895 research outputs found

    Criticism and Counter-Criticism of Public Management: Strategy Models

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    Critical control is very important in scientific management. This paper presents models of critical and counter-critical public-management strategies, focusing on the types of criticism and counter-criticism manifested in parliamentary political debates. The paper includes: (i) a normative model showing how rational criticism can be carried out; (ii) a normative model for oral critical intervention; and (iii) a general motivational strategy model for criticisms and counter-criticisms. The paper also presents an example taken from everyday life.criticism, counter-criticism, public management, public administration, public policies, innovation in communication, communicative innovation, debate.

    JOUR 489.01: Opinion Writing

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    Scholarly Personal Narrative as Information Systems Research Methodology

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    Scholarly personal narrative is a constructivist research methodology that recognizes the researcher’s personal experience as a valid object of study. Drawing from information systems research demonstrating the value of storytelling to knowledge management, we suggest scholarly personal narrative offers IS researchers a new tool to enhance research relevance, scholarly discourse, and pedagogy. We suggest IS research scenarios where researchers might successfully apply new methodology

    GIS-based decision support approach for selecting a new landfill site for the city of Cape Town

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    Includes bibliographical references (leaves 107-111).Recent studies indicate that the population of Cape Town generates approximately 2.2 milliontons of waste annually. Numerous waste minimization strategies have been developed whichhave not been successful in reducing the amount that needs to be disposed of at a landfill site.This results to mounting pressure on existing waste disposal sites thus necessitating an urgentneed for a new regional landfill. According to CCA Draft Environmental Impact Report (2006),the former Cape Metropolitan Council (CMC) appointed technical consultants in 2000 to identifyand assess the potential sites for a landfill to service Cape Metropolitan Area (CMA), presentlyreferred to as the City of Cape Town (CCT). The construction of a landfill has significant impacts on the environments. It is for that reason Integrated Environmental Management (IEM) has to be followed to assess the impacts. The principle of IEM is broadly interpreted as applying to the planning, assessment, implementation and management of any project proposal or activity that has a potentially significant effect on the environment. Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) process, which lies in the heart of the IEM, is enforced to examine the environmental effects of development. These impacts are directly related to the physical location of the project. That makes site selection for proposed project a very important stage of the EIA process. Laws have been enacted to minimizeenvironmental impacts, including strict guidelines for siting landfills. Using landfill siting criteria and site selection methods, the technical consultants identified four potential sites, Atlantis being the only site falling within the City of Cape Town. The interviews, backed by secondary data sources such as websites and project reports, revealed that the techniques used to identify potential sites for the landfill, even when combined are costly and time consuming. Several scenarios were run using various ArcGIS extensions, including the ModelBuilder to identify sites that met the stated criteria. GIS analysis yielded agreeable results with the recommendations from the consultants who used techniques other than GIS to identify the regional landfill. The research findings demonstrate that GIS is an efficient and dependable stand-alone technique that can be implemented in landfill site studies thus expedite the decision making process

    An application of multiattribute decision analysis to the Space Station Freedom program. Case study: Automation and robotics technology evaluation

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    The results are described of an application of multiattribute analysis to the evaluation of high leverage prototyping technologies in the automation and robotics (A and R) areas that might contribute to the Space Station (SS) Freedom baseline design. An implication is that high leverage prototyping is beneficial to the SS Freedom Program as a means for transferring technology from the advanced development program to the baseline program. The process also highlights the tradeoffs to be made between subsidizing high value, low risk technology development versus high value, high risk technology developments. Twenty one A and R Technology tasks spanning a diverse array of technical concepts were evaluated using multiattribute decision analysis. Because of large uncertainties associated with characterizing the technologies, the methodology was modified to incorporate uncertainty. Eight attributes affected the rankings: initial cost, operation cost, crew productivity, safety, resource requirements, growth potential, and spinoff potential. The four attributes of initial cost, operations cost, crew productivity, and safety affected the rankings the most

    TOWARDS A CONSOLIDATED RESEARCH MODEL FOR UNDERSTANDING BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE SUCCESS

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    Research about the factors that determine the success of information systems (IS) suggests that IS success is an elusive phenomenon that can only be explained in terms of a multi-dimensional construct. Despite the usefulness and unique qualities of Business Intelligence (BI) solutions, the factors responsible for the success of BI solutions remain poorly understood. Our article attempts to illuminate a path towards a clearer understanding of how BI solutions succeed by drawing on the existing body of literature and critically reflecting on the updated model of information systems success presented by DeLone and McLean (2003) and Wixom and Watson’s (2001) model of data warehousing success. The principal research contribution consists of expanding, adapting, and synthesising these two models into a consolidated model for BI success. We derive a second order model, delineate its constructs, and conceptualise their relationships based on prior research related to IS success. The operationalization of these factors has the potential of leading to a more precise instrument for understanding, evaluating and analysing the success of BI solutions

    HEBREW DIACHRONY AND THE LINGUISTIC PERIODISATION OF BIBLICAL TEXTS: OBSERVATIONS FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF REWORKED PENTATEUCHAL MATERIAL

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    The accepted ancient Hebrew diachronic paradigm and the standard linguistic approach for the periodisation of biblical texts are today heavily criticised, the criticism most recently centring on the textual situation of the sources. Critics argue that the high degree of textual instability and linguistic fluidity characterising the extant witnesses preclude any reliable tracing of the history of the language and make even the most approximative attempts at linguistic dating impossible. However, much of this textual argument is abstract, since the effect of secondary intervention on the stability of diachronically significant features has been studied in detail in the case of only a few texts, the investigations reaching conflicting conclusions. After a brief survey of foregoing investigations, the present study compares Pentateuchal material from the MT and Qumran, concluding that (a) preservation of diachronically meaningful detail is still very much the norm, and (b) differences between editions of the Torah often indicate the linguistic conservatism of one edition, here the MT, as opposed to linguistic development of the other, here the Qumran material
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