13,002 research outputs found
Governance networks: Interlocking directorships of corporate and nonprofit boards
This study describes the interlocking networks of corporate directors serving on publicly listed corporate boards and those on the boards of nonprofit organizations in Western Australia in 2006. When this study was undertaken, the state was the beneficiary of a booming economy in resource development prior to the global financial crisis, yielding a substantial number of resource companies with their headquarters in Perth, the capital city of Western Australia. Through social network analysis using NetDraw, we trace the extent of interpersonal connections of prominent individuals who serve on these boards in this relatively isolated state in Australia. The network figures demonstrate the inner circle of companies and nonprofits with their interlocking directorships that suggest the growing interpenetration among the state, the market, and civil society. As a result of reduced government funding during the last two decades in Western Australia, nonprofit organizations have had to use market strategies to increase their revenues, which is one factor that has led to this greater interdependence between previously separate groups. Thus, market forces have blurred the boundaries that once separated private companies from nonprofit organizations, increasing the interlocking nature of their board directors
Navigating global-local tensions in accountability/autonomy policies: Comparative case studies in 'Asian' universities
The twin policy domains of accountability and autonomy have featured in recent education reforms in many countries, signalling new relationships between governments and educational institutions. Despite different national and localised contexts, a number of common 'global' trends have been identified. However, simultaneously context-specific differences are also evident. For us, the concept of 'globalisation', when it implies policy homogenisation, is too blunt an instrument to critically analyse these major reforms. We would argue that there are still too few studies on globalisation processes grounded in detailed examinations of particular historical times and geographical spaces. Our research is located within the tensions between global commonalities and localised differences.
This paper reports research on changing accountability and autonomy in higher education in three 'Asian' countries. Empirical data has been collected in the People's Republic of China, Hong Kong and Singapore in an attempt to begin to redress a 'Western' hegemony in such research. Within each national context two different types of universities became case study sites for the analysis of both commonalities and differences in accountability and autonomy policies and practices. The current paper focuses in particular on the conceptual and methodological framings of the research and presents some preliminary findings
An archival case study : revisiting the life and political economy of Lauchlin Currie
This paper forms part of a wider project to show the significance of archival material on distinguished economists, in this case Lauchlin Currie (1902-93), who studied and taught at Harvard before entering government service at the US Treasury and Federal Reserve Board as the intellectual leader of Roosevelt's New Deal, 1934-39, as FDR's White House economic adviser in peace and war, 1939-45, and as a post-war development economist. It discusses the uses made of the written and oral material available when the author was writing his intellectual biography of Currie (Duke University Press 1990) while Currie was still alive, and the significance of the material that has come to light after Currie's death
A whole of water approach for the city of Sydney
Urban water managers and policy makers are struggling with the challenge of transitioning to an approach that considers a whole of urban water approach, where water planning and the urban form are considered in an integrated manner. The recent drive for liveable cities, where water is used to enhance the urban landscape through reuse and stormwater management, has seen a shift in focus. This has brought a number of challenges to bear on institutions charged with water planning and management at strategic, tactical and operational levels. Five central challenges have emerged from the research undertaken by ISF, viz.: a) Legislations and regulations that are prescriptive, overlapping and inconsistent, b) Economic and financial systems that are restrictive and traditional, c) Planning that is uncoordinated and non-collaborative, d) Organisational and professional cultures that are siloed and inflexible, e) Citizens engagement that is uncoordinated, technical and uninspiring. Drawing on the approach adopted by the City of Sydney, the paper will illustrate how a number of these challenges were overcome by local council in their attempt to achieve liveability goals, make the city more resilient to climate change, and reduce pollution levels in the water ways and harbour. The City undertook a consultative process to develop a decentralised water master plan that would both drive and guide future recycling, stormwater management, and pollution control initiatives. Six transferrable lessons and enabling actions were identified that will have relevance to other cities and urban planners aiming to achieve a whole water approach and liveable cities
New evidence on Allyn Young's style and influence as a teacher
This paper publishes the hitherto unpublished correspondence between Allyn Abbott Young's biographer Charles Blitch and 17 of Young's former students or associates. Together with related biographical and archival material, the paper shows the way in which this adds to our knowledge of Young's considerable influence as a teacher upon some of the twentieth century's greatest economists. The correspondents are as follows: James W Angell, Colin Clark, Arthur H Cole, Lauchlin Currie, Melvin G de Chazeau, Eleanor Lansing Dulles, Howard S Ellis, Frank W Fetter, Earl J Hamilton, Seymour S Harris, Richard S Howey, Nicholas Kaldor, Melvin M Knight, Bertil Ohlin, Geoffrey Shepherd, Overton H Taylor, and Gilbert Walker
The Evolution of Circumstellar Disks Surrounding Intermediate Mass Stars: IC 1805
We report the results of a study of the intermediate and high mass stars in
the young, rich star-forming complex IC 1805, based on a combination of
optical, near-infrared, and mid-infrared photometry, and classification
spectra. These data provide the basis for characterizing the masses and ages
for stars more massive than ~2 Msun and enable a study of the frequency and
character of circumstellar disks associated with intermediate- and high-mass
stars. Optically thick accretion disks among stars with masses 2 < M/Msun <4
are rare (~2% of members) and absent among more massive stars. A larger
fraction (~10%) of stars with masses 2 < M/Msun < 4 appear to be surrounded by
disks that have evolved from the initial optically thick accretion phase. We
identify four classes of such disks. These classes are based on spectral energy
distributions (SEDs) of excess emsission above photospheric levels: disks that
are (1) optically thin based on the magnitude of the observed excess emission
from 2 to 24 um; (2) optically thin in their inner regions (r< 20 AU) and
optically thick in their outer regions; (3) exhibit empty inner regions (r < 10
AU) and optically thin emission in their outer regions; and (4) exhibit empty
inner regions and optically thick outer regions. We discuss, and assess the
merits and liabilities of, proposed explanations for disks exhibiting these SED
types and suggest additional observations that would test these proposals.Comment: Accepted to Ap
Additions to the State and County Records of Ohio Dragonflies (Odonata)
Author Institution: Department of Botany and Plant Pathology and Department of Zoology and Entomology, The Ohio State University, Columbus 1
On the General Ericksen-Leslie System: Parodi's Relation, Well-posedness and Stability
In this paper we investigate the role of Parodi's relation in the
well-posedness and stability of the general Ericksen-Leslie system modeling
nematic liquid crystal flows. First, we give a formal physical derivation of
the Ericksen-Leslie system through an appropriate energy variational approach
under Parodi's relation, in which we can distinguish the
conservative/dissipative parts of the induced elastic stress. Next, we prove
global well-posedness and long-time behavior of the Ericksen-Leslie system
under the assumption that the viscosity is sufficiently large. Finally,
under Parodi's relation, we show the global well-posedness and Lyapunov
stability for the Ericksen-Leslie system near local energy minimizers. The
connection between Parodi's relation and linear stability of the
Ericksen-Leslie system is also discussed
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