ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
People who are seeking asylum often have lived experience of their personal boundaries and human rights being violated. For this reason, it is especially important that we consider the impact of boundaries in therapeutic work with this population. This paper explores work with a woman with a severe trauma history who was seeking asylum in England. Examples of perceived boundary crossings in the therapeutic relationship are examined. Considerations for other clinicians working with asylum seekers are discussed. These include: addressing socio-political factors; being sensitive to cultural differences; the importance of supervision and reflective practice; the personal impact of such work; and using critical thinking and warmth to manage boundaries rather than rigidly following rules. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
135. Unfavorable hydroxychloroquine COVID-19 research associated with authors having a history of political party donations.
- Author
-
Berry AC, Gonnering RS, Rodriguez I, Zhang Q, and Berry BB
- Subjects
- Humans, United States, Antimalarials therapeutic use, Gift Giving, Hydroxychloroquine therapeutic use, Politics, Publication Bias, COVID-19 Drug Treatment
- Abstract
We explored the degree to which political bias in medicine and study authors could explain the stark variation in Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ)/Chloroquine (CQ) study favorability in the US compared to the rest of the world. COVID-19/SARS-CoV-2 preprint and published papers between January 1, 2020-July 26, 2020 with Hydroxychloroquine and/or Chloroquine; 267 met study criteria, 68 from the US. A control subset was selected. HCQ/CQ study result favorability (favorable, unfavorable, or neutral) was noted. First and last main authors of each US study were entered into FollowTheMoney.org Website, extracting any history of political party donation. Of all US studies (68 total), 39/68 (57.4%) were unfavorable, with only 7/68 (10.3%) of US studies yielding favorable results-compared to 199 non-US studies, 66/199 (33.2%) unfavorable, 69/199 (34.7%) favorable, and 64/199 (32.2%) neutral. Studies with at least one US main author were 20.4% (SE 0.053, P < 0.05) more likely to report unfavorable results than non-US studies. US Studies with at least one main author donating to any political party were 25.6% (SE 0.085, P < 0.01) more likely to have unfavorable results. US studies with at least one author donating to the Democratic party were 20.4% (SE 0.045, P < 0.05) more likely to have unfavorable results. US authors were more likely to publish studies with medically harmful conclusions than non-US authors. Cardiology-specific HCQ/CQ studies were 44.2% more likely to yield harmful conclusions ( P < 0.01). Inaccurate propagation of HCQ/CQ cardiac adverse effects with individual scientific author political bias has contributed to unfavorable US HCQ/CQ publication patterns and political polarization of the medications., Competing Interests: The authors declare no financial or political conflicts of interest., (© 2021 The Authors. Published by IMR Press.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
136. Financial contributions made by patients towards dispensed medicines prescribed by Australian dentists from 2006 to 2018: a cost-analysis study.
- Author
-
Park JS, Kruger E, and Tennant M
- Subjects
- Australia, Costs and Cost Analysis, Dentists, Drug Prescriptions, Humans, Analgesics, Opioid, Gift Giving
- Abstract
Objective This cost-analysis study explored Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) data to determine the financial patient contribution (PC) towards dispensed medications prescribed by dentists and temporal trends in cost contributions. Methods For this study we used the PBS online dataset and only included concessional data in the analysis. Data on dental medications dispensed under the PBS from 2006 to 2018 were accessed. For all medicines aggregated to different pharmacological categories (antibiotics, analgesics and opiates, anti-inflammatories, antifungals, benzodiazepines, anticonvulsants and anti-emetics, and emergency medications), a temporal trend was generated using annual PC data. Cumulative patient and mean annual PC data were also generated in a similar manner. Results Cumulative PC over the study period for dental PBS prescriptions was A$28783361 (A$5.55 per dispensing). The mean annual PC for dental PBS was A$2214105 (for the entire concessional population from 2006 to 2018), with a statistically significant and strong correlation between year and PC (Dental PBS, A$59756 per year; r=0.98: P<0.0001). Antibiotics represented the highest proportion of PC (87.8%), whereas the lowest proportion of PC was for emergency medications (e.g. adrenaline, atropine, glucagon, naloxone), which amounted to 0.003%. Conclusions This study highlights the increasing contributions made by patients towards antibiotic prescriptions. What is known about the topic? Australian dentists can independently prescribe subsidised medications as per a set scope for general and specialist dentists, regulated under the PBS with requisite adherence to specific legal requirements. What does this paper add? This is the first study highlighting the increased level of patient financial contributions towards dental medicines, according to different pharmacological categories, dispensed by pharmacists in Australia. What are the implications for practitioners? This study creates a base for future research assessing the appropriateness of the PBS subsidy and the PBS Safety Net threshold, possibly reassessing the out-of-pocket pricing on brand substitution and appropriately reassessing the current dental PBS schedule.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
137. Does Whistleblowing on Tax Evaders Reduce Ingroup Cooperation?
- Author
-
Chapkovski, Philipp, Corazzini, Luca, and Maggian, Valeria
- Subjects
WHISTLEBLOWING ,TAX evasion ,TAX auditing ,GIFT giving ,COOPERATION - Abstract
Whistleblowing is a powerful and rather inexpensive instrument to deter tax evasion. Despite the deterrent effects on tax evasion, whistleblowing can reduce trust and undermine agents' attitude to cooperate with group members. Yet, no study has investigated the potential spillover effects of whistleblowing on ingroup cooperation. This paper reports results of a laboratory experiment in which subjects participate in two consecutive phases in unchanging groups: a tax evasion game, followed by a generalized gift exchange game. Two dimensions are manipulated in our experiment: the inclusion of a whistleblowing stage in which, after observing others' declared incomes, subjects can signal other group members to the tax authority, and the provision of information about the content of the second phase before the tax evasion game is played. Our results show that whistleblowing is effective in both curbing tax evasion and improving the precision of tax auditing. Moreover, we detect no statistically significant spillover effects of whistleblowing on ingroup cooperation in the subsequent generalized gift exchange game, with this result being unaffected by the provision of information about the experimental task in the second phase. Finally, the provision of information does not significantly alter subjects' (tax and whistleblowing) choices in the tax evasion game: thus, knowledge about perspective ingroup cooperation did not alter attitude toward whistleblowing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
138. Educational psychologists’ report-writing: acts of justice?
- Author
-
Attard, Sunaina, Mercieca, Daniela, and Mercieca, Duncan P.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGISTS ,SCHOOLS ,BEHAVIORAL scientists ,PSYCHOLOGY ,GIFT giving - Abstract
One of the major tasks of educational psychologists is the writing of reports. Often, all involvement, assessment and intervention culminate in the production of a report. This paper explores critically the tensions involved in writing reports which are closed down in their conformity to requirements of different bodies, while looking for possibilities of openings in this closure. We acknowledge that report-writing is caught in the economies of exchange and the impossibility of gift-giving, based on the writing of Jacques Derrida. This paper will draw upon a small qualitative study of seven experienced school psychologists, and using a Derridian framework, it makes the familiar strange and the strange familiar [Biesta, G., J. Allan, and R. Edwards. 2011. “The Theory Question in Research Capacity Building in Education: Towards an Agenda for Research and Practice.” British Journal of Educational Studies, 59 (3): 225–239.] on the process of report-writing. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
139. European Union and the Economy of the Gift.
- Author
-
Kentrotis, Kyriakos and Akrivoulis, Dimitrios
- Subjects
GIFTS ,CEREMONIAL exchange ,GIFT giving ,ECONOMICS & ethics ,CAPITALISM - Abstract
The paper offers two parallel reflections upon the contemporary European predicament through the concept of the gift. First, the paper focuses on the existing critique drawing from 'moral economy' theories, according to which the European project has abandoned its own idealized 'gift economy', that is, its founding principles of solidarity and equality, in favor of an immoral market economy. This emphasis on the 'immoral' functions of market economy prevents us from recognizing that its basic principles and values have themselves become the organizing moral basis of contemporary European society. The key problem here is that all those values now associated with the EU - even those that the theories of moral economy would have recognized as 'moral' - are now conceptualized in a manner pursuant to neoliberal capitalism. Second, the paper offers an alternative narrative of the historical development of European integration, through four successive stories marked by distinct arrangements in the virtuouscircle relation between the gift and the expectation of a gift in return, read as doron-antidoron. Read in parallel with the historical development of neoliberal capitalism, the progress of European integration is thus represented as embedded in a series of choices between gratuity-charity for the plenty and profit-making for the few, never abandoning a European 'gift economy', which has fundamentally been an economy of exchange. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
140. Playing games, receiving gifts, creating experiences and building brands.
- Author
-
Pratap, Sankalp, Gupta, Agam, Mateen, Arqum, and Mahto, Kavita
- Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to extend the understanding the role of consumer experiences, instantiated through gift giving and game play, in communication of brand values. Design/methodology/approach – The paper is based on in-depth phenomenological interviews of marketing managers and various channel intermediaries involved in the execution of a mass brand promotion program in rural India. Findings – The study reveals the employment of innovative game designs and gift choices, their design rooted deep in the village populace’s context and life experiences. It shows how the consumer’s experience created through games and gifts shapes their perceptions about the brand leading to favorable consideration and purchase outcomes for it. Research limitations/implications – This work is derived primarily from practice. It is hoped that industry practitioners will benefit from this stream of research and will use games and gifts in innovative ways to engage customers and create brand experiences. Originality/value – This is one of the first works to highlight the importance of games and gifts in experiential marketing literature. It brings into focus one of the largely unexplored facets of customer engagement in rural India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
141. Nourishing social solidarity in exchanging gifts: a study on social exchange in Shanghai communities during COVID-19 lockdown.
- Author
-
Zhou, Youjia and Dong, Chen
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIAL cohesion ,SOCIAL exchange ,SOLIDARITY ,GIFT giving ,SOCIAL norms ,STAY-at-home orders - Abstract
During the COVID-19 lockdown in Shanghai, we found many social exchanges within communities. In this study, we focus on exploring the driving forces behind social exchanges and their impacts on the social solidarity of local communities. Twenty-eight residents of separate communities are interviewed, and grounded theory is applied to have the motivation for social exchanges coded and analyzed. We find that reciprocal and generalized exchanges, rather than negotiated exchanges, occur in most communities. Among these exchanges, the willingness to share is stimulated by the traditional cultural norms taking place in online social groups. Residents will be propelled to carry on exchanges through sentiments cultivated within and to develop the micro social order through interactions in the media space. Social exchanges bring social solidarity to communities and develop it into a noticeable form consisting of functional, emotional, and communal aspects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
142. A Gift to the World: The Human Person's Place in Creation According to the Thought of Ferdinand Ulrich.
- Author
-
TAYLOR, MICHAEL DOMINIC
- Subjects
- *
GIFT giving , *HUMAN beings , *GENEROSITY , *PHILOSOPHERS , *THEOLOGIANS , *POPES , *ANTHROPOLOGY - Abstract
Saint Pope John Paul II once suggested that the world is a gift to man and man is a gift to the world. This paper seeks to interpret this felicitous phrase in the light of the metaphysical anthropology of the German philosopher and theologian Ferdinand Ulrich (1931-2020). Building upon the comprehension of creatio ex nihilo as a "metaphysics of gift" and Aquinas' assertion that esse is "completum et simplex sed non subsistens" (De pot. q.1 a.1 ad.1), Ulrich, in his Homo Abyssus, describes the human person's role in creation as a "Gift-Task" (Auf-Gabe) that must be accepted and fulfilled. Man, as frontier and microcosm, is the only creature that can perform the act of reditio completa, yet what Ulrich proposes is that, through the act of naming-a spoken word uniting love and knowledge-man incorporates other creatures into his very soul, helping them achieve a fulfillment they could not otherwise achieve. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
143. Worker reciprocity and the returns to training: Evidence from a field experiment.
- Author
-
Sauermann, Jan
- Subjects
FIELD research ,RANDOM fields ,GIFT giving ,RECIPROCITY (Psychology) ,CAPITAL investments - Abstract
Do reciprocal workers have higher returns to employer‐sponsored training? Using a field experiment with random assignment to training combined with survey information on workers' reciprocal inclinations, the results show that reciprocal workers reciprocate employers' training investments by higher posttraining performance. This result, which is robust to controlling for observed personality traits and worker fixed effects, suggests that individuals reciprocate the firm's human capital investment with higher effort, in line with theoretical models on gift exchange in the workplace. This finding provides an alternative rationale to explain firm training investments even with the risk of poaching. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
144. Reflections on A Messy World, Seventeen Years Later.
- Author
-
Leat, Diana
- Subjects
GRANT writing ,GIFT giving - Abstract
This article reflects on a study conducted in 2005/6 that examined grant-making practices in Australia. The study aimed to understand the decision-making process of foundations and the information they require from applicants. The author suggests that it would be interesting to repeat the study today to see how grant-making has changed over the past seventeen years. The author highlights potential changes such as increased use of online applications, greater public scrutiny of grant makers, demands for diversity among decision-makers, and the evolving nature of grantor-grantee relationships. The article also mentions Mackenzie Scott's unique approach to grant-making and raises questions about the role of grant makers in contributing to a vibrant democracy. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
145. Publika i primjeri potrošnje digitalnih sadržaja u kulturi.
- Author
-
Brgles, Miriam Mary, Dombre, Maša, and Matić, Andriana
- Subjects
CULTURE ,THEATER tickets ,GROUNDED theory ,DIGITAL technology ,ELECTRONIC equipment ,MASS media ,AUDIENCES ,GIFT giving - Abstract
Copyright of Kroatologija is the property of University of Zagreb, Centre for Croatian Studies and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
146. The Politics of Production, Glass Provenance and Social Context on the Early Islamic Silk Roads.
- Author
-
Henderson, Julian
- Subjects
SILK Road ,SOCIAL context ,GLASS ,TANG dynasty, China, 618-907 ,POPULATION of China ,GIFT giving ,COSMOPOLITANISM - Abstract
Islamic material culture is often either discussed in terms of its typology or its technological characteristics, as defined by scientific analysis, sometimes leading to its provenance. Here these aspects will be discussed in terms of their contrasting social, political and ritual contexts along the Eurasian Silk Roads. The concept of the terrestrial and maritime "Silk Roads" as routes of interaction is considered in terms of its definitions and indeed whether it is a useful term to use. The political context in which production occurred is considered, especially during the Abbasid caliphate, when the political centre shifted from Damascus to Baghdad. This shift in the centre of power is discussed in terms of the way it affected the growth and mass production of ceramics and glass during the golden age of Islam. The use of scientific analysis to investigate glass feeds into this discussion by providing evidence for increasingly more precise provenances and for trade, recycling and for production of different decorative vessel types in specific cosmopolitan hubs and therefore specialization. Moreover, evidence for a decentralized production model for glass and ceramics is discussed. Although the emphasis here is on glass in western Asia, the paper considers Islamic ceramics and glass in eastern Asia, especially during the Tang Dynasty. The social provenance of "exotic" material culture is tied to trade, exchange and gift giving and, in turn, to the acculturation of foreign populations in China, including Arabs and Sogdians. All these activities and factors, and the use of scientific analysis feed into the social, ritual, and economic values of material culture that occurs along the Silk Roads. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
147. TRY THIS: REUSABLE GIFT WRAP.
- Subjects
WRAPPING paper ,GIFT wraps ,CHRISTMAS ,GIFT giving ,GIFTS ,EQUIPMENT & supplies - Abstract
TRY THIS: REUSABLE GIFT WRAP WHILE giving presents at Christmas is a joy, throwing away the reams of beautiful wrapping paper is enough to make you want to cry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
148. A cross-sectional study of social inequities in medical crowdfunding campaigns in the United States.
- Author
-
Kenworthy N, Dong Z, Montgomery A, Fuller E, and Berliner L
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Family, Female, Fund Raising, Healthcare Disparities, Humans, Male, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Socioeconomic Factors, United States, Crowdsourcing, Gift Giving, Healthcare Financing
- Abstract
Americans are increasingly relying on crowdfunding to pay for the costs of healthcare. In medical crowdfunding (MCF), online platforms allow individuals to appeal to social networks to request donations for health and medical needs. Users are often told that success depends on how they organize and share their campaigns to increase social network engagement. However, experts have cautioned that MCF could exacerbate health and social disparities by amplifying the choices (and biases) of the crowd and leveraging these to determine who has access to financial support for healthcare. To date, research on potential axes of disparity in MCF, and their impacts on fundraising outcomes, has been limited. To answer these questions, this paper presents an exploratory cross-sectional study of a randomized sample of 637 MCF campaigns on the popular platform GoFundMe, for which the race, gender, age, and relationships of campaigners and campaign recipients were categorized alongside campaign characteristics and outcomes. Using both descriptive and inferential statistics, the analysis examines race, gender, and age disparities in MCF use, and tests how these are associated with differential campaign outcomes. The results show systemic disparities in MCF use and outcomes: people of color (and black women in particular) are under-represented; there is significant evidence of an additional digital care labor burden on women organizers of campaigns; and marginalized race and gender groups are associated with poorer fundraising outcomes. Outcomes are only minimally associated with campaign characteristics under users' control, such as photos, videos, and updates. These results corroborate widespread concerns with how technology fuels health inequities, and how crowdfunding may be creating an unequal and biased marketplace for those seeking financial support to access healthcare. Further research and better data access are needed to explore these dynamics more deeply and inform policy for this largely unregulated industry., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
149. HAVE YOURSELF A sustainable Christmas.
- Author
-
Bramble, Amber
- Subjects
CHRISTMAS ,CHRISTMAS trees ,GIFT giving ,AUSTRALIA Day ,GIFT wrapping ,WHALE watching - Abstract
PHOTO (COLOR): Pip is continuing the legacy of her late dad Ian Kiernan, who founded Clean Up Australia. Christmas may be a joyous time of year, but all that revelry and gift-giving (not to mention food!) can lead to a lot of waste. Unfortunately, most of it is plastic - from shiny wrapping paper to fake Christmas trees, baubles and decorations, not to mention all the extra plastic packaging on our shopping!. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
150. Corruption or professional dignity: An ethical examination of the phenomenon of "red envelopes" (monetary gifts) in medical practice in China.
- Author
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Zhu, Wei, Wang, Lijie, and Yang, Chengshang
- Subjects
PHYSICIANS ,MEDICAL personnel ,HEALTH care industry ,DIGNITY ,RECIPROCITY (Commerce) ,CORRUPTION ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH care reform ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL ethics ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,PRIVACY ,RESEARCH ,GIFT giving ,EVALUATION research ,ETHICS - Abstract
In the medical practice in China, giving and taking "red envelopes" (monetary gifts) is a common phenomenon although few openly admit it. This paper, based on our empirical study including data collected from interviews and questionnaires with medical professionals and patients, attempts to explore why "red envelopes" have become a serious problem in the physician-patient relationship and how the situation can be improved. Previous studies show that scholars tend to correlate the spread of "red envelopes" in health care sector to the commercialization trend, the general erosion of traditional values, and the lowering of the moral level in the medical field. However, in this paper, the authors argue that medical professionals' choice of taking "red envelopes" is actually more a way to compensate for their problematic self-image and marred dignity in real practice. Medical professionals in China as a whole are in an embarrassing situation where the work pressure and income, and the sense of pride that used to be part of their profession are not comparable to each other. Under this circumstance, we believe that the effective way to deal with the "red envelopes" issue does not lie solely in introducing more stringent regulations or granting medical professionals higher payments, but rather in protecting and enhancing the professional dignity of all those working in healthcare. And on top of that, there must also be effort to cultivate a more favorable moral environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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