30 research outputs found

    Maintenance of cross-sector partnerships: the role of frames in sustained collaboration

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    We examine the framing mechanisms used to maintain a cross-sector partnership (XSP) that was created to address a complex long-term social issue. We study the first eight years of existence of an XSP that aims to create a market for recycled phosphorus, a nutrient that is critical to crop growth but whose natural reserves have dwindled significantly. Drawing on 27 interviews and over 3,000 internal documents, we study the evolution of different frames used by diverse actors in an XSP. We demonstrate the role of framing in helping actors to avoid some of the common pitfalls for an XSP, such as debilitating conflict, and in creating sufficient common ground to sustain collaboration. As opposed to a commonly held assumption in the XSP literature, we find that collaboration in a partnership does not have to result in a unanimous agreement around a single or convergent frame regarding a contentious issue. Rather, successful collaboration between diverse partners can also be achieved by maintaining a productive tension between different frames through ‘optimal’ frame plurality – not excessive frame variety that may prevent agreements from emerging, but the retention of a select few frames and the deletion of others towards achieving a narrowing frame bandwidth. One managerial implication is that resources need not be focussed on reaching a unanimous agreement among all partners on a single mega-frame vis-à-vis a contentious issue, but can instead be used to kindle a sense of unity in diversity that allows sufficient common ground to emerge, despite the variety of actors and their positions

    Poly Economics-Capitalism, Class, and Polyamory

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    Academic research and popular writing on nonmonogamy and polyamory has so far paid insufficient attention to class divisions and questions of political economy. This is striking since research indicates the significance of class and race privilege within many polyamorous communities. This structure of privilege is mirrored in the exclusivist construction of these communities. The article aims to fill the gap created by the silence on class by suggesting a research agenda which is attentive to class and socioeconomic inequality. The paper addresses relevant research questions in the areas of intimacy and care, household formation, and spaces and institutions and advances an intersectional perspective which incorporates class as nondispensable core category. The author suggests that critical research in the field can stimulate critical self-reflexive practice on the level of community relations and activism. He further points to the critical relevance of Marxist and Postmarxist theories as important resources for the study of polyamory and calls for the study of the contradictions within poly culture from a materialist point of view. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media New York

    Classical and alternative pathway complement activation are not required for reactive systemic AA amyloid deposition in mice

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    During induction of reactive systemic amyloid A protein (AA) amyloidosis in mice, either by chronic inflammation or by severe acute inflammation following injection of amyloid enhancing factor, the earliest deposits form in a perifollicular distribution in the spleen. Because the splenic follicular localization of immune complexes and of the scrapie agent are both complement dependent in mice, we investigated the possible complement dependence of AA amyloid deposition. In preliminary experiments, substantial depletion of circulating C3 by cobra venom factor had little effect on experimental amyloid deposition. More importantly, mice with targeted deletion of the genes for C1q or for both factor B and C2, and therefore unable to sustain activation, respectively, of either the classical complement pathway or both the classical and alternative pathways, showed amyloid deposition similar to wild type controls. Complement activation by either the classical or alternative pathways is thus not apparently necessary for the experimental induction of systemic AA amyloid in mice
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