204 research outputs found
Paradigms of flexibility: a systematic review of research on workplace flexibility
As flexibility has become a sine-qua-non of the contemporary workplace, we performed a critical review of its different uses and understandings in business and management research. Analyzing the literature on workplace flexibility in the period 1970-2018, using a four-part conceptual framework, and on the basis of subsequent content analysis of 262 most relevant publications, we identify two axes of tension embedding scholarly work on flexibility: the flexibility of vs. flexibility for organizations and employees, and a favorability-criticality tension. We further explain how internal divisions are attributable to three different paradigms of flexibility (two of which dominate), resulting from divergent sets of assumptions regarding: its target, rationale, approach to it, as well as methodologies involved in studying it. We propose a research agenda indicating the ways in which paradigmatic underpinnings of flexibility research may be further clarified and divisions between the paradigms made sense of
Workplace flexibility across the lifespan
As demographic changes impact the workplace, governments, organizations and workers are looking for ways to sustain optimal working lives at higher ages. Workplace flexibility has been introduced as a potential way workers can have more satisfying working lives until their retirement ages. This paper presents a critical review of the literature on workplace flexibility across the lifespan. It discusses how flexibility has been conceptualized across different disciplines, and postulates a definition that captures the joint roles of employer and employee in negotiating workplace flexibility that contributes to both employee and organization benefits. Moreover, it reviews how flexibility has been theorized and investigated in relation to older workers. The paper ends with a future research agenda for advancing understanding of how workplace flexibility may enhance working experiences of older workers, and in particular focuses on the critical investigation of uses of flexibility in relation to older workers
Finite Element Analysis to model ischemia experienced in the development of device related pressure ulcers.
Pressure ulcers are a common occurrence of damage to skin. Severity ranges from slightly
discoloured skin to full thickness tissue damage which can be fatal in some cases. Engineering effort,
typically developing computational models had made significant progress in the understanding and
demonstration of the formation mechanism of pressure ulcers with the aetiology of excessive stress
however relatively limited attempts had been made to develop relevant models for pressure ulcers
caused by ischemia. The aim of this paper is to present evidence of a computational model
developed to simulate ischemic pressure ulcer formation and demonstrate the established
relationship between the computational data and the acquired clinically relevant experimental data
by utilising laser Doppler velocimetry. The application of the presented computational model and
the established relationship allows the evaluation of the effect of a mechanical loading to the
cutaneous blood flow velocity which is a step closing to understand and evaluate a mechanical load
to the formation of pressure ulcers caused by ischemia
A SWOT Analysis of Indigenous Language Use in Agricultural Radio Programming in Nigeria
This chapter investigates the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of indigenous
language use in agricultural radio programming in Nigeria within the theoretical frame of
diffusion of innovations as well as the theory of planned behaviour. This discourse affirms
existing assertions that using indigenous languages in agricultural radio programming can
guarantee farmers' access to information on issues of agro materials, utility applications, support
accessories, funding, technology, conservation, marketing, and pedagogy. The study concludes
that indigenous language use in agricultural radio programming engages agricultural programme
producers and farmers through their opinion leaders. It recommends that the use of indigenous
languages in agricultural radio programming in Nigeria should continue. However, the country's
agro policy should protect all farmers irrespective of cultural or ethnic divides; and specifically
cater to the needs of minority ethnic groups of farmer
Principles for the design and operation of engineer-to-order supply chains in the construction sector
By integrating the approaches of Forrester and Burbidge [Forrester, J. W. 1961. Industrial Dynamics. Pegasus Communications; Burbidge, J. L. 1961. “The “New Approach” to Production.” Production Engineer 40: 769–784], a set of five design principles have emerged which provide a foundation for sound supply chain design. The ‘FORRIDGE’ principles have since been shown to be a powerful guide for effective design of make-to-stock supply chains. However, some have questioned the applicability of generic supply chain thinking, arguing for a tailored approach. Hence, the goal here is to investigate how these principles should be adapted for engineer-to-order (ETO) industries, such as construction, capital goods and shipbuilding. The empirical elements draw on an extensive study of 12 suppliers and two large contractors in the construction industry. Supply chain tactics are identified for this range of companies, which are matched with real world problems, and linked with the FORRIDGE principles. This results in an additional ‘Design for X’ principle being proposed. The contributions made are the adaptation of established principles for the ETO sector, and the framework behind these principles
Heterodoxy:Challenging orthodoxies about heterosexuality
The intention of this article is to challenge orthodoxies regarding heterosexuality, which have tended to constitute it as a static monolith and queer as the only potential site for a less oppressive sexuality. By contrast, we consider heterodox possibilities for pleasure and change within the realm of the dominant. We examine three examples – divergence, transgression and subversion – and then consider some terminologies that might flesh out experiential aspects of these examples of social change in heterosexuality. This conjunction offers a means to acknowledge heterosexuality’s coercive aspects while attending to its more egalitarian, less orthodox forms.Chris Beasley, Mary Holmes, Heather Broo
Embedded Interests and the Managerial Local State: Methanol Fuel-Switching in China
This paper analyzes the determinants of alternative automobile fuel regulation and development support with a particular focus on methanol fuel. We find that embedded interests, bureaucratic reforms, and political circumstances in the Chinese national, provincial, and municipal governments have all shaped policy outcomes in this area. The paper seeks to explain why at, the national level, support for alternative fuels has waned and finds that the concerns of state oil majors and disorganization during the process of national bureaucratic restructuring have been the deciding factors. Interestingly, at the sub-national level promotion of methanol continues unabated in some places. At the local level, business relationships as well as the embedded economic and personal interests of local leaders help to explain managerial local government behavior and sheds light on why government officials actively create and manage methanol fuel business opportunities through local standardization, subsidies, and hands-on management of SOE opposition. The switch towards methanol fuel was more successful in localities where individuals, either government officials or enterprise managers, formed an alliance and made this their 'pet projects'. The analysis draws on 55 interviews conducted between June and October 2010 in Shanxi, a major coal-producing province which has supported methanol fuel-switching programs for over ten years. The findings contribute to debates about the condition of the local state in China. The argument put forward in this paper is that because of limited state capacity at the central level and insufficient concerns for the development of alternative fuels in the short-term, some sub-national governments with strong embedded interests promote certain alternative fuels by taking on active managerial roles, adopting creative and ad-hoc strategies to fill in the national level policy gap at the local level
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