58 research outputs found

    Cabin crew collectivism: labour process and the roots of mobilization

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    The protracted dispute (2009–11) between British Airways and BASSA (British Airways Stewards and Stewardesses Association) was notable for the strength of collective action by cabin crew. In-depth interviews reveal collectivism rooted in the labour process and highlight the key agency of BASSA in effectively articulating worker interests. This data emphasizes crews’ relative autonomy, sustained by unionate on-board Cabin Service Directors who have defended the frontier of control against managerial incursions. Periodic attempts to re-configure the labour process, driven by cost cutting imperatives in an increasingly competitive airline industry, eroded crews’ organizational loyalties. When BA imposed radical changes to contracts and working arrangements, BASSA successfully mobilized its membership. The article contributes to labour process analysis by emphasizing the collective dimensions to emotional labour, restoring the ‘missing subject’, but also articulating the interconnections between labour process and mobilization and the role unions can play in providing the organizational and ideological resources to legitimate worker interest

    Metabolomics demonstrates divergent responses of two Eucalyptus species to water stress

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    Past studies of water stress in Eucalyptus spp. generally highlighted the role of fewer than five “important” metabolites, whereas recent metabolomic studies on other genera have shown tens of compounds are affected. There are currently no metabolite profiling data for responses of stress-tolerant species to water stress. We used GC–MS metabolite profiling to examine the response of leaf metabolites to a long (2 month) and severe (ιpredawn < −2 MPa) water stress in two species of the perennial tree genus Eucalyptus (the mesic Eucalyptus pauciflora and the semi-arid Eucalyptus dumosa). Polar metabolites in leaves were analysed by GC–MS and inorganic ions by capillary electrophoresis. Pressure–volume curves and metabolite measurements showed that water stress led to more negative osmotic potential and increased total osmotically active solutes in leaves of both species. Water stress affected around 30–40% of measured metabolites in E. dumosa and 10–15% in E. pauciflora. There were many metabolites that were affected in E. dumosa but not E. pauciflora, and some that had opposite responses in the two species. For example, in E. dumosa there were increases in five acyclic sugar alcohols and four low-abundance carbohydrates that were unaffected by water stress in E. pauciflora. Re-watering increased osmotic potential and decreased total osmotically active solutes in E. pauciflora, whereas in E. dumosa re-watering led to further decreases in osmotic potential and increases in total osmotically active solutes. This experiment has added several extra dimensions to previous targeted analyses of water stress responses in Eucalyptus, and highlights that even species that are closely related (e.g. congeners) may respond differently to water stress and re-waterin

    The Effect of Service on Research Performance: A Study on Italian Academics in Management

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    Academics all over the world are feeling the increasing pressure to attain satisfactory research performance. Since research is not the only activity required of academics, though, the debate on how it may be coupled with other knowledge transfer activities like teaching, patenting, and dissemination has been captivating scholars interested in higher education. Literature is surprisingly silent about the interplay between research performance and other roles and tasks that faculty are expected to carry out, namely academic citizenship, intended as the service that they provide to their institution, to the scientific community, and to the larger society. Through a negative binomial regression conducted on 692 Italian academics in management, this paper investigates both the direct and moderating effect exerted by academic citizenship on the relationship between research performance in two subsequent evaluation exercises, thus advancing our knowledge of the relationship between research and service. Findings show that institutional service acts as a pure moderator, discipline-based service is a quasi-moderator, while public service exerts only a direct negative effect on research performance. In light of the emergent interplay between research and service, the necessity to boost reflection on academic citizenship is discussed and suggestions for its acknowledgement and advancement are formulated

    Electrical Fundamentals

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    Competition and succession between the oily alga Botryococcus braunii and two green algae Chlorella vulgaris and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

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    Contamination by other algal species is a major problem in the culture of the oil-producing green alga Botryococcus braunii (Bb). In this study, the population interactions between Bb and two small green algae, Chlorella vulgaris (Cv) and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Cr), were separately investigated in two controlled experiments. Filtrates of Cv or Cr significantly stimulated the growth of Bb in the first 9–11 days when the filtrates were derived from a low- or medium-density algal culture. However, filtrates of Cv and Cr from the high-cell-density cultures significantly inhibited Bb growth from day 11 and 7, respectively. In Bb–Cv competition, the growth of Bb was significantly inhibited by Cv at the biomass ratio of Bb/Cv = 1:1. However, when the Cv component reduced to 0.5 (Bb/Cv = 1:0.5) or 0.25 (Bb/Cv = 1:0.25), the growth of Bb was faster than that in the control in the first 13 days. Similarly, in Bb–Cr competition, the biomass ratios of 1:0.5 and 1:0.25 (Bb/Cr) favoured the growth of B. braunii in the first 15 days, but the growth of Bb decreased in the Bb/Cr ratio of 1:1 from day 15. By contrast, the growth of Cv and Cr were not affected by the presence of Bb in all biomass ratios. These results suggest that Cv and Cr could impact the growth of Bb by metabolites in the culture medium, and when the biomass of Bb is two to four times that of other algae, this oily alga becomes competitive over other algal species. This study reveals the mechanism of population dynamics of this oily alga competing with small and fast-growing algae. The results are applicable in reducing algal competition and regulating species succession between slow and fast-growing algae species

    Gas Phase Chromatography of Progesterone and Related Steroids

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