60,194 research outputs found
Governing the Energy Transition:Reality, Illusion or Necessity? Routledge Studies in Sustainability Transitions (Book Review)
The shoals of celebrity
The author recounts his experiences of interacting with Australian politicians, members of the British Royalty and performers while establishing the Australian Studies Centre in London. He narrates incidents which involved his diplomatic skills in humouring celebrities during the process
Dignity in and at work : why it matters
Throughout the history of social science, dignity is a word that is continually used to express concern about various aspects of work. Within these concerns we see a set of implicit understandings of what dignity is, and what it does, and profoundly, dignity as an essential need of the human spirit. Beginning with some of the earliest insights that inform contemporary analyses of work we can see that, in different ways and relating their concerns to different eras, writers on work and organisation each conceptualise increasing industrialisation as entailing a possible denial of dignity. Most recently the dignity at work debate been colonised by the focus on bullying and harassment. The high profile campaign for 'dignity at work' (cf: Amicus and The Andrea Adams Trust) draws attention to the everyday bullying behaviours that occur in the workplace serving to intimidate and oppress employees, coming both from the workplace hierarchy, and, whether through cultural consensus or individual malintent, from peers. This reflects a feeling that some fundamental rights are coming under pressure. The proposed UK 'dignity at work act' advises that 'every employee shall have the right to dignity at work'
Theorizing Audience and Spectatorial Agency
This chapter analyses Georgian audiences and spectatorial agency through several lenses: psychoanalytic film theory, theories of the public sphere and of mass publicity, and media studies of cultural convergence. The first section reads Georgian theatre’s heterogeneous playbills as a syntactical rendering of the audience, the imaginary community of the nation in process of negotiation. The second section shows theatrical paratexts blurring the boundary between theatre and coffee house, creating a theatrical public sphere in which the audience exercises daily public agency in saving or damning the play. The third section highlights the mingling of vulnerability and charisma in the celebrity prologue-speaker, a figure who both judges and entrances the audience while also embodying actors’ exposure to possible audience wrath. The final section looks at the theatres’ encouragement of spouting clubs as a means of channelling spectatorial agency
The Value of Design-led Innovation in Chinese SMEs
Organised by: Cranfield UniversityThis paper focuses on understanding the role and use of design-led innovation in Chinese SMEs. The
insights were gained by undertaking a pilot study, based on an applied developmental research approach
involving participatory workshops, quantitative and qualitative positioning activities, in depth case studies
and an individual pilot project undertaken with SMEs in the Pearl River Delta [PRD] over an 18 month
period. It will discuss the findings, highlighting key areas of uncertainty that SMEs experience when
attempting to make the transition from OEM to OBM, and how the findings have contributed to the
development of a new design-led innovation framework.Mori Seiki – The Machine Tool Compan
The Risks and Weaknesses of the International Criminal Court from America’s Perspective
Bolton argues the US should raise its objections to the International Criminal Court (ICC) on every appropriate occasion, as part of its larger campaign to assert American interests against stifling, illegitimate, and unacceptable international agreements. The US has many alternative foreign policy instruments to utilize that are fully consistent with US interests, leaving the ICC to the obscurity it richly deserves
COMMUNITY CULTURAL DEVELOPMENT: A PUBLIC AFFAIRS EDUCATION PROGRAM IN FLORIDA
Community/Rural/Urban Development,
Odious Debts or Odious Regimes
Odious regimes have always been there. That there is no silver-bullet solution that will prevent odious regimes from arising, or stymie them once they do, is evident from the plethora of responses employed by the international community once a regime\u27s odiousness becomes clear. Current odious debt doctrine dates back to a 1927 treatise by a wandering Russian academic named Alexander Sack. The Sack definition contemplates a debt-by-debt approach to questionable borrowing. If a loan is used to benefit the population--to build a highway or water-treatment plant, for instance--the obligation would be fully enforceable, no matter how pernicious the borrower regime. Here, Bolton and Skeel attempt to fill the vacuum: a regime is odious if it engages in either systematic suppression or systematic looting
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