193 research outputs found
Investigating hybridity in organizations: a conceptual framework, a measurement scale, and effects of pro-social claims
This dissertation presents an investigation of the hybrid condition characterizing organizations combining social and economic objectives. Drawing on extant research efforts explaining how such organizations should cope with conflicting aims, the objective of this work is to capture the heterogeneous features of hybridity through three papers with the respective outputs: i) a conceptual framework justifying how hybridity in organizations emerges and externally manifests; ii) a measurement scale of the hybrid condition; iii) an analysis of the consequences of externally manifesting pro-social claims. This study proposes to expand the interpretation of the hybrid condition in current research streams, stimulating novel avenues of investigation that consider different facets of hybridity
Pump polarization-state preservation of picosecond generated white-light supercontinuum
Supercontinuum (SC) generation is among the most interesting nonlinear optical effects lately discovered, due to the complexity of the mechanisms responsible for its generation. This phenomenon, first demonstrated by Alfano and Shapiro using picosecond pulses in condensed phase, has found novel applications in optical pulse compression, timeresolved spectroscopy and material characterization among many others. Here, we demonstrate that picosecond generated SC white-light in water preserves the polarization state: linear, elliptical and circular of the pump source. Moreover, we were able to determine the SC polarization rotation direction in the circular case. With the generation of pulsed circularly polarized SC, new studies and applications are envisaged in the biological, medical and pharmaceutical field. Amino acids, involved in the origin of life, and other chiral structures represent an attractive target for this type of study
Mission, governance, and accountability of Benefit Corporations: towards a commitment device for achieving commercial and social goals
Benefit corporations (BCs) are profit-with-purpose organizations regulated by a legal framework for establishing explicit commitments in terms of multi-stakeholder governance and accountability structures. We comprehensively analyze the theoretical alignment of four concepts (ownership, mission, governance, and accountability) to explain the legal rationale for BCsâ unique corporate form. However, the boundaries of BC legislation are blurry, leaving them open to top-down governance arrangements and weak accountability. To explore this ambiguity, this paper investigates whether BCs implement a de facto (i.e., beyond the letter of the law) multi-stakeholder structure with governance models and downward accountability mechanisms that balance different stakeholdersâ interests, instead of focusing only on shareholder profits. This further highlight the soft boundaries imposed by the BC regulatory framework and suggests that more work is needed to explore the relationship between governance models that differently balance stakeholdersâ claims and the firmâs social performance
Recommended from our members
EU financial regulations and social impact measurement practices: A comprehensive framework on finance for sustainable development
Sustainability is becoming the main character of the financial industry in Europe, especially after the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) 2019/2088, which came into force on March 10th, 2021. However, despite the topâdown indications for disclosing and reporting sustainability practices provided by this new policy, financial actors still lack a comprehensive framework on how to track and measure their social and environmental contributions within the perimeter of this novel institutional context. This paper discusses the implications for financial actors brought by the SDFR and builds a conceptual link with social impact measurement practices. In particular, the article provides a comprehensive framework that identifies strategic approaches and measurement tools for financial actors for building a more sustainable finance, that is a finance focused on the purest dimension of blended value and more attentive to sustainable development
Paleomagnetic dating of non-sulfide Zn-Pb ores in SW Sardinia (Italy): a first attempt
A first paleomagnetic investigation aimed at constraining the age of the non-sulfide Zn-Pb ore deposits in the
Iglesiente district (SW Sardinia, Italy) was carried out. In these ores, the oxidation of primary sulfides, hosted
in Cambrian carbonate rocks, was related to several paleoweathering episodes spanning from the Mesozoic onward.
Paleomagnetic analyses were performed on 43 cores from 4 different localities, containing: a) non-oxidized
primary sulfides and host rock, b) oxidized Fe-rich hydrothermal dolomites and (c) supergene oxidation
ore («Calamine»). Reliable data were obtained from 18 samples; the others show uninterpretable results due to
low magnetic intensity or to scattered demagnetization trajectories. Three of them show a scattered Characteristic
Remanent Magnetization (ChRM), likely carried by the original (i.e. Paleozoic) magnetic iron sulfides. The
remaining 15 samples show a well defined and coherent ChRM, carried by high-coercivity minerals, acquired
after the last phase of counterclockwise rotation of Sardinia (that is after 16 Myr), in a time interval long enough
to span at least one reversal of the geomagnetic field. Hematite is the main magnetic carrier in the limestone,
whereas weathered hydrothermal dolomite contains goethite or a mixture of both. The results suggest that paleomagnetism
can be used to constrain the timing of oxidation in supergene-enriched ores
Resonant nonlinear absorption in Zn-phthalocyanines
In this work, we investigate the nonlinear absorption dynamics of Zn phthalocyanine in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). We used single pulse and pulse train Z-scan techniques to determine the dynamics and absorption cross-sections of singlet and triplet states at 532 nm. The excited singlet state absorption cross-section was determined to be 3.2 times higher than the ground state one, giving rise to reverse saturable absorption. We also observed that reverse saturable absorption occurs from the triplet state, after its population by intersystem crossing, whose characteristic time was determined to be 8.9 ns. The triplet state absorption cross-section determined is 2.6 times higher than the ground state one. In addition, we used the white light continuum Z-scan to evaluate the singlet excited state spectrum from 450 to 710 nm. The results show two well-defined regions, one above 600 nm, where reverse saturable absorption is predominant. Below 600 nm, we detected a strong saturable absorption. A three-energy-level diagram was used to explain the experimental results, leading to the excited state absorption cross-section determination from 450 nm up to 710 nm.FAPESPCNPQAFOSR (FA9550- 07-1-0374
- âŠ