338 results
Search Results
2. Information Technology Management into the 1990s: A Position Paper.
- Author
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Holtham, Clive
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION technology , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *HIGH technology industries , *COMPUTER input-output equipment , *INDUSTRIAL management , *PUBLIC sector - Abstract
Information technology poses many challenges both to general management and to the IT industry itself. After extrapolating some of the technological trends that could have significant impacts on commercial and public sector IT in the 1990, the paper reviews four major challenges. These are the need to develop IT strategies, both nationally and for individual organisations; the need to create alliances: the need to avoid misalliances; mechanisms for converting ideas into action. A considerable emphasis is placed on the need to understand the managerial environment within which IT is used, and to see IT as only one element within wider organisational systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Reimagining an emergency space: practice innovation within a frontline art therapy project on the France-UK border at Calais.
- Author
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Lloyd, Bobby and Usiskin, Miriam
- Subjects
ART therapy ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,IMAGINATION ,MAPS ,PROFESSIONAL ethics ,PSYCHOSES ,REFUGEE camps ,REFUGEES ,WORK environment ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,SOCIAL support ,CRISIS intervention (Mental health services) ,OCCUPATIONAL adaptation - Abstract
This paper explores the large map as an innovative visual art tool in a frontline art therapy project with refugees. In a volatile and hostile setting on the France-UK border at Calais, inhospitable spaces, for a time, become human places, and the capacity to imagine both other (people) and somewhere other (place) become possible. Within this emergency setting, a safe space is temporarily activated. In the complicated times in which we live, art therapists are uniquely positioned to offer crisis support to people in diverse contexts with ethical and imaginative practice, using both their psychological skills and the art itself in equal weight. Critical examination of art therapy interventions is a necessary aspect of ethical practice and can lead to adaptations. This can feed into contemporary debates about how to deliver crisis intervention work, social action, social justice, as well as issues of definition. Dialogue, collaboration and co-production can open debate, challenge injustices and lead to social change. Social media as an extension of practice can serve as a further innovation and offer an alternative potential space, particularly in crisis contexts and where face-to-face work is not possible. Plain-language summary This paper looks at the role of the large map in an ongoing frontline art therapy project with refugees in Calais, northern France. The authors write about the border context in which the work takes place. They then present some thinking about the use of maps within this setting. This is followed by an example of the work in practice in the form of one Facebook post written in February 2019. The authors discuss the themes and ideas about space and materials emerging out of this extract. The authors propose that the innovative choice and application of materials, which helps to create a safe space in this border setting, can be translated into other physically and psychologically challenging contexts. The core tenets of art therapy practice and the skills brought by art therapists are needed now as much as ever. The paper also invites art therapists to think critically and imaginatively about the materials and media they choose in relation to their own wider work contexts with people. The authors suggest that an important part of the art therapy intervention in a difficult place needs to be about reflecting and adapting to context, which includes crisis support. This in turn supports a dialogue that can challenge injustices and lead to social change. The collaborative reflections about the work, written into blog posts during the return journeys from France back to the UK, form a second practice innovation. The posts are shared with an online audience and sometimes read, commented upon and further shared by those who use the service in Calais. The posts attempt to present creative, impactful narratives about the human aspect of the refugee experience. This is in contrast to the dominant media narratives in which refugees are often depicted with negative stereotypes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Authorisations to issue shares and disapply pre-emption rights in the UK, Belgium and France: law, economics and practice.
- Author
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Vos, Tom
- Subjects
STOCKHOLDERS ,STOCKS (Finance) ,PRE-emption ,BOARDS of directors - Abstract
In this paper, I analyse the role of shareholder approval and pre-emption rights in protecting shareholders in share issuances by listed corporations in the UK, Belgium and France. In these countries, shareholder approval and pre-emption rights are in principle required for share issuances, but the general meeting can authorise the board of directors to issue shares and disapply pre-emption rights. Proxy advisors and institutional investors have adopted guidelines that signal that they strongly support pre-emption rights and shareholder approval of share issuances. However, I provide empirical evidence that these guidelines are often not followed in France and Belgium, especially for smaller corporations with high levels of insider ownership. I contrast this with the strong impact of the guidelines in the UK. I also offer explanations for these differences, as well as policy options that would give shareholders a larger say on the balance between flexibility and accountability regarding authorisations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. THERE ARE COALITIONS EVERYWHERE.
- Author
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Nedergaard, Peter
- Subjects
OPEN method of coordination (Government) ,COALITIONS - Abstract
Do members of the committees under the Open Method of Coordination (OMC) find that there are coalitions of specific member states in these committees? If so, then what kind of side payments hold these coalitions together? For the first time in scholarly literature, and based on an empirical investigation, the findings in this paper document that two opposing coalitions - with the United Kingdom and France as the respective leaders - exist in OMC committees where mutual learning is the raison d'etre. In the existing theory on this subject in the EU, it is claimed that consensus decision-making leads to a weakening of coalition-building. All three committees analysed in this paper build on consensus decision-making, which is achieved after intensive meetings between all the members. However, it is contended that the 'argumentative contest' working method of the OMC committees leads to more - not less - coalition-building. On the basis of a test, it is also shown that these committees are primarily held together by side payments in the form of 'promises relating to policy among the like-minded'; however, 'payments allied to subsequent decisions' add to the cement of the coalition-building processes stemming from the OMC working method. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A review of different pile design approaches in chalk used in France and the UK: case studies from French sites.
- Author
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Doghman, Mirna, Mroueh, Hussein, and Burlon, Sebastien
- Subjects
CHALK ,DEAD loads (Mechanics) ,LONG-Term Evolution (Telecommunications) ,CONE penetration tests - Abstract
Design of piles in chalk is considered as an important issue for a number of geotechnical applications in Northern Europe. Few methods exist for predicting the ultimate axial pile capacity in chalk, but little guidance can be found regarding the design of driven piles in this complex material as experience is rather limited. This paper aims to study the short and long-term predictive performance of different pile design methods used in France and the UK where chalk is found widespread in the north-west coast and the south-east coast, respectively. Conventional methods used in France and the UK are compared by considering seven full-scale static load tests performed in Paris Basin and extracted from the LCPC pile database. The ratio of the measured vs calculated pile shaft resistance and base resistance value is analysed and the scatter of each method is studied. The comparison shows large differences between results. Extension of the database is of great importance to improve the predictive reliability. The last part discusses the evolution of the long-term capacity of driven piles in chalk due to ageing effects. Results show an increasing trend after driving, following a hyperbolic evolution curve. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Inter-imperial '45: War, Geopolitics, and the Entanglements of Rebellion, 1745–1763.
- Author
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Lockton, Richard Austin
- Subjects
GEOPOLITICS ,ACCULTURATION ,POLITICAL integration ,BRITISH colonies ,INSURGENCY - Abstract
This article considers the 1745–46 Jacobite rebellion in Scotland (the last major attempt to restore the Stuart dynasty – in exile since 1689 – to the throne of Britain), and its decades-long aftermath, as a transatlantic problem deeply embedded in the geopolitical and cultural entanglements of inter-imperial rivalry and warfare. Prevailing interpretations of the '45 consider it as primarily a culminating political event centred on dynastic rivalry and the relative security of the Hanoverian establishment, while overlooking more recent geographic insights from the fields Atlantic and New Imperial history. In exploring the long term imperial strategic repercussions of the '45 as understood through the dynamics of a rapidly expanding and interconnected British Atlantic press and public sphere, this paper demonstrates novel and lasting understandings of the connection between inter-imperial rivalry, warfare, and domestic fifth-column rebellions. Such understandings, continuing throughout the mid-eighteenth century wars between Britain and France, and the contemporary anxieties tied to them, disrupt linear narratives of post-'45 British political and cultural integration. The British polity and formations of Britishness and Scottishness were entangled with France to an unprecedented degree as a result of the inter-imperial problem of the '45. This ultimately draws attention to the overlooked historical novelties, continuities, and contingencies of the post-'45 period. This cultural context must be considered and periodized on its own historical terms, rather than as part of a straightforward eighteenth century process of nation-state formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Simply a matter of compliance with the rules? The moralising and responsibilising function of fraud-based citizenship deprivation in France and the UK.
- Author
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Fargues, Émilien
- Subjects
NATURALIZATION ,LOSS of citizenship ,LEGAL compliance ,FRAUD ,CIVIL procedure - Abstract
Scholarship largely sees fraud-based citizenship stripping as a tool for guaranteeing the consistency of the naturalisation process against applicants who do not respect the rules. This implies that the line between 'desirable' and 'undesirable' citizens is drawn in accordance with procedural norms. In contrast, this article argues that deprivation on grounds of fraud aims to create a virtuous and responsible political subject. Drawing on the cases of France and the UK, the paper shows how government officials and judges understand citizenship deprivation not simply as a means to safeguard the procedural integrity of naturalisation, but as a mechanism for the moralisation and responsibilisation of applicants. The article further contends that not everyone is made the subject of 'renationalisation'. British and French deprivation policies reproduce suspicions and stereotypes against specific categories of migrants, constructing them as second-class citizens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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9. Glutenophilia: Chemistry and Flour Quality in Nineteenth-century France and Great Britain.
- Author
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Page, Arnaud and Guesnon, Maxime
- Subjects
FLOUR quality ,NINETEENTH century ,FLOUR ,GLUTEN ,WHEAT ,CHEMISTS - Abstract
This article analyses how gluten was discussed by chemists in the nineteenth century in Great Britain and France as a proxy for both nutritive and baking quality. It examines the role of gluten in the broader quest to measure and render the quality of wheat and flour through a set of objective and quantifiable criteria. The paper also shows how measuring quality proved to be an extremely complex task, and how chemistry was, by itself, unable to reduce the complexity of the wheat grain, and the various demands made upon it, to a simple numerical indicator. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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10. Brexit deal done! A detailed micro- and macroeconomic analysis of its fallout.
- Author
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Cubells, José Francisco and Latorre, Maria C.
- Subjects
BRITISH withdrawal from the European Union, 2016-2020 ,POUND sterling ,WAGES - Abstract
We offer a rich set of macroeconomic and sectoral effects of Brexit in France, together with macroeconomic ones for the UK, the rest of the EU and the rest of the world. We explain the intuition for the impact on production and trade across the 21 sectors that underlie our macroeconomic estimations (national imports and exports, output, GDP, welfare, wages and rental rate of capital). Our comprehensive technique captures the direct and indirect effects of Brexit on trade. Four types of withdrawal are analysed, including the finally agreed between the EU and the UK on December 2020. This will avoid tariffs, but other medium size (non-tariff) barriers will emerge. The UK, France and the rest of the EU will be harmed by Brexit, although asymmetrically. While Brexit will substantially harm the UK economy, the negative impact on France and the rest of the EU will be limited and similar. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Men Shape a Downward Trend in Car Use among Young Adults—Evidence from Six Industrialized Countries.
- Author
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Kuhnimhof, Tobias, Armoogum, Jimmy, Buehler, Ralph, Dargay, Joyce, Denstadli, JonMartin, and Yamamoto, Toshiyuki
- Subjects
YOUNG adult attitudes ,TOURISM ,TRAVELERS - Abstract
This paper investigates trends in the travel behaviour of young adults in Germany, France, Great Britain, Japan, Norway, and the USA over the past few decades with a focus on car availability and car travel. The trend analysis relies on micro-data from over 20 National Travel Surveys from the study countries dating back to the mid-1970s. The analysis of the survey data is supplemented by official statistics on licence holding. On this basis, this paper compiles a body of evidence for changes in mobility patterns among young adults in industrialized countries over the past few decades. The findings indicate that since the turn of the millennium, access to cars, measured in terms of drivers' licences and household car ownership, has decreased in most study countries—especially for men. Moreover, average daily car travel distance has decreased in most study countries, again especially for men. In France, Japan, and most significantly in the USA, the decrease in car travel has led to a reduction in total everyday travel by young travellers. In Great Britain, the decline in car travel was partly, and in Germany fully, compensated by an increased use of alternative modes of transport. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Why is there a lack of central funding for enterprise education at Further Education Colleges?
- Author
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Hardy, Brian
- Subjects
ADULT education ,BUSINESS education ,GOVERNMENT policy ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,VOCATIONAL education - Abstract
This paper reviews the reasons behind the absence of central Government funding for enterprise and innovation at Further Education Colleges (FECs). Enterprise and innovation are, according to conventional wisdom, crucial in rebuilding the UK's economy and providing jobs. In pursuit of this, the Government has provided central funding for enterprise promotion and education for both Universities and Secondary Schools, but not for FECs. The review starts by looking at recent Government policy papers on enterprise and innovation, then briefly considers the current economic characteristics that lay behind the need for enterprise education and innovation. The efficacy of the current proposals is questioned, looking at the concepts concerning the type and level of intelligence entrepreneurs need, also touching on what types of innovations can be expected to increase employment. The paper concludes by asking if elitist or class bias plays a part in the exclusion of Vocational Education & Training students at FECs from central funding for innovation and enterprise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Foyers in the UK and France -- Comparisons and Contrasts.
- Author
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Lovatt, Roland, Whitehead, Christine, and Levy-Vroelant, Claire
- Subjects
YOUTH -- Dwellings ,COMMUNITY centers ,YOUTH centers ,UNEMPLOYED youth ,HOUSING - Abstract
The Foyer movement in the UK developed in the early 1990s as a government sponsored response to inter-related youth problems of homelessness, unemployment and limited training and recreation facilities. In an attempt to ‘re-enfranchise’ large numbers of young people a strategy of providing accommodation, training and other facilities was pursued based upon an understanding of French successes. France has a much longer tradition of Foyers providing accommodation and support dating back to the mid-nineteenth century, although developments over the past 20 years perhaps represent the most interesting period from the UK perspective. During this time many French Foyers have increased their range of activities and introduced new practice and governance. This paper focuses on both the UK and French experiences of Foyers in order to highlight some comparisons and contrasts as a means of determining what might be learned in the UK from the more extensive French experience. The key question that this paper considers is whether or not the different governance, economic and social conditions in France mean that UK Foyers truly reflect French thinking and application of the concept. Does the French experience provide a blueprint, which has been followed in the UK- and if so, does this suggest that such policy solutions are applicable across political, economic and social boundaries? Alternatively has an apparently similar concept generated very different approaches to housing young people? In pursuing these questions, the paper relies not only upon existing literature relating to Foyers in the UK and France, but also upon a research programme carried out by the authors mainly for the Housing Corporation between 2001 and 2005. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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14. Standardization in EU education and training policy: findings from a European research network.
- Author
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Ertl, Hubert and Phillips, David
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL standards ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,TRAINING ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION research ,TEACHING - Abstract
This paper describes an EU-funded project under the Training and Mobility of Researchers (TMR) Programme, with a particular emphasis on the Oxford-based part. Involving six European universities, the overarching investigation was concerned with the tensions between standardization and tradition in education. In Oxford the focus was on aspects of EU education and training policy in four Member States: the United Kingdom, German, Sweden, and France. The paper describes the research undertaken and its outcomes, using the project as an example of EU funding programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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15. EUROPEAN PERSPECTIVES ON WELFARE REFORM.
- Author
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Gray, Anne
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL welfare ,UNEMPLOYED people ,LABOR market ,TAX credits ,LABOR incentives - Abstract
This paper discusses the effects of 'welfare to work' and 'making work pay' policies such as tax credits on job quality in the wider labour market. It examines the consequences of two policy approaches to the problem of work incentives for the unemployed. One approach is greater conditionality of benefits systems, of which the extreme case is workfare; the other is transfers to supplement low wages. It is argued that both approaches, individually or in combination, threaten to set up vicious circles, creating yet more of the problems they attempt to solve. Through qualitative interview material from Britain, France, Germany and Belgium, from a recent international project supported by the EU,[sup 1] the paper illustrates how the responses of the unemployed to the four countries' benefits systems and insertion programmes structure the effects of these policies on the labour market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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16. Banking on flexibility: a comparison of the use of flexible employment strategies in the retail banking sector in Britain and France .
- Author
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O'Reilly, Jacqueline
- Subjects
BANKING industry ,RETAIL banking ,EMPLOYERS ,FLEXTIME ,TEMPORARY employment ,SUBCONTRACTING ,LABOR market segmentation ,BRANCHES (Business enterprises) ,DIVISION of labor ,AUTOMATED teller machines - Abstract
This paper examines the flexibility debate with reference to an empirical study conducted in the retail banking sector in Britain and France. The first part of this paper discusses the theoretical context within which this research was conducted and argues that the dichotomous categories formulated in previous debates are too simplistic to explain the diversity of employer rationales for developing flexibility. The second half examines the use of functional flexibility, temporary work, subcontracting and part-time work on the basis of evidence collected from the case studies in each country. The paper concludes that in order to examine employers' strategies and the comparative organization of work a wider perspective is required which not only takes account of business needs and developments, such as product market competition and new technology, but which also looks at the social and regulatory factors which affect the terms in which different labour arrangements can be used by employers in different countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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17. Democratic babies? Françoise Dolto, Benjamin Spock and the ideology of post-war parenting advice.
- Author
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Bates, Richard
- Subjects
CHILD rearing ,IDEOLOGY ,PSYCHOANALYSIS - Abstract
This article looks at the political implications of a subject not always thought of as directly political, but which has an important ideological component: child-rearing advice. The period after 1945 offers an important example of how this topic can interact with developments in political ideology. This article takes the example of France, with substantial comparative reference to the US and Britain. It argues that the mid-twentieth century was characterized by a move from a hygienist and behaviourist approach to child rearing to a more liberal, humanist approach informed by Freudian psychoanalysis. This occurred significantly later in France – in the 1970s – than in Britain or the US, where it is associated with the years immediately after World War II. Through a comparison of two celebrated childcare experts who epitomized the change – Françoise Dolto in France, Benjamin Spock in the US – the paper explores the reasons for this temporal discrepancy. It shows that Anglo-American experts believed that the widespread application of psychoanalytic theory would help produce democratic citizens and ward off the dangers of authoritarian personalities. In France, psychoanalytic approaches became allied with conservative Catholic views of the family and women's roles, with implications for family policy into the twenty-first century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A multilevel analysis of implicit and explicit CSR in French and UK professional sport.
- Author
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François, Aurélien, Bayle, Emmanuel, and Gond, Jean-Pascal
- Subjects
PROFESSIONAL sports ,ATHLETIC clubs ,SOCIAL responsibility of business ,RUGBY football - Abstract
Research question: This paper examines the ways in which French and UK professional sports clubs implement and communicate their CSR policies. In addition to identifying similarities and differences between CSR practices in the two countries, our analysis extends and adapts the implicit-explicit CSR framework to the field of sport. Research methods: We used a mixed methods approach to analyse qualitative and quantitative data on the CSR strategies of 66 professional rugby union (Top 14, Aviva Premiership Rugby) and football (Ligue 1, Premier League) clubs that participated in the 2017-2018 season. Results and findings: We found major differences in CSR communication between France and the UK. Communication by French clubs tends to highlight sport's values, involve few media channels, whereas communication by UK clubs explicitly vaunts their social responsibility and involves numerous channels. In the case of CSR implementation, there are similarities between French and UK clubs, especially in the fields their CSR initiatives cover (e.g. health, diversity), as well as differences. However, the scope of initiatives varies more between sports than between countries, with football demonstrating a more international outlook than rugby. Implications: This article expands Matten and Moon's [(2008). 'Implicit' and 'explicit' CSR: A conceptual framework for a comparative understanding of corporate social responsibility. Academy of Management Review, 33(2), 404-424] implicit-explicit CSR framework by identifying the influence of interactions between sectorial/field-level factors and national/macro-level factors on CSR practices, and by distinguishing between CSR communication and CSR implementation. Our results throw light on the shift from implicit to explicit CSR in French professional sport. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A Debased Currency? Using Memoir Material in the Study of Anglo-French Intelligence Liaison.
- Author
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Haire, Emily Jane
- Subjects
FRANCE-Great Britain relations ,INTELLIGENCE service ,MEMOIRS ,20TH century espionage ,WORLD War I ,TWENTIETH century ,HISTORY ,MILITARY intelligence - Abstract
Using memoirs can be a vital way of supplementing archival evidence or indeed of overcoming a shortage of contemporaneous sources, and they offer insights into the attitudes and motivations of participants as well as how they recorded and remembered events. Memoirs retain an inherent value that must not be ignored, particularly in the study of intelligence liaison which addresses the kinds of personal and cultural aspects which are often especially well illuminated through autobiographical writing. This paper explores some of the theoretical and practical issues associated with the use of memoir material and examines them through the prism of selected autobiographical writings related to Anglo-French intelligence liaison from the Great War up to the Second World War. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Assessing the Localization Pattern of German Manufacturing and Service Industries: A Distance-based Approach.
- Author
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Koh, Hyun-Ju and Riedel, Nadine
- Subjects
MANUFACTURING industries ,SERVICE industries ,INDUSTRIAL clusters - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Studies 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
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Framing post-pandemic preparedness: Comparing eight European plans.
- Author
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Holmberg, Martin and Lundgren, Britta
- Subjects
EMERGENCY management ,HEALTH policy ,EPIDEMICS ,RESEARCH funding ,RISK management in business ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Framing has previously been studied in the field of pandemic preparedness and global health governance and influenza pandemics have usually been framed in terms of security and evidence-based medicine on a global scale. This paper is based on the pandemic preparedness plans, published after 2009, from eight European countries. We study how pandemic preparedness is framed and how pandemic influenza in general is narrated in the plans. All plans contain references to ‘uncertainty’, ‘pandemic phases’, ‘risk management’, ‘vulnerability’ and ‘surveillance’. These themes were all framed differently in the studied plans. The preparedness plans in the member states diverge in ways that will challenge the ambition of the European Union to make the pandemic preparedness plans interoperable and to co-ordinate the member states during future pandemics. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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22. Academic workforce in France and the UK in historical perspectives.
- Author
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Carpentier, Vincent and Picard, Emmanuelle
- Subjects
LABOR market ,HIGHER education ,EQUALITY - Abstract
Copyright of Comparative Education 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
23. Public or Private Orientation of Pension Systems in the Light of the Recent Financial Crisis.
- Author
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Lagoutte, Christine and Reimat, Anne
- Subjects
PENSIONS ,PENSION costs ,FINANCIAL crises ,INSTITUTIONAL economics ,LABOR supply - Abstract
This paper studies the appropriateness of a public or private orientation of pension systems in the light of the recent financial crisis, which has underscored the difficulties and contradictions associated with each system. The different institutional arrangements, in which public or private pension systems are embedded, are key components when assessing their responses to the crisis. Particularly, private pension systems are intertwined with financial markets, while social insurance-based pension systems are linked to the labour market mechanisms. This paper compares the British and French pension systems, as “archetypes” of private-oriented and public-oriented systems, respectively, the first relying on the market and private pension schemes, and the second on mandatory social insurance. This paper shows that the crisis has upheld the founding principles of the public (French) and private (British) pension systems to maintain the existing institutional configurations. At the same time, both systems have strengthened the role played by means-tested benefits and minimum pensions for low-income groups to offset the weaknesses of one or the other system, as emphasised by the crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Enterprise zones and zones franches urbaines: a critique of area-based fiscal incentives and regeneration in England and France.
- Author
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Chignier-Riboulon, Franck and Hall, Stephen
- Subjects
URBAN planning ,ENTERPRISE zones ,URBAN community development - Abstract
This paper provides a critical commentary on area-based fiscal incentives and regeneration in Europe, focusing on Enterprise Zones (EZs) in Britain and zones franches urbaines (ZFUs) in France. It, thus, counters the trans-Atlantic comparative bias of much of the extant literature. The paper provides a qualitative account of the development trajectory of four zones in Britain and France. It, thus, also counters the bias for evaluating short-term quantitative outputs (e.g. leverage ratios, cost per job) over long-term qualitative spatial outcomes. We consider how four variables (the objectives and ideological foundations of the EZ and ZFU programmes, the nature and scope of policy instruments deployed, the heterogeneous geography of the zones and local implementation) influence process and outcomes locally and the extent to which they engender ‘sustainable’ regeneration; the (re)embedding of zone development locally so that perpetual public investment and intervention is unnecessary. We conclude that, notwithstanding their potential to stimulate development and employment gains, area-based fiscal incentives are (given their propensity to produce unanticipated outcomes andpost hocchallenges) an imperfect platform to promote sustainable regeneration. This is, in part, due to an intrinsic flaw of the model; the limited effective public control over private investment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Collective Remittances and Integration: North African and North Indian Comparative Perspectives.
- Author
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Lacroix, Thomas
- Subjects
REMITTANCES ,SOCIAL integration ,TRANSNATIONALISM ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation - Abstract
This paper makes the case for a joint redefinition of the concepts of transnationalism and integration in a way that would allow a better combination. Transnationalism is here defined as a coping strategy for migrants who strive to manage their integration into two (or more) settings. Integration is commonly depicted as a multi-level process which combines a social embedding into a web of interpersonal or associational relations and a systemic embedding into wider economic or political systems. Next to these levels, this work highlights a third one, namely the identity integration of migrants who seek to maintain a balance between the poles of their identity. This conceptual framework is applied in order to analyse the emergence of collective practices of development among two North African groups in France (the Moroccan Chleuhs and the Algerian Kabyles) and one UK-based North Indian group (the Sikh Punjabis). It is shown that transnational development practices, in the form of collective remittances, constitute a matrix of identity integration for migrants who want to reinvent their identity of villager despite the transformations induced by their stay abroad. However, the success of their actual engagement into cross-border practices largely depends on the effectiveness of their systemic and social integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The Comintern and Black Workers in Britain and France 1919-37.
- Author
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Adi, Hakim
- Subjects
PAN-Africanism ,AFRICAN migrations ,AFRICAN diaspora ,DIASPORA ,COMMUNISM - Abstract
This paper looks at the attempts of the Communist international to organise amongst African and Caribbean workers in Europe, and particularly in France and Britain during the inter-war period. It locates these attempts within the overall objectives of the Comintern to organise all workers, to organise in the colonies and to address what was referred to at that time as the 'Negro Question' - that is the liberation of all those of African descent. The paper particularly highlights the role of communists of African and Caribbean origin and the organisations they formed. It suggests that a sense of belonging was connected with political organising and that for black workers their sense of belonging could also include identifying with other workers and a sense of class allegiance. The role of the communists was to encourage the founding of some of the first workers' organisations amongst the African diaspora in Europe and to provide an ideology to that sought to unite all workers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Fiscal policy is back in France and the United Kingdom!
- Author
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Creel, Jérôme, Monperrus-Veroni, Paola, and Saraceno, Francesco
- Subjects
FISCAL policy ,MONETARY policy ,MACROECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC models ,KEYNESIAN economics ,FRENCH economy ,ECONOMIC conditions in Great Britain - Abstract
In this paper, we analyze the resurgence of discretionary fiscal policy in the fiscal theory of the price level (FTPL) framework. Despite its reliance on the new consensus macroeconomic (NCM) framework, the FTPL concludes that fiscal policy may lead monetary policy without hampering macroeconomic stability. We show that an empirical model deriving from this theory gives very interesting results: in France and the United Kingdom, fiscal policy has positive long-run effects. This is at odds with the orthodox nature of FTPL promoters who usually advocate fiscal rules and sanctions. We interpret our results as being consistent with Post Keynesian economic thinking. We conclude that the move of some economists from the NCM school of thought in favor of discretionary fiscal policy has promoted the visibility of Post Keynesian ideas on this topic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Organizational work-life initiatives: context matters.
- Author
-
Ollier-Malaterre, Ariane
- Subjects
WORK-life balance ,HUMAN resources departments ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,WORK environment ,SOCIAL problems ,PERSONNEL management ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Copyright of Community, Work & Family 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
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Volunteering and the gender division of labour: A Franco-British comparison.
- Author
-
Windebank, JanE.
- Subjects
DIVISION of labor ,GENDER ,EQUALITY ,EMPLOYMENT ,HOME labor ,VOLUNTEER service ,LABOR supply - Abstract
Copyright of Community, Work & Family 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
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Quantitative sources for the history of education.
- Author
-
Carpentier, Vincent
- Subjects
QUANTITATIVE analysts ,EDUCATION research ,HISTORY of education ,RESEARCH methodology ,HISTORICAL source material ,BRITISH education system ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper proposes a critical reflection on the use of quantitative sources for the historian of education. It identifies and discusses key promises and challenges related to the construction and interpretation of historical statistics in education, drawing on a number of British and some French historiographical examples. Ultimately, the article encourages, where possible and appropriate, a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods in order to identify trends and patterns in education and facilitate their contextualisation in terms of processes and meanings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. An empirical study of interest rate determination rules.
- Author
-
Bhattarai, Keshab
- Subjects
INTEREST rates ,SIMULATION methods & models ,TIME series analysis - Abstract
This paper finds empirical support for a Taylor (1993) type interest rate determination rule. The model is solved analytically, estimated and used for simulation, impulse response analyses and forecasting with quarterly time series data for the UK and annual time series data for Germany, France, Japan, the UK and the US. The results confirm that such rules implicitly exists during the period of analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. NEW MORAL ECONOMIES OF WELFARE: THE CASE OF DOMICILIARY ELDER CARE IN GERMANY, FRANCE AND BRITAIN.
- Author
-
Bode, Ingo
- Subjects
PUBLIC welfare ,PROFESSIONALISM ,ELDER care ,SOCIAL services - Abstract
Currently, deregulation of social welfare provision is underway throughout Western Europe. The major tendency is for disorganisation, together with the emergence of welfare markets. This is also changing the way elderly people are provided with personal and socio-medical services. Focusing on domiciliary eldercare, the paper explores if this is accompanied by a change in what Kohli has termed the moral economy of old age welfare. Departing from a general reflection on the organisation of social services in modern welfare capitalism the paper sketches evolutions in the eldercare system of three major European countries, with a special focus on the role of civic rationales and professional norms in the organisational field under consideration. It is argued that the moral economy of eldercare has become fluid, thus implying a broader transformation in the societal treatment of old age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Introducing the impact of technology: a 'neo-contingency' HRM Anglo-French comparison.
- Author
-
Ramirez, Jacobo and Fornerino, Marianela
- Subjects
PERSONNEL management ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,MANAGEMENT styles ,EMPLOYEE attitudes ,BUSINESS education ,CREATIVE ability - Abstract
The paper analyses the impact of technological and national-culture factors on certain HRM policies and practices in Britain and France. This perspective supports the neo-contingency approach, which does not claim primacy for either the technological or the national-cultural factors shaping HRM policies and practices. HR managers in each country in high-, mid- and low-tech firms were surveyed. The relevance in the diffusion of certain patterns of HRM policies and practices advocates that employees working in intensive technology firms need a creative and adaptive HR management approach. The differences found in the application of the HRM practices studied between the two countries are illustrated through the educational system, which is different in France and Britain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Comparative Analysis of Mainstream Discourses, Media Narratives and Representations of Islam in Britain and France Prior to 9/11.
- Author
-
Brown, MalcolmD.
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE studies ,NARRATIVES ,ISLAM ,RELIGION & literature ,LECTURES & lecturing ,ISLAMOPHOBIA ,ORIENTALISM - Abstract
It has become almost impossible to believe that Islam even existed in Western consciousness before September 11, 2001 (9/11). Those who have used that event to denigrate Islam, and those who criticise the Islamophobia inherent in such negative discourses, take the events and aftermath of that day as their starting point. In contrast to that imagination, and also in contrast to some literature that attempts to instantiate a critique of Orientalism, this paper shows that Western representations of Islam and Muslims were sophisticated, diverse and historically fluid before 9/11. It does so by analysing media sources from the United Kingdom and France, the two nation states whose governments have famously been at loggerheads over their post-9/11 analyses and foreign policies. The objective here is to capture the diversity of mainstream social discourses as they were reflected in the press. The purpose is not to analyse media influence or the relative importance of different discourses, so the sources are deliberately selective and small in number. The article is structured around the ‘paradigm shift’ from an exotic, sensual stereotype of Islam to a stereotype of Muslim fanaticism (prominent at the time of the Rushdie affair, for example), which prepared the ground for responses to 9/11, but it also identifies a media critique of these discourses, and of Islamophobia in society and in the media itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Analysis of long-run benefits from international equity diversification between Taiwan and its major European trading partners: an empirical note
- Author
-
Chang, Tsangyao, Nieh, Chien-Chung, and Wei, Ching-Chun
- Subjects
TAIWANESE economy ,STOCK price indexes ,COINTEGRATION ,EQUILIBRIUM - Abstract
This paper employs four cointegration test approaches, PO, HI, JJ and KSS, to test for pairwise long-run equilibrium relationships between Taiwan's stock price index and each of the stock price indexes of four European markets – French, German, Dutch, and British stock markets. The results from these four tests are robust and clearly consistent in suggesting that the Taiwan stock market is not pairwise cointegrated with the four European stock markets. This provides strong evidence that there exist long-run benefits for Taiwan investors diversifying in the equity markets of Taiwan's major European trading partners, France, Germany, Holland, and the UK, over the sample period considered from 6 January 1998 to 30 May 2002. These findings could be valuable to Taiwan individual investors and financial institutions holding long-run investment portfolios in the equity markets of France, Germany, Holland, and the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Regulation and standards for psychoanalysis: The place of the Other in psychoanalysis and its teaching.
- Author
-
Malone, Kareen
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY laws ,PSYCHOANALYSIS ,STATE regulation ,EDUCATIONAL accreditation - Abstract
In numerous Western countries, psychotherapies have come under increasing governmental regulation. A more recent development is the increasing scrutiny given to psychoanalysis in the United Kingdom, in France, and in the United States. This paper examines a particular document that was created by four professional psychoanalytic organizations that are based in the United States. The document called Standards of Psychoanalytic Education aims to develop criteria that would guide accreditation and the organization of psychoanalytic institutes. The document is part of a set of concerns and actions related to the state regulation of psychoanalytic practice, its professional status, and the protection of those who seek its services. The essay examines the putative theoretical neutrality of this document by unfolding its tenets in terms of Lacanian psychoanalysis, a school of psychoanalysis that would take exception to many of the ideas suggested in the document's template for psychoanalytic education. The paper follows one line of argumentation throughout: what is the place of the Social Field, the Symbolic Other, within psychoanalytic process and as a recourse for professional legitimization that stands outside of psychoanalysis? As a practice of particularity, what relation does the discipline bear to other mental health fields and to the norms and knowledge systems of the mental health professions? Using a Lacanian orientation, two senses of the Other are discussed, and the specificity of psychoanalysis is asserted. This specificity is contrasted with some of the goals and constraints that are introduced by current approaches to regulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The cyclical behaviour of inventories: European cross-country evidence from the early 1990s recession.
- Author
-
Bagliano *, Fabio C. and Sembenelli, Alessandro
- Subjects
RECESSIONS ,BUSINESS cycles ,INVENTORY control ,INVESTMENTS ,FINANCIAL leverage ,ASSET backed financing - Abstract
This paper employs data for a panel of firms from France, Italy and the UK to study the effect of the recession of the early 1990s on inventory investment, controlling for cyclical fluctuations at the firm level. The results clearly show some common patterns across countries, pointing to the relevance of financial factors (namely, the level of leverage) in propagating initial recessionary shocks. Moreover, Italian firms, especially if 'small and young', seem more likely to suffer from a reduction in the value of collateralizable assets possibly originated by restrictive policy actions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. SOCIAL EXCLUSION, CHILDREN AND EDUCATION: Implications of a rights-based approach.
- Author
-
Klasen, Stephan
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,POVERTY ,SOCIAL policy ,WELFARE economics ,UNEMPLOYMENT - Abstract
In this paper, I am applying a rights-based approach to childhood social exclusion that, following Sen's capability approach as one formulation of such a rights-based approach, sees social exclusion as the failure of people to have access to critical capabilities relating to their integration into society. The implications of this approach will then be applied to the relation between education and social exclusion, where it is shown that education has a critical impact on mitigating or reinforcing social exclusion. Taking such a capabilities-based approach implies a shift away from a concentration on average achievement generated by an education system to the low end of the achievement distribution and the ability of the education system to raise the performance and integrate the most disadvantaged students. The paper investigates how education systems in Europe and other industrialized countries are achieving this goal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Comparison of public health and preventive medicine physician specialty training in six countries: Identifying challenges and opportunities.
- Author
-
Peik, Samuel M., Mohan, Keerthi M., Baba, Toshiaki, Donadel, Morgane, Labruto, Andrea, and Loh, Lawrence C.
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE studies ,CURRICULUM ,EMPLOYMENT ,ENDOWMENTS ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MEDICAL practice ,MEDICAL specialties & specialists ,STUDY & teaching of medicine ,PREVENTIVE health services ,PUBLIC health ,CERTIFICATION ,ACCREDITATION - Abstract
Rationale: Public health and preventive medicine (PHPM) has been recognized internationally as a physician specialty, but national parallels and differences exist between training contexts. This paper reviews PHPM training and employment in Canada, France, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the USA. Methods: Information gathered from relevant accreditation bodies and literature searches was used to create descriptive profiles of national training demographics and structure and a narrative outlining trends and challenges facing the specialty. Results: Notable similarities and differences exist between national contexts. Key themes were differences in training strategies and practice scope, specialty stakeholders, certification structure, and funding. Recognition challenges faced the specialty across all six countries. Other challenges included unclear competencies and training strategies and a need for PHPM specialists to highlight their role in combating population health threats. Additional differences existed between comparator countries on the structure of training, funding sources for training programs, availability of training posts, and linkages with other physician specialties. Conclusion: Highlighting these themes is a first step to fostering training collaborations between PHPM specialist physicians to augment transnational action on global public health challenges and also supports PHPM physician educators with innovative solutions from abroad that might address domestic specialty challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Depreciation: concepts and practices in France and the UK.
- Author
-
Burlaud, Alain, Messina, Michel, and Walton, Peter
- Subjects
DEPRECIATION ,ACCOUNTING methods ,TAX deductions ,ACCOUNTING - Abstract
This article is a comparative review of current depreciation practices in France and the United Kingdom. It starts with a consideration of the evolution of depreciation from the nineteenth century, when it was generally regarded as an optional item, often associated with profit-smoothing, through to the present day when the principle of its systematic application is never questioned. The article reviews the different regulatory frameworks controlling depreciation in France and the UK and notes the importance in France of the link with allowable expenses for tax purposes. From this analysis is drawn a series of recognition and measurement differences where the approach to depreciation is different between the two countries. Major differences are the use of residual values in the UK and their absence in France, the use of different asset categories, and different definitions for some assets. The paper then provides the results of empirical work where samples of accounts drawn from specific industry sectors are examined for evidence of actual practice. The paper concludes in observing that the research demonstrates many of the classical problems of cross-border analysis in that even a topic thought of as routine, such as depreciation, shows national differences of approach both as to asset categorization, and measurement of depreciation, so that direct comparisons are not entirely justified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Regulatory change and skill transfer: The case of national laboratories in the UK, France and...
- Author
-
Smith, Helen Lawton
- Subjects
LABORATORIES ,REGIONAL economics - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Studies 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
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Analyzing the violation of drone regulations in three VGI drone portals across the US, the UK, and France.
- Author
-
Mandourah, Ammar and Hochmair, Hartwig
- Subjects
REGULATORY compliance ,PUBLIC service advertising ,DRONE aircraft pilots ,STATE regulation ,FEDERAL regulation - Abstract
Drone technology opens the door to major changes and opportunities in our society. But this technology, like many others, needs to be administered and regulated to prevent potential harm to the public. Therefore, national and local governments around the world established regulations for operating drones, which bans drone use from specific locations or limits their operation to qualified drone pilots only. This study reviews the types of restrictions on drone use that are specified in federal drone regulations for the US, the UK, and France, and in state regulations for the US. The study also maps restricted areas and assesses compliance with these regulations by analyzing the spatial contribution patterns to three crowd-sourced drone portals, namely SkyPixel, Flickr, and DroneSpot, relative to restricted areas. The analysis is performed both at the national level and at the state/regional level within each of the three countries, where statistical tests are conducted to compare compliance rates between the three drone portals. This study provides new insight into drone users' awareness of and compliance with drone regulations. This can help governments to tailor information campaigns for increased awareness of drone regulations among drone users and to determine where increased control and enforcement of drone regulations is necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Instrumentalizing Fukushima: Comparing Media Coverage of Fukushima in Germany, France, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland.
- Author
-
Kepplinger, Hans Mathias and Lemke, Richard
- Subjects
FUKUSHIMA Nuclear Accident, Fukushima, Japan, 2011 ,DISASTERS in the press ,MASS media ,SENDAI Earthquake, Japan, 2011 ,PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
According to the theory of instrumental actualization in mediated conflicts, the mass media tend to exaggerate events consistent with the editorial line. This theory was tested using press coverage in Germany, Switzerland, France, and the United Kingdom on the Japanese seaquake, the tsunami it caused, and the nuclear disaster of Fukushima. Within a period of seven weeks after the seaquake, the coverage in the four countries in 27 national newspapers and magazines on the three events was analyzed. As hypothesized from theory, German and Swiss media concentrated on Fukushima and stressed its relevance to domestic nuclear plants, whereas French and British media placed a greater emphasis on the tsunami and rarely related the nuclear catastrophe in Japan to domestic nuclear programs. In addition, there were remarkable correlations between the views of journalists and the bias of statements on nuclear energy presented in their news sections. Findings are discussed and related to the theory of public opinion and political decisions in liberal democracies. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The Relationship Between Inclusive Institutions, Proximate Causes of Growth, and Economic Growth: A Case Study of the Four Mandate Territories of Lebanon, Palestine, Syria, and Trans-Jordan, 1918-1946/1948.
- Author
-
Schein, Andrew
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,FINANCIAL institutions ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
I present a comparative historical study of the economic growth in the four mandate territories of Lebanon, Palestine, Syria, and Trans-Jordan. In all four areas, the ruling western powers, Britain and France, attempted to introduce inclusive economic institutions with a strong emphasis on private property. These institutions advanced economic growth in all four regions, but there were differences in their growth rates. For example, Palestine had the best growth, even though the British were more successful in instituting inclusive institutions in Trans-Jordan. In Palestine, there was also a huge increase in the proximate causes of growth that did not happen in Trans-Jordan. The paper suggests a refined formulation of the relationship between inclusive institutions, proximate causes of growth, and economic growth. Inclusive institutions will generate economic growth, but at a slower pace. If a country is able to enhance its proximate causes of growth, then the joint effect of the proximate causes of growth and inclusive institutions will lead to much quicker growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Vive les différences? Voice in French MNCs' overseas workplaces: a comparative study of voice in French, German and US subsidiaries in the UK.
- Author
-
Tüselmann, Heinz-Josef, Allen, Matthew M.C., and McDonald, Frank
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,EMPLOYEE participation in management ,SUBSIDIARY corporations ,PERSONNEL management ,CAPITALISM ,BUSINESS enterprises ,AMERICAN business enterprises - Abstract
Foreign-owned firms help to disseminate management practices across UK companies; this includes the ability of indigenous firms to learn improved human resource management (HRM) practices from leading foreign companies. Analysing the transfer of HRM policies forms an important strand of the international HRM and comparative capitalisms literatures; however, large-scale, comparative studies of voice patterns in German, US and, in particular, French subsidiaries in the UK are limited. This paper draws on a major survey that includes the, to date, largest sample of French MNC subsidiaries. It does not simply identify the existence of different kinds of voice mechanisms, but examines how these different practices come together in the implementation of subsidiaries' voice policies. This enables the detection of subtle, but important, differences in the subsidiaries' voice practices. French subsidiaries are significantly less likely to pursue a partnership approach to voice than their German and US counterparts. French and US establishments are significantly more likely to adopt a ‘bleak house’ approach than German ones. Importantly, these key differences only emerge at a fine-grained level of analysis that examines how subsidiaries implement voice practices. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Which activities threaten independent living of elderly when becoming problematic: inspiration for meaningful service robot functionality.
- Author
-
Bedaf, Sandra, Gelderblom, Gert Jan, Syrdal, Dag Sverre, Lehmann, Hagen, Michel, Hervé, Hewson, David, Amirabdollahian, Farshid, Dautenhahn, Kerstin, and de Witte, Luc
- Subjects
CAREGIVERS ,DECISION making ,FOCUS groups ,HOME care services ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,NOSOLOGY ,LEGAL status of patients ,ROBOTICS ,QUALITATIVE research ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,ASSISTIVE technology ,INDEPENDENT living ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose: In light of the increasing elderly population and the growing demand for home care, the potential of robot support is given increasing attention. In this paper, an inventory of activities was made that threaten independent living of elderly when becoming problematic. Results will guide the further development of an existing service robot, the Care-O-bot®. Method: A systematic literature search of PubMed was performed, focused on the risk factors for institutionalization. Additionally, focus group sessions were conducted in the Netherlands, United Kingdom and France. In these focus group sessions, problematic activities threatening the independence of elderly people were discussed. Three separate target groups were included in the focus group sessions: (1) elderly persons ( n = 41), (2) formal caregivers ( n = 40) and (3) informal caregivers ( n = 32). Results: Activities within the International Classification of Functioning domains mobility, self-care, and interpersonal interaction and relationships were found to be the most problematic. Conclusions: A distinct set of daily activities was identified that may threaten independent living, but no single activity could be selected as the main activity causing a loss of independence as it is often a combination of problematic activities that is person-specific. Supporting the problematic activities need not involve a robotic solution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Entente Cordiale Redux: the impact of Brexit on British and French foreign and security policy.
- Author
-
Hadfield, Amelia and Turner, Christian
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,BRITISH withdrawal from the European Union, 2016-2020 ,BILATERAL treaties ,BREXIT Referendum, 2016 ,BORDER security ,COOPERATION - Abstract
Brexit has been a game-changer for Britain, and its key partners. Strategic shifts as well as historic relations have impacted the UK's relationship with France in a number of unexpected ways. This article explores some of the key historical events that have caused both agreement and strife between the two states, looking at the bilateral treaties established to deepen cooperation on security and defence, specifically the Lancaster House agreements, and considers the series of intriguing accords and conventions that have arisen from the mid-1980s, as well as the logistical challenges of the shared border and juxtaposed border controls of Britain and France. Post-Brexit diplomatic forums in which Britain and France are joined by Germany are then explored, before assessing Britain's attempts to forge its new role in relation to long-standing commitments to France and an evolving relationship with the EU. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Spectacle of Woman as Creator: representation of women composers in the French, German and English feminist press 1880–1930.
- Author
-
Harris, Amanda
- Subjects
WOMEN composers ,WOMEN in the press ,HISTORY of feminism ,CREATIVE ability ,FEMINISM ,HISTORY - Abstract
The period 1880–1930 saw women composers achieve unprecedented prominence as composers of large-scale works. This success coincided with the first wave of feminist movements in England, France and Germany. This article views the junctions where these two groups of women met through the vehicle of the feminist press, documenting the tensions and misunderstandings that occurred between emerging women composers attempting to be taken seriously as creative entities and feminists seeking to improve the political, social and professional lot of women. The pervasive aesthetic of male musical genius remained unquestioned by many feminists in spite of examples of female creative brilliance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. National context as a predictor of high-performance work system effectiveness in small-to-medium-sized enterprises (SMEs): a UK–French comparative analysis.
- Author
-
Gilman, Mark and Raby, Simon
- Subjects
PERSONNEL management ,SELF-directed work teams ,RESOURCE management ,INFORMATION resources management ,COMPARATIVE studies ,KNOWLEDGE management ,SMALL business research ,WORK design - Abstract
High-performance work systems (HPWSs), a large firm model, have recently attracted interest within small-to-medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). In addition, institutional settings have been shown as an important determinant in the types of human resource management (HRM) practices adopted by employers. This paper progresses these topics through a comparative analysis of SMEs within Cote d'Opale/Nord Pas de Calais (French) and Kent (UK) regions. Clear divergence is evident in the nature of HPWS. Whilst UK SMEs are found to adopt a wider range of practices, French firms exhibit a higher degree of integration portrayed through a collective range of practices that engender employee participation and commitment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. How Culturally Significant Imaginings are Translated into Lifestyle Migration.
- Author
-
Benson, Michaela
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,IMAGINATION ,QUALITY of life ,LIFESTYLES - Abstract
Through the examination of British migration to rural France, the article explores how imagination is put into practice and aims to determine what it is that makes some individuals act on the basis of these imaginings to improve their quality of life. It becomes clear that, for lifestyle migration to occur and in order to explain the timing of migration, it is necessary to question and consider the other factors—structural, cultural and biographical—that might drive people to act on the basis of their imaginings. Through recognition of the various contingencies that need to be in place for lifestyle migration to occur, the paper argues for a theoretical approach that accounts for the dialectic between structure and agency in the act of migration. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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