11,208 results
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2. Wounded Country: The Murray-Darling Basin: A Contested History: By Quentin Beresford. Sydney: NewSouth, 2021. Pp. 432. A$34.99 paper.By Scott Hamilton and Stuart Kells. Melbourne: Text Publishing, 2021. Pp. 336. A$34.99 paper.
- Author
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Cook, Margaret
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENT policy , *ENVY , *WATER conservation , *DUST storms - Abstract
Like Beresford, Hamilton and Kells have expertise in public policy, and their book details the evolution of Australia's contemporary water policy to the present day. While Beresford offers an overview of water trading, here Hamilton and Kells go deep. The Murray-Darling Basin (MDB) traverses the lands of forty Aboriginal nations, all four eastern Australian states and an area larger than France. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Are women less persistent? Evidence from submissions to a nationwide meeting of economics.
- Author
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Pereda, Paula, Montoya Diaz, Maria Dolores, Rocha, Fabiana, Matsunaga, Liz, Borges, Bruna Pugialli, Mena-Chalco, Jesus, Narita, Renata, and Brenck, Clara
- Subjects
UNDERGRADUATE programs ,GENDER inequality ,YOUNG women ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CONFERENCE papers - Abstract
Female under-representation in high-profile career positions has relevant impacts on firms' outcomes, research topics, and public policies. In the academic profession, women's participation decreases as they evolve in their careers. To understand the lack of women in economics in Brazilian academia, we investigate the decision to submit papers to the largest conference in the country (Brazilian Meeting of Economics, or ANPEC Meetings), an important achievement in the profession. We explore a novel panel dataset of researchers and match them with web-scraped data of their résumés to test gender differences in the probability of submitting an article one year after having a paper (same or new) rejected in the previous year. Our findings suggest that women desist 2.9% points more than men when facing rejection. We also find evidence that younger women give up more and that the quality of the undergraduate program relates to the gender gap in the likelihood of desisting. Finally, we argue that more competitive women may self-select into higher-quality institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The differentiated duty of care: a response to the Online Harms White Paper.
- Author
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Tambini, Damian
- Subjects
- *
USER-generated content , *SOCIAL media , *GOVERNMENT policy , *DUTY , *TELECOMMUNICATION , *COMMUNICATION policy , *FREEDOM of speech - Abstract
A consensus has formed that the negative social externalities of online harms combined with huge market power of internet intermediaries justify regulation of online service providers.[1] Fake news, foreign interference in democracy and a business model based on exploitation of engagement via behavioural data have consolidated a political will for new policies, and the government's White Paper proposes a new social media regulator with the power to fine companies that fail to reduce exposure to harmful content. The White Paper proposes, rather than defining a size threshold triggering regulation, to locate discretion with the regulator to decide where to place regulatory emphasis: the regulator will have to decide on the basis of evidence, what the harm reduction priorities are at any one time. So both illegal and harmful content should be part of the regulator's remit, but the regulator should avoid muddying the distinction between them. In effect, each company would be responsible to observe a general regulator-derived code for dealing with speech that clearly meets a standard of illegality, and a company-specific or sector-wide voluntary code that reflects the terms of service of the company. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
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5. Parent Infant Psychotherapy for Sleep Problems: Through the Night: by Dilys Daws with Sarah Sutton, London: Routledge, 2020, 2124 pp., RRP £19.99 paper back and eBook, ISBN 978-03-67187-82-8.
- Author
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de Rementeria, Alexandra
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PARENT-infant relationships ,CHILD psychotherapy ,ELECTRONIC books ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SLEEP - Abstract
(Daws, [3]) Daws is clear that the work of receiving and containing a family's distress cannot be done in a routine way. Parent Infant Psychotherapy for Sleep Problems: Through the Night: by Dilys Daws with Sarah Sutton, London: Routledge, 2020, 2124 pp., RRP £19.99 paper back and eBook, ISBN 978-03-67187-82-8 With Sarah Sutton's expert knowledge, Dilys Daws has condensed and updated her classic "Through the Night", written in [2]. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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6. From Rags to Riches.
- Author
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Kittler, Juraj
- Subjects
PAPERMAKING ,VENICE (Italy) politics & government, 1508-1797 ,INCUNABULA ,HISTORY of the book, 1450-1600 ,RENAISSANCE ,PAPER industry ,CAPITAL ,REPUBLIC of Venice, 697-1797 ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HISTORY - Abstract
In the first four or five centuries of its manufacturing in Europe, paper was neither cheap nor available in unlimited quantities. Old rags, the primary material from which the paper was exclusively made, were a strategic commodity and trade with them was strictly regulated. Owing to their perpetual scarcity, as well as to the overall laboriousness of the papermaking process, a skilled master printer of the Incunabula period was hardly able to purchase a ream or two of high-quality paper for his monthly earnings. Consequently, the earliest printers had to rely on the support of ‘venture capitalists’ in order to secure steady supplies of paper. But the limitations of its manufacturing were not resolved by the end of the Incunabula period. Alas, the shortage and high cost of paper accompanied the development of print in Italy and elsewhere practically up until the advent of its industrial production from wooden pulp in the nineteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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7. Paper Soldiers: the life, death and reincarnation of nineteenth-century military files across the British Empire.
- Author
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Macdonald, Charlotte and Lenihan, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
CONFIDENTIAL records , *PRESERVATION of archival materials , *RECORDS -- Law & legislation , *ARCHIVES collection management , *GOVERNMENT policy ,BRITISH military history - Abstract
From the moment a man took ‘the king’s shilling’ and was sworn to serve as a soldier in the nineteenth-century British Army, his life proceeded as a file as well as a fighting man. Disorder and desertion drove the utilitarian purposes of discipline and tracking, while constant pressure to account for expenditure in lives and money added further impetus to the copious industry of military record-keeping. Individuals were enumerated, named, appraised and allocated pay. Such archives produce a disorderly silence where men are present but without voice. Carefully archived and always public, military files have a continuing currency through the post-army lives of soldiers into the twenty-first century for descendants and historians. Tracking the life of ‘files’ over time, the paper reflects on the shifting forms of knowledge produced. In particular, it notes the tensions between the densely written form of the files in a population of rank and file soldiers who were partially literate; the highly detailed individuation of the files within a heavily conformist institution, and the modernity of post-1850s record-keeping in an institution bound by tradition. It ends with a reflection on the limitations and opportunities presented by digital access to this substantial archive of imperial-colonial conflict. Abbreviations: AJCP: Australian Joint Copying Project TNA: The National Archives, London WO: War Office [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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8. The solutions are already here: tactics for ecological revolution from below: by Peter Gelderloos, London, Pluto Press, 2022, 204 pp. + Endnotes and Index, £16.99 (Paper Back), ISBN 9780745345116.
- Author
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Dunlap, Alexander
- Subjects
ANARCHISM ,POLITICAL participation ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
'Governments are machines designed to allow the upper classes to exert pressure on the rest of society', explains Gelderloos. The solutions are already here: tactics for ecological revolution from below: by Peter Gelderloos, London, Pluto Press, 2022, 204 pp. This book thus has four important threads: (anti-authoritarian) anti-colonial struggle, the limitations of Western Science, the pacifying role of NGOs and the importance of imagining revolutionary socio-ecological horizons through active struggle. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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9. Revise and resubmit? Reviewing the 2019 Online Harms White Paper.
- Author
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Nash, Victoria
- Subjects
- *
CYBERBULLYING , *INTERNET forums , *CLINICAL psychology , *GOVERNMENT policy , *ONLINE social networks , *CHILD psychology , *LEGAL liability - Abstract
Given the range and extent of problematic content and behaviour described in the OHWP, government concern and scrutiny is certainly merited. If we set aside the focus on harms or illegal content, the OHWP could instead be read as a manifesto for government-led platform governance. If viewed from a platform governance perspective, the most significant failing of the duty of care approach is that (at least as currently framed) it doesn't tackle the unique regulatory challenges posed by problematic behaviour and content on platforms. The proposed "duty of care" may in practice require procedural accountability on the part of platforms, but by choosing to target rhetorical simplicity over principles for good governance, it fails to provide a broad-ranging normative framework for platform governance that could truly set an international standard. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
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10. Australia’s oceans strategy and the 2017 Foreign Affairs White Paper.
- Author
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Bergin, Anthony
- Subjects
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OCEAN , *FOREIGN ministers (Cabinet officers) , *GOVERNMENT policy ,AUSTRALIAN foreign relations ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government - Published
- 2017
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11. Editorial announcement - 'Best paper prize' 2020.
- Author
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Richardson, Jeremy and Rittberger, Berthold
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PRIZES (Contests & competitions) ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,JURORS ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ANNOUNCEMENTS - Abstract
We asked two members of the Editorial Board, Erik Jones and Martin Lodge, to act as jury and select what they considered to be the best article published in JEPP in 2020 (excluding those published as part of a "Special Issue"). The winner of 2020 JEPP Best Paper Prize is: Burns, Charlotte, Eckersley, Peter & Tobin, Paul (2020). Jury statement I " i We were very impressed by the articles that we read, but we had a shared enthusiasm for the originality of the paper by Charlotte Burns, Peter Eckersley and Paul Tobin. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
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12. The White Paper on Opioids and Pain: A Pan-European Challenge: The European White Paper on the Use of Opioids in Chronic Pain Management.
- Subjects
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OPIOIDS , *PAIN , *GOVERNMENT policy , *PATIENTS - Abstract
This document was developed by a group of over two dozen pain clinicians and investigators from Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany Ireland, Israel, Italy, The Netherlands, Norway. Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom and funded by an educational grant form Mundipharma International, Limited. The stated aim of the White Paper is to identify inequalities in government policies towards opioids that contribute to inadequate treatment of pain. It calls for their replacement with policies that will support doctors and patients in their efforts to relieve pain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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13. The “Digital Revolution” Reconsidered – NPS Christian Bay Best Paper Award APSA 2015, San Francisco, CA.
- Author
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Kirsch, Robert
- Subjects
- *
DIGITAL communications , *FRANKFURT school of sociology , *EVOLUTIONARY theories , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This article responds to the 2014 American Political Science Association Annual Conference’s theme of “Politics After the Digital Revolution.” It first gives a brief assessment of how the discipline of political science has reacted to the digital revolution. It then seeks to couch the putative revolution in Thorstein Veblen’s theory of a “machine process” in order to recast it less as a discrete phenomenon to be dealt with by the discipline, but instead as part of an evolutionary process of social change that instils habits of mind of those who are subject to it, and who in turn, influence the machine process itself in a co-determinant manner. This article offers the synthesis of Veblen and the Frankfurt School to theorize how the digital revolution might be critically assessed in its evolutionary framework, and speaks towards an evolutionary critical theory for analysing political society beyond discrete events. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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14. The Triple Day Thesis Versus Neoclassical Models of Labour Supply: Alternative Perspectives and Policies.
- Author
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Freiberg, Tracey, Frederick Gibson, Deon, and Tontoh, Elaine Agyemang
- Subjects
LABOR supply ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIAL mobility ,SOCIAL forces ,SOCIAL participation ,COMPOSITION of breast milk - Abstract
In this theoretical paper, we respond to the Triple Day Thesis (TDT) by positioning it within the context of the neoclassical labour supply literature and existing public policy. The TDT applies a theoretical lens to the practical experiences of mothers as they distribute time between self-reproductive, reproductive, and waged work. Self-reproductive work refers to self-care, self-investment, and self-realizable activities, including time for good sleep, schooling, and intellectual and social engagements that promote mothers' human development and well-being. The TDT identifies the Triple Day Problem (TDP) as the lack of freedom or inability of mothers to engage in self-reproductive work as they balance the increasing demands of reproductive work with waged work and proposes Motherhood Compensation as a social policy solution. In this paper, we demonstrate that the existence of the TDP can be used to explain persistent gender differences in labour force participation. We envision the TDT as a novel theoretical approach to promoting mothers' labour force participation and social mobility through self-reproductive work. We suggest that Motherhood Compensation can be created from a mix of already existing family programs, including paid leave, parental allowance, and cash transfer programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Review: A New Deal for Transport--Analysis of the Transport White Paper (Cm 3950).
- Author
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Hibbs, John
- Subjects
PAPER ,AUTOMOBILES ,TRANSPORTATION ,GOVERNMENT policy ,COMMERCIAL vehicles ,PUBLIC transit ,RAILROADS - Abstract
The article presents comments of the author on the transport White Paper. The British Deputy Prime Minister's proposals, as revealed in the July 1998 White Paper, fall far short of the rhetoric one recalls from the 1997 general election campaign, or even of the promises that followed it. The railways are not to be renationalized; the buses are not to be re-regulated and area-wide local authority franchising is not even mentioned. All the same, the politicians' urge to meddle runs throughout the document and the liberty of entrepreneurs to seek out and satisfy demand is still to be overseen by those whom scholar Deepak Lal calls the Platonic guardians. The search for a definitive meaning of the word integration is abandoned in favor of a list of four possible interpretations. There is to be a new Commission for Integrated Transport and there are to be local transport plans will be the key to the delivery of integrated transport locally. So the Commission and the local authorities will have to work out the meaning of the word for themselves. The White Paper is being followed by a collection of daughter papers which might, just possibly, throw more light on the question. A policy based upon an indeterminate concept such as this can hardly be expected to make things better for everyone.
- Published
- 1999
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16. Immigrants and the paper market: borrowing, renting and buying identities.
- Author
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Vasta, Ellie
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *FORGED identification cards , *POWER (Social sciences) , *GOVERNMENT policy , *UNDOCUMENTED immigrants , *IDENTITY (Psychology) ,EUROPEAN emigration & immigration - Abstract
The focus of this paper is on how the state sets up discriminatory structures, how immigrants work out ways of managing those structures and how in this process they construct flexible and innovative identities. Two main issues are explored. The first is the relationship between state control and exclusion and immigrant resistance. The paper shows how, despite increased surveillance and digital nets mounted by European states to keep immigrants out of their territory, the British state is ambivalent towards irregular immigrants. At the same time, it is in the interstices of ambiguity that immigrants, by buying, renting and borrowing documents, have found ways through their networks and communities to resist or get around exclusionary and contradictory regulations. Second, the paper is concerned with the construction of innovative and flexible identities. The research reveals how immigrants occupy rebellious spaces and construct identities in difficult situations at the intersection of self and structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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17. Gender and the Nuclear Weapons State: A Feminist Critique of the UK Government's White Paper on Trident.
- Author
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Duncanson, Claire and Eschle, Catherine
- Subjects
- *
NUCLEAR weapons , *GENDER role in communication , *FEMINIST criticism , *MILITARY policy , *TRIDENT (Weapons systems) , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This article enquires into the connections between gender and discourses of the nuclear weapons state. Specifically, we develop an analysis of the ways in which gender operates in the White Paper published by the UK government in 2006 on its plans to renew Trident nuclear weapons (given the go-ahead by the Westminster Parliament in March 2007). We argue that the White Paper mobilizes masculine-coded language and symbols in several ways: firstly, in its mobilization of techno-strategic rationality and axioms; secondly, in its assumptions about security; and, thirdly, in its assumptions about the state as actor. Taken together, these function to construct a masculinized identity for the British nuclear state as a “responsible steward.” However, this identity is one that is not yet securely fixed and that, indeed, contains serious internal tensions that opponents of Trident (and of the nuclear state more generally) should be able to exploit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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18. Commentary: Public Parks after the Urban White Paper.
- Author
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Jenkins, Jennifer
- Subjects
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PARK policy , *PUBLIC spaces , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Comments on the political importance of public parts in light of the British government's White Paper program. Problems in achieving ideals for parks and open spaces; Impact of the neglect of public open spaces; Sources of funding for the development of public open spaces according to the White Paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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19. Review of 'Selected Papers of William L. White' Website.
- Author
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Cicchetti, Andrew and Johnson, DavidH.
- Subjects
- *
AUTHORS , *CONVALESCENCE , *INTERNET , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *INFORMATION resources , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *GOVERNMENT policy , *TREATMENT programs - Abstract
The article reviews the web site Selected Papers of William L. White, located at www.williamwhitepapers.com, from William L. White, senior research consultant, Chestnut Health Systems/Lighthouse Institute.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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20. The Trade (Policy) Discourse in Top Economics Journals.
- Author
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Aistleitner, Matthias and Puehringer, Stephan
- Subjects
TRADE regulation ,ECONOMIC policy ,COMMERCIAL policy ,SOCIAL sciences education ,DISCOURSE ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
In the aftermath of recent populist upheavals in Europe, nationalist economic policies challenge the overly positive view on economic integration and the reduction of trade barriers established by standard economic theory. For quite a long time the great majority of economists supported trade liberalisation policies, at least those actively engaged in policy advice or public debates. In this paper, we examine the elite economics discourse on trade policies during the last 20 years regarding specific characteristics of authors, affiliations, citation patterns, the overall attitude towards trade, as well as the methodological approach applied in these papers. Our analysis yields the following results: First, the hierarchical structure of economics also manifests in the debate about trade. Second, while we found some indications of a shift towards more empirically oriented work, quite often empirical data is solely used to calibrate models rather than to challenge potentially biased theoretical assumptions. Third, top economic discourses on trade are predominantly characterised by a normative bias in favour of trade-liberalisation-policies. Forth, we found that other-than-economic impacts and implications of trade policies (political, social and cultural as well as environmental issues) to a great extent either remain unmentioned or are rationalised by means of pure economic criteria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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21. The emergence of European boundary-spanning policy regimes: analysing intersectoral policy coordination in education and employment.
- Author
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Graf, Lukas, Marques, Marcelo, Sorensen, Tore Bernt, and Dumay, Xavier
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,EMPLOYMENT & education ,TRAINING ,SUPRANATIONALISM ,HIGHER education ,ADULTS - Abstract
While much attention has been paid to European policy arrangements in individual policy fields, European intersectoral policy coordination has been mostly an overlooked phenomenon, especially within the sectors of education and employment. Thus, in the introductory paper for this Special Issue, we offer a contemporary discussion of European intersectoral policy coordination. We firstly review the literature on intersectoral policy coordination, and secondly look at the application of concepts related to intersectoral policy coordination to supranational arrangements, especially the European Union. We then employ the concept of boundary-spanning policy regime and the related 'I' framework (issues, ideas, interests, and institutions) to discuss the individual pieces' contributions. This serves to explore the strength of the intersectoral perspective when analysing European policy coordination in education and employment. We conclude with a discussion of the strengths and limitations of this approach and offer a research agenda to study supranational intersectoral policy coordination (in education and employment). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Effects on cement after partial replacement with burned joss paper ash.
- Author
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Lin, D. F., Huang, L. S., Luo, H. L., and Weng, R. S.
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,CONSTRUCTION materials ,CARBON dioxide mitigation ,CARBON dioxide ,SPIRIT money ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
In the last ten years, as international environmental protection consciousness has increased, the study and applications of green building, green construction materials and energy savings as well as reduction of carbon dioxide have become urgent issues for governments. In Taiwan, joss papers are burned in more than 11,731 registered shrines or temples in traditional Chinese deity or ancestor worship ceremonies during special holidays or occasions. Instead of placing this large amount of burned joss paper ash (BJPA) in landfills, this study proposes recycling BJPA by replacing some cement with calcined BJPA (CBJPA) in mortar specimens. After BJPA samples were calcined at a high kiln temperature, mortar samples were created using CBJPA to replace cement at seven different levels: 0%, 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25% and 30%. Tests like setting time and compressive strength were performed for macro-analyses; scanning electron microscopy–energy dispersive spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction and thermal gravimetric analysis/differential thermal analysis were carried out for the microstructure and chemical composition analyses. The test results showed that the compressive strengths of specimens with different levels of CBJPA replacement were apparently less than those of the control group (0% CBJPA) at all curing times. The compressive strength and setting time both decreased as the fraction of CBJPA in the mortar increased. Furthermore, because the hydration product did not cement and the mortar specimen structure was loose, the expected strength improvement from the pozzolanic reaction provided by the CBJPA was not clearly observed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
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23. Developing entrepreneurial ecosystem: a case of unicorns in China and its innovation policy implications.
- Author
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Poon, Teresa Shuk-Ching, Wu, Chia-Hsuan, and Liu, Meng-Chun
- Subjects
UNICORNS ,ECONOMIC expansion ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The concept of the entrepreneurial ecosystem (EE) has become increasingly popular among policymakers because of its potential to drive economic growth. In many countries, the promotion of EE has been linked with innovation policy but little research has been done to examine whether such policy can facilitate EE's development. Using the case study method to examine the growth of China's unicorns, which are productive entrepreneurial outputs of EE, this paper investigates the process of EE's emergence and development, and the role of government policies, including innovation policy, in promoting EE's growth. The paper advances three policy implications derived from the case study; first, the important role of government policies in creating institutional contexts; second, developing informal institutions, and third, implementing a systemic intervention, to promote EE's emergence and development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The White Paper and the rural poor.
- Author
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Fast, Hildegarde
- Subjects
- *
RURAL poor , *LOCAL government , *POVERTY , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Evaluates proposals made in the White Paper on Local Government to address rural poverty in South Africa. Proposed institutional systems; Identification of the needs of the poor; Responsibility of traditional leadership; Promotion of the meaningful participation of women in public life.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Response to paper by Birgitte Andersen on the Digital Economy Act.
- Author
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Heaney, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
COMPUTER file sharing , *INTERNET security , *INFORMATION sharing , *ECONOMIC crime , *COMPUTER crime prevention laws , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Andrew Heaney has been executive director of strategy and regulation with TalkTalk since 2007. He was previously a competition policy director with Ofcom and a partner with Spectrum Strategy Consultants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Critical Social Analysis, Service Learning, and Urban Affairs: A Course Application in Public Policy and Administration* * This paper is in part derived from "The Role of Critical Social Analysis in Public Policy and Administration: A Service Learning Course Application in Race, Inequality, and Public Policy," Contemporary Justice Review 5:4 (2002), pp. 351-369, by Edward J. Martin.
- Author
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Martin, Edward J.
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC administration , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SOCIAL policy , *GOVERNMENT productivity - Abstract
This article discusses a course application in urban affairs within a masters program in public administration. The course application utilizes service learning and critical social analysis methods as instructional tools. The article identifies the historical evolution of social analysis, starting in the Enlightenment and finally reaching its current manifestation in critical theory. The development of critical social analysis methodology, otherwise known as "critical consciousness," is then analyzed in the applications of social critics and educators Paulo Freire and Ivan Illich. Based on this form of social criticism, four vignettes are evaluated based on an intensive seminar course in urban affairs. The subsequent techniques are then adapted within a service learning component in the course. The article details examples of focus questions and journal exercises deemed useful in aiding students, administrators and practitioners in critically assessing the study of urban affairs. The potential implications for this pedagogical model can assist educators, students, and administrators to more clearly analyze and assess urban policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Bitcoin research across disciplines.
- Author
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Holub, Mark and Johnson, Jackie
- Subjects
BITCOIN ,CRYPTOCURRENCIES ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ECONOMIC databases ,PUBLIC finance - Abstract
Over the last few years, research on Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies has snowballed across many disciplines: technical fields, economics, law, public policy, finance, accounting, and others. As the uses of blockchain technology behind Bitcoin expand, more disciplines will be drawn to its study and the research will greatly expand. This paper provides an assessment of the current state of the literature. From a comprehensive search of the literature that resulted in an original sample of 13,507 results, a final sample of 1,206 papers on Bitcoin are categorised and mapped across six disciplines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Digital Trans-Pacific Silk Road and Phases of China-Latin American Connectivity: From Silver to AI.
- Author
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Fung, K. C., Lin, Yue, and Xia, Le
- Subjects
COMMERCIAL policy ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,MANUFACTURED products ,MINES & mineral resources ,ECONOMIC models ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
In this paper, we aim to document and analyze the long arc of connectivity between China and Latin America. First, using analytical international trade and economic tools, we provide a new economic perspective of the First Globalization–-the Ming and early Qing China's economic and business links with Latin America and Europe. Second, due to U.S. government trade policies toward China in the 1990s, the Second China's Globalization was ushered in with its entry to the World Trade Organization (WTO). During this second phase, China exchanged manufactured goods with minerals and resources from Latin America. Finally, the tough technology and trade stance by the Trump and Biden Administrations prompted China to intensify the third phase of China interaction with Latin America. For the 2020s and beyond, one important pillar of the Third China-Latin America-Europe Globalization is heightened efforts for China to increase its digital-AI, telecommunication and platform business presence and access into the Latin American markets. To enrich our analysis, we will provide Chinese-style digital-AI business and economic models to help illustrate our discussions. Throughout our paper, we want to point out that government policies were instrumental in bringing forth these Three Globalizations that involve China-Latin America-Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Inclusive child welfare services, disabled children, and their families: insights from a European comparison of social policy and social (work) practice in Austria, Iceland, and Ireland.
- Author
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More, Rahel
- Subjects
CHILD welfare ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CHILDREN with disabilities ,SOCIAL services ,CULTURE ,FAMILIES ,HUMAN rights ,SOCIAL support ,SOCIAL classes - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Social Work is the property of Routledge 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
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Lost memory: The paper drives of World War II.
- Author
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Smith, Bruce
- Subjects
- *
WORLD War II , *WASTE products , *ARCHIVAL resources , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Examines the wholesale destruction of priceless and irreplaceable historical records in Australia during World War II. Impact of Australia's involvement in the war on the policy on waste materials; Features of the plan for the salvage of waste materials; Results of salvage collection in the country; Four types of salvage activities; Historical records destroyed during the campaign.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The process of implementing a multi-level and multi-sectoral national sport policy: cautionary lessons from the inside.
- Author
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Parent, Milena M. and Jurbala, Paul R.
- Subjects
SOFT law ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CONCEPT mapping ,SUCCESS ,TARGETS (Sports) ,FORMATIVE evaluation ,EDUCATIONAL accountability ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
The purpose of this paper was to (1) present and critically reflect upon a national sport policy's implementation and monitoring process in a multi-level, multi-sectoral context from an insider's perspective and (2) provide recommendations for future research and policymakers regarding sport policy implementation and monitoring. Based on hundreds of documents (e.g. formal and personal meeting notes, formative and summative evaluation reports) gathered over the policy's lifespan, the paper critically reflects on the second Canadian Sport Policy's (CSP) implementation process between 2012 and 2022, which comprised grassroots, high performance, and sport for development goals, using the multiple governance framework. The reflection highlights key challenges for implementing a soft (national sport) policy in a complex, multi-level, multi-sectoral governance context, such as the normative soft policy seeing a 'policy for all' becoming a 'policy for no one', no stakeholder accountability per se, nor power for the policy intermediary to enforce implementation. This resulted in the CSP 2012's ceremonial attribution of success because any action could be seen as fitting within policy goals. The paper highlights the importance of (1) aligning policy development, implementation, and evaluation between macro and micro levels; (2) a more holistic policy implementation process analysis using in situ methods; (3) understanding the personal experiences, struggles, and tensions found within policy implementation to explain potential outcomes; (4) policy ambiguity and equifinality limiting policy implementation evaluation; (5) resources/dedicated funding as a policy implementation success driver; and (6) potential tools (e.g. use of outside experts, conceptual maps) for soft policy implementers/monitors and researchers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Commentary on the criterion problem in the US Department of Defense: Policy and operational considerations.
- Author
-
Velgach, Sofiya and Arabian, Jane M.
- Subjects
RESEARCH evaluation ,MILITARY medicine ,EMPLOYEE selection ,DECISION making ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MANAGEMENT ,POLICY sciences ,JOB performance ,MILITARY personnel - Abstract
Criterion measures are foundational to an effective selection and classification process and valid enlistment aptitude standards. The Department of Defense, when possible, considers eligibility standards based on empirical evidence of the relationship between recruit attributes and applicable performance to be best practice. Ensuring use and incorporation of appropriate criteria is critical to this process. However, this process is often complex and costly. Numerous policy related issues must be considered. This paper provides commentary on each of the technical papers included in this issue from a policy and operational perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. New development: Managing and accounting for sustainable development across generations in public services—and call for papers.
- Author
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Grubnic, Suzana, Thomson, Ian, and Georgakopoulos, Georgios
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,SUSTAINABILITY ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,PUBLIC administration ,TRANSPARENCY in government ,BRITISH politics & government ,TWENTY-first century ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Social and environmental justice across generations is a fundamental attribute of sustainable development. In this article, which is also a call for papers for a future theme in Public Money & Management (PMM), we develop our case for further research on how governments and public service organizations seek to address sustainable development in their decision-making processes. We believe that accounting for social and environmental aspects is an underdeveloped area of research and practice that is worthy of further critical enquiry. We therefore call on researchers and practitioners to submit their research to a themed issue of PMM on managing and accounting for sustainable development in public services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Museums' digital identity: key components.
- Author
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Povroznik, Nadezhda
- Subjects
VIRTUAL museums ,DIGITAL transformation ,ELECTRONIC records ,GRAND strategy (Political science) ,DIGITAL technology ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Museums have widely used digital technologies to expand their societal and cultural impact. In terms of their use of information technologies (IT), museums have evolved from initial experiments in the 1950s to a significant online presence today. In the process of digital transformation, museums have shaped their digital identity, aiming to expand their activities beyond museum walls with emerging new roles in the digital era. The concept of museums' digital identity is the focus of this paper. To articulate the concept, the theory of digital identity, the methodology of web history, the concept of virtual museums, and museum branding, are brought into consideration. The author articulates the concept of museums' digital identity and outlines a number of components at the collective and individual levels embodied in national strategies and policy documents relating to digital transformation, articulated in statements by museum associations, revealed in features of their online presence, and embedded in brand design. In the conclusion, the author raises questions about the driving force of museums in developing digital identity and the need to comprehensively analyse the multiplatform museum presence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Blood donation as a public service: Young citizens' prosocial behaviour.
- Author
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Robaina-Calderín, Lorena, Melián-Alzola, Lucía, and Martín-Santana, Josefa D.
- Subjects
PROSOCIAL behavior ,CITIZENS ,MUNICIPAL services ,GOVERNMENT policy ,GENERATION Z ,CITIZEN satisfaction - Abstract
Young citizens play a key role in providing a continuous blood supply for public health system. This paper examines the prosocial behavior of young non-blood donors and analyses motivations, barriers, anticipated emotions (AEs), and intention to donate of a sample of 1,626 Spanish non-donors belonging to Generation Z and millennials. Among the main conclusions, motivations and barriers are antecedents of the AEs. Particularly, motivations (external and internal) positively influence AEs that enhance blood donation and deter AEs of not donating. Barriers (external and/or external) positively influence AEs that deter blood donation and deter AEs that enhance blood donation. Findings also demonstrate the influence of AEs in predicting intention to donate, and thus in prosocial behavior. As different clusters of young non-donors coexist according to their motivations and barriers, the paper identifies the cluster that would reduce free-riders. Public policy may change citizens' behavior by changing AEs that deter blood donation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Mapping Arabic human rights discourse: a thematic review.
- Author
-
Almahfali, Mohammed, LeVine, Mark, and Muthanna, Abdulghani
- Subjects
ARABIC literature ,HUMAN rights ,AUTHORITARIAN personality ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DISCOURSE - Abstract
The Arab world faces serious challenges in the protection of human rights. Merely criticising government policies towards human rights has long meant risking one's freedom, if not life. Yet despite the myriad threats, there is a long and powerful history of efforts to address human rights from multiple perspectives that has largely been ignored outside the region (and even by many human rights scholars and practitioners within it), in good measure because most of it occurs in Arabic, which most international human rights scholars do not read. This paper critically reviews Arab human rights publications written in Arabic as a first attempt towards elucidating the diversity and depth of human rights literature in the Arab world for the broader field of human rights studies. Bringing this knowledge to the international human rights community is crucial to helping develop a human rights discourse in and for the Arab world that can positively impact research, advocacy and governance despite the broad environment of authoritarian retrenchment across the region. In so doing, our research offers new knowledge for developing human rights studies in trajectories that can have more direct impact on human rights struggles on the ground globally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Introduction.
- Author
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Hodgkinson, Robert
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,ECONOMIC impact ,GOVERNMENT policy ,INDUSTRIAL management - Abstract
But replacing market processes (supported by relevant and reliable accounting information) with government allocation processes risks resource misallocation and dampens innovation and ultimately economic growth. The COVID-19 pandemic wrought profound changes in product and service markets which require a process of "creative destruction" that might be hindered by lack of a proper exit strategy from government interventions. They document firms' adjustments of their management controls in response to the COVID-19 crisis resulting in stronger action controls, more flexible result controls and weaker cultural controls. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. ‘Maritime Development and Economic Growth’, with selected papers from IAME 2012, IFSPA 2013 and the 2013 Conference on Challenge and Response of Ports in a Globalized Economy.
- Author
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Ng, Adolf K.Y., Lee, Paul T.W., Fu, Xiaowen, and Sutiwartnarueput, Kamonchanok
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,GLOBALIZATION ,INDUSTRIAL management ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HILBERT-Huang transform ,COMPARATIVE studies - Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Political failure: a missing piece in innovation policy analysis.
- Author
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Kärnä, Anders, Karlsson, Johan, Engberg, Erik, and Svensson, Peter
- Subjects
POLICY analysis ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Within the field of innovation studies, researchers have identified systematic failures that hamper investment in R&D, innovation, and growth. Accordingly, researchers in this field often seek to provide policy recommendations on how to alleviate these failures. However, previous discussions have often been lacking considerations to the risks of political failures, meaning that policies fail to achieve their stated goals in a systematic manner. In response to this gap, this article aims to illustrate the concept of political failure and its relevance for innovation research. This is done by both discussing how political failure can impact innovation policy and by reviewing the prevalence of any discussions of political failure among top-ranked journals on innovation for the period 2010–2019, a total of 7161 articles. The results show that consideration of political failure is scarce, with a small number of papers that have a substantial analysis of political failures. If the awareness of political failures could be increased, this could lead to better policy recommendations with a more nuanced discussion of the risks and limitations of public policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Rural Society, Democratic Exclusion, and the Cultural Divide: Moving Towards a Research Agenda of the Study of Ruralness.
- Author
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Gabehart, Kayla M.
- Subjects
PUBLIC spaces ,RURAL Americans ,CITIES & towns ,PUBLIC administration ,RURAL sociology ,EVIDENCE gaps ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper contends that rural communities in the United States and Europe broadly have been mainly studied as a dichotomy to their urban counterparts. The focus on cities and urban centers and an inculcation of myths and assumptions regarding ruralness have led to knowledge gaps, misperceptions, and missed opportunities in public administration and policy studies. This paper interrogates misconceptions about ruralness and refutes them. It identifies a gap in research agendas, knowledge, and scholarship about ruralness; explores issues with the design of policies and, therefore, policy implications concerning rural communities; and describes how the misconceptions, the lack of scholarly knowledge, and policy implications coalesce to drive a feeling of marginalization and exclusion in rural communities, fuelling a "culture war" dynamic. The conclusion offers potential directions for establishing a research agenda that prioritizes studying rural society as a subgroup with unique needs and belief systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Every paper matters: a comparative analysis of two policies surrounding the development of children and young people.
- Author
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Allan, David
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT publications ,CHILD welfare ,SOCIAL policy ,UNDEREMPLOYMENT ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
The purpose of this article is to examine two policies in an attempt to measure their impact and ascertain any potential trajectory from government-level agenda to borough-level contextualisation. Inspired by content analysis, but also taking into account the implementation of the documents, this study draws upon the Every Child Matters green paper (2003) as a government initiative and seeks to establish the progression route taken by one particular borough (Knowsley). Knowsley, a borough with high unemployment figures for school leavers, aims to address its problematic areas through policy implementation and strongly acknowledges the significance of Every Child Matters. The two policies looked at here are the government green paper Every Child Matters (2003) and Knowsley's Children and Young People's Strategic Plan 2007-2010 (2007). Both policies concern themselves with progression routes for young people and problematic areas are identified at an early age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. 'You need to change how you consume': ethical influencers, their audiences and their linking strategies.
- Author
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Aboelenien, Aya, Baudet, Alex, and Chow, Ai Ming
- Subjects
INFLUENCER marketing ,MARKETING literature ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Our paper advances a subcategory of influencers who mobilise their audiences towards consumption-driven change; we label them 'ethical influencers'. Using netnography and an archival dataset on ten ethical influencers, we delineate their unique challenges and positioning. Ethical influencers legitimate their accounts via a close-up of personal practices, as opposed to an articulated persona, and connect with divergent audiences to advocate for the needed change. Our paper describes the divergent audience groups and engagement styles: allies, inquisitives, detractors, and enigmatics. We also identify the ethical influencers' linking strategies to connect these audiences with other market actors (e.g. ethical businesses and other ethical influencers) which include acting, humanising, framing, pivoting, and evangelising. This research advances influencer marketing literature and offers important managerial and public policy implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Policy values related to support for care leavers with disabilities.
- Author
-
Bennwik, Ingri-Hanne Braenne and Oterholm, Inger
- Subjects
PATIENT aftercare ,TRANSITION to adulthood ,SOCIAL support ,PATIENT participation ,LIBERTY ,SOCIAL justice ,MEDICAL care ,PSYCHOLOGY of People with disabilities ,QUALITATIVE research ,DOCUMENTATION ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CHILD welfare ,MEDICAL care for people with disabilities ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,CONTENT analysis ,NEEDS assessment ,THEMATIC analysis ,HOUSING ,ENDOWMENTS ,FOSTER home care ,CITIZENSHIP - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Social Work is the property of Routledge 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
44. Editorial: embracing the ambiguity.
- Author
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Devlieghere, Jochen and Roose, Rudi
- Subjects
PROFESSIONAL practice ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLISHING ,SOCIAL support ,SERIAL publications ,CULTURAL pluralism ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIAL work education ,SOCIAL services - Abstract
An editorial is presented on maintaining the highest profile for European social work policy, practice, and education. Topics include popular special issues of the European Journal of Social Work being the issue on neoliberalism in social work; and important in the pursuit of social justice, human rights, collective responsibility, and respect for diversities.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Teaching public policy analysis: Lessons from the field.
- Author
-
Durrance, Christine Piette
- Subjects
POLICY analysis ,GOVERNMENT policy ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,MARKET failure ,ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
Understanding how to make the world a better place requires interdisciplinary knowledge. Public policy analysis helps policymakers arrive at informed policy decisions. The policy analysis process involves public problem definition and data collection, stakeholder identification, a rationale for government involvement, evaluation criteria, identification and analysis of policy alternatives, and a recommendation. Economics informs not only the identification of market failures but also how we think about public problems, evaluate relevant research, identify policy alternatives, weigh objective criteria (costs, benefits, equity), and select optimal solutions. Students of policy analysis gain experience through in-class examples of contemporary topics and an iterative policy paper, where each student selects a public problem, conducts research, and writes an analysis. Students become effective consumers and beginning producers of policy analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Revisiting the Macroeconomic Impact of Benefits Generosity.
- Author
-
Raza, Hamid, Byrialsen, Mikael Randrup, and Stamhus, Jørgen
- Subjects
UNEMPLOYMENT insurance ,GOVERNMENT policy ,UNEMPLOYMENT statistics ,ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
This paper is an attempt to empirically investigate the macroeconomic effects of public policy on unemployment benefits. We address this issue by asking a simple question: How does public policy relating to unemployment benefits affect economic growth, productivity, and unemployment rate? We employ a dynamic panel VAR and perform a number of estimations, using data for several OECD countries. Overall, our results suggest that increases in unemployment benefits have both positive and adverse effects. In particular, we find that benefits generosity can increase output and productivity, but can also weakly raise unemployment rates in some cases. Our analysis in this paper calls into question the mainstream policy view of using reduction in unemployment benefits as a tool to improve macroeconomic outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Education of Children with Disabilities in Rural Indian Government Schools: A Long Road to Inclusion.
- Author
-
Taneja-Johansson, Shruti, Singal, Nidhi, and Samson, Meera
- Subjects
SCHOOL environment ,RURAL conditions ,RESEARCH methodology ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,CHILDREN with disabilities ,PSYCHOLOGY of teachers ,INTERVIEWING ,MAINSTREAMING in special education ,SCHOOLS ,PUBLIC sector ,GOVERNMENT policy ,NEEDS assessment - Abstract
Global commitments to the education of children with disabilities, have led to progressive policy developments in India, and a surge in the enrolment of children who were traditionally excluded from the formal education system. This paper examines the perceptions and practices of mainstream teachers in rural government schools, within the context of increased learner diversity, focusing on how teachers understand, and respond to, the needs of children with disabilities. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with teachers and classroom observations, in six primary schools, in three districts of Haryana. Our findings suggest that deficit-oriented views dominated teacher thinking, but they showed a readiness to engage with disability issues, recognising the value of education for all. However, they struggled in their classroom practices in relation to meeting diverse learner needs and exclusionary practices were further amplified for children with disabilities. Teachers were unwilling to take responsibility for the learning of children with disabilities, expressing significant concerns about their own preparedness, while highlighting the lack of effective and appropriate support structures. The paper concludes by drawing attention to the pressing need for effective teacher professional development opportunities and other support structures, to provide quality education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Placing Heritage in Entrepreneurial Urbanism: Planning, Conservation and Crisis in Ireland.
- Author
-
Scott, Mark, Parkinson, Arthur, Redmond, Declan, and Waldron, Richard
- Subjects
ECONOMIC recovery ,DISCOURSE analysis ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CIVIL society ,SEMI-structured interviews ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
Ireland is beginning to emerge from an extended period of austerity following the global economic collapse of 2008. In this time, private sector investment in historic urban cores all but halted, and state funding for heritage was dramatically cut. However, both the state and civil society have placed a new emphasis on the potential of built heritage to act as a driver of economic recovery, reflected in both local and national policies and strategies relating to the conservation and regeneration of historic urban cores. Through a discourse analysis of local documentary material, and of semi-structured interviews with a range of key factors involved in the management of two historic urban cores in Ireland (Limerick and Waterford), the paper explores how conservation policy has been fashioned to suit its deployment as an instrument of local and national economic recovery within the context of entrenched entrepreneurial urbanism, and how local stakeholders have responded. The paper concludes on the implications for both conservation policy—specifically tensions between traditional conservation approaches and more flexible instruments utilised in heritage-led regeneration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Bombay "city boss," Congress party treasurer, and union cabinet minister from Nehru to Indira: Sadashiv Kanoji Patil (1898–1981).
- Author
-
Ankit, Rakesh
- Subjects
CABINET officers ,FEDERAL government ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CIVIC leaders ,SPANISH-American War, 1898 - Abstract
S.K. Patil, quintessential Congressman of Bombay city and cabinet minister in three central governments from 1957 to 1963 and 1964 to 1967, was the kind of figure in Indian politics, who personified Rajni Kothari's Congress "system" of clients-patrons and chains-links. A Patelite, Patil was a thorn in Nehru's side. A leader of the business community, he identified with a network politics involving capital. He was an indifferent administrator, but an influential party apparatchik and his career peaked in 1964–1967, when he was a part of the all-important Congress "syndicate." Afterward, however, he struggled for relevance in the turbulent decade of the 1970s. In this research article based on Patil's personal papers, I offer these fragments from his political life as interesting prisms through which to view (a) aspects of intra-party and inter-ministerial conflictual culture, (b) issues concerning the top-down character of governance with implications for public policy and (c) the complex opposition to it, both inside and outside, thereby repaying this visit to an individual's trajectory in contemporary history with parallels for current politics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. What should teacher education be about? Initial comparisons from Scotland and Alberta.
- Author
-
Adams, Paul and Burns, Amy
- Subjects
TEACHER education ,WATERMARKS ,GOVERNMENT policy ,TEACHER development - Abstract
This article empirically examines the ways in which Initial Teacher Education in Scotland and Alberta, Canada, seeks to 'get students in', 'get them out and into the workforce', 'get on with teaching future teachers' and how it should 'get on with students'. Using Adams' (2016) policy heuristic, which posits that policy can be discerned in three realms: frame; explanation; and formation, this paper considers the middle realm: that of policy explanation. Here, attempts to position policy through public pronouncement, policy directive, mandate and/or missive are examined in the context of ITE in Scotland and Alberta. By analysing policy explanations, the paper marks out how both jurisdictions should begin to attempt to craft ITE located in career-long, professional learning and development that understands and acknowledges tensions between ITE and later teacher-education phases. Finally, the paper makes a tentative proposal as to what such ITE might hope to achieve and how it might contribute to a well-developed workforce, so that both locations and other jurisdictions might orient initial teacher development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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