342 research outputs found
Without Reservation: Benjamin Reifel and American Indian Acculturation
Review of: Without Reservation: Benjamin Reifel and American Indian Acculturation, by Sean J. Flynn
Skunk Hill: A Native Ceremonial Community in Wisconsin
Review of: "Skunk Hill: A Native Ceremonial Community in Wisconsin," by Robert A. Birmingham
For To All Those Who Have, More Will be Given: The Matthew Effect, Nonprofit Organizations, and the Adoption of Internet Technology
This study assesses the adoption of Internet-based communication by nonprofit organizations. The research literature posits that the Internet may serve as a ‘leveler’ between rich and poor organizations by lowering the transaction costs of communication, by lowering costs of access to information and by reducing the scale-economy advantages that larger and well-resourced organizations usually enjoy. This literature contrasts with Robert Merton’s Matthew Effect, in which the better-resourced advance and the lesser resourced do not (Merton and Zuckerman 1973(1968)). This study attempts to determine what characteristics distinguish the nonprofit organizations that adopt Internet technologies. This study uses a multi-method approach to ascertain these structural and financial characteristics (Campbell and Fiske 1959; Brewer and Hunter 1989; Judd, Smith et al. 1991). The data collected during this research include case studies of Roman Catholic higher education institutions, content analysis of institutional WWW sites, and a large-scale national survey of randomly chosen nonprofit organizations as a baseline data set on adoption and usage of the Internet among v nonprofit organizations. Results of these analyses suggest that while earlier patterns of adoption perdure in some nonprofit organizations and other organizations have Internet connectivity, as of the year 2000—some six years after the general availability of WWWbased technologies—the adoption of some of these technologies has already occurred, calling into question the Matthew Effect and comparable concerns about a “Digital Divide.” Nearly 90 percent of nonprofit organizations use electronic mail and have access to the Internet as of July 2000. However, only two-thirds of nonprofit organizations have WWW sites and only 20 percent of organizations use their respective WWW sites for electronic fundraising. Regression analysis suggests a positive correlation between the use of Internet technologies and the variables: organization size, assets, information technology (IT) investment, IT personnel, and history of innovation adoption. The same analysis finds a negative correlation between Internet usage and available financial resources
Knot Fertility and Lineage
In this paper, we introduce a new type of relation between knots called the
descendant relation. One knot is a descendant of another knot if
can be obtained from a minimal crossing diagram of by some number of
crossing changes. We explore properties of the descendant relation and study
how certain knots are related, paying particular attention to those knots,
called fertile knots, that have a large number of descendants. Furthermore, we
provide computational data related to various notions of knot fertility and
propose several open questions for future exploration.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, 14 table
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