6,937 research outputs found

    Supporting Supply Chain Innovation and Sustainability Practices through Knowledge and Innovation Management

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    This paper extends exploratory research on the contribution of knowledge and innovation management (KIM) to innovation and sustainability activities across a number of small to medium size Australian food and beverage exporters in Australia as part of a longitudinal research project. Recent trends in sustainable supply chain management (SSCM) in global supply chains sees a greater focus on achieving more social and transformational forms of sustainability, rather than traditional economic or environmental approaches. Applying a framework of sustainability-oriented innovation, analysis of eight case study organizations revealed that innovation practices across these firms largely reflected an economic focus on sustainability, followed by some activities in the environmental domain. However, more transformative forms of innovation, such as those addressing social/community concerns, were lagging. Although further research is recommended, we offer some propositional speculation on why successful SMEs with a strong reputation for innovation are still driven predominantly by financial considerations

    Flock together with CReATIVE-B: A roadmap of global research data infrastructures supporting biodiversity and ecosystem science

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    Biodiversity research infrastructures are providing the integrated data sets and support for studying scenarios of biodiversity and ecosystem dynamics. The CReATIVE-B project - Coordination of Research e-Infrastructures Activities Toward an International Virtual Environment for Biodiversity – explored how cooperation and interoperability of large-scale Research Infrastructures across the globe could support the challenges of biodiversity and ecosystem research. A key outcome of the project is that the research infrastructures agreed to continue cooperation after the end of the project to advance scientific progress in understanding and predicting the complexity of natural systems. By working together in implementing the recommendations in this Roadmap, the data and capabilities of the cooperating research infrastructures are better served to address the grand challenges for biodiversity and ecosystem scientists

    Toward a Reference Architecture for Software Supply Chain Metadata Management

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    An Software Supply Chain (SSC) attack combines an upstream attack, where malicious codes are injected into a software artefact via a compromised life cycle activity, and a downstream attack on the consumers who use the compromised artefact. Organisations need thorough and trustworthy visibility over the entire SSC of their software inventory to detect risks early and rapidly identify compromised assets in the event of an SSC attack. One way to achieve such visibility is through SSC metadata, machine-readable and authenticated documents describing an artefact's lifecycle, such as how it was constructed and the utilised ``ingredients''. Adopting SSC metadata requires organisations to procure or develop a Software Supply Chain Metadata Management system (SCM2), a suite of software tools for performing life cycle activities of SSC metadata documents such as creation, signing, distribution, and consumption. Selecting or developing an SCM2 is challenging due to the lack of a comprehensive domain model and architectural blueprint to aid practitioners in navigating the vast design space of SSC metadata terminologies, frameworks, and solutions. This paper addresses the above-mentioned challenge with a Systematisation of Knowledge about SSC metadata and SCM2, presented as a Reference Architecture (RA). The RA comprises a domain model and an architectural blueprint for SCM2 systems, constructed from the concepts and building blocks scattered across existing SSC security frameworks and standards. Our evaluation shows that the RA framework is effective for analysing existing SCM2 solutions and guiding the engineering of new SCM2

    In Homage of Change

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    Global data for local science: Assessing the scale of data infrastructures in biological and biomedical research

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    publication-status: Acceptedtypes: ArticleThe use of online databases to collect and disseminate data is typically portrayed as crucial to the management of ‘big science’. At the same time, databases are not deemed successful unless they facilitate the re-use of data towards new scientific discoveries, which often involves engaging with several highly diverse and inherently unstable research communities. This paper examines the tensions encountered by database developers in their efforts to foster both the global circulation and the local adoption of data. I focus on two prominent attempts to build data infrastructures in the fields of plant science and cancer research over the last decade: The Arabidopsis Information Resource and the Cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid. I show how curators’ experience of the diverse and dynamic nature of biological research led them to envision databases as catering primarily for local, rather than global, science; and to structure them as platforms where methodological and epistemic diversity can be expressed and explored, rather than denied or overcome. I conclude that one way to define the scale of data infrastructure is to consider the range and scope of the biological and biomedical questions which it helps to address; and that within this perspective, databases have a larger scale than the science that they serve, which tends to remain fragmented into a wide variety of specialised projects

    Momentum 2014

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    A journal of undergraduate researchhttps://csuepress.columbusstate.edu/momentum/1004/thumbnail.jp

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    Documentary film and ethical foodscapes : three takes on Caribbean sugar

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    This article demonstrates how certain stories, voices and values around agro-food networks can be made powerful by documentary film. Our central argument is that documentaries mobilize ethics by presenting a partial and affective account of their subject matter, which makes their audience feel differently about the social relations that underpin the production of food and acts as a focal point for media scrutiny and political interventions. We focus attention on three documentaries about Caribbean sugar to explore multiple and disparate ethical claims made about the farmers, workers and communities that embody Caribbean sugar industries. Through a comparison of the three documentaries, we chart how the production and distribution of these films have entailed quite different ethical narratives, encounters and interventions. A key finding is that the context in which films are received is just as important as the content they deliver. The paper concludes with a guarded endorsement for using documentary film to transform the unequal life conditions experienced in the global food system, stressing the need for empirically-grounded critique of the context of documentaries and suggesting the important role that geographers might play as interlocutors in their reception
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