27 research outputs found
Global nuts and local mangoes: a critical reading of the UNDP Growing Sustainable Business Initiative in Kenya
This article provides a conceptual and empirical assessment of UN brokered partnerships that seek to deepen or create inclusive and sustainable agricultural supply chains in sub-Saharan Africa. More specifically it appraises the decision-making mechanisms, processes of partnership brokerage and project implementation within the UNDP Growing Sustainable Business Initiative (GSB) in Kenya. The paper argues that the lack of bottom-up participation in decision-making mechanisms and the predominantly economic imperatives driving the GSB partnership projects have failed to reach out to the partnerships’ intended beneficiaries—Kenyan small producers of nuts and mangoes. In conclusion it is suggested that opening up the GSB platform might hold the promise of reconciling sustainable business models with (some) poverty reduction
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Drama and discounting in the relational dynamics of corporate social responsibility
Employing theoretical resources from Transactional Analysis (TA) and drawing from interviews with managers dealing with social or environmental issues in their role, we explain how CSR activity provides a context for dramas in which actors may ignore, or discount aspects of self, others, and the contexts of their work as they maintain and reproduce the roles of Rescuers, Persecutors and Victims. In doing so, we add to knowledge about CSR by providing an explanation for how the contradictions of CSR are avoided in practice even when actors may be aware of them. Specifically, we theorise how CSR work can produce dramatic stories where adversity is apparently overcome, whilst little is actually achieved at the social level. We also add to the range of psychoanalytic tools used to account for organisational behaviours, emphasising how TA can explain the relational dynamics of CSR
Um estudo bibliométrico sobre a violência de gênero
Resumo A violência de gênero, apesar de global, é socialmente invisível, sendo urgente o avanço de produção científica sobre esse tema. Um estudo bibliométrico majora a demanda de debates ao demonstrar que as pesquisas abrangeram poucos países, ignoraram as consequências dos danos e ainda são, apesar de sua ampliação, incipientes. Este artigo objetivou descrever o panorama da produção científica sobre violência de gênero, procurando tecer uma análise crítica diante da magnitude da demanda. Buscaram-se artigos em inglês, pelos descritores gender e violence, na base de dados Web of Science, de 1982 a 2012, excluindo-se os textos de áreas específicas, que tratavam da violência geral ou adotaram "gênero" em substituição a sexo, restando 450 artigos. A bibliometria ratificou que as mulheres encontram-se em mais situações de violências, apesar da referência a crianças e adolescentes, homossexuais e homens. A produtividade das pesquisas em diversas áreas do conhecimento é crescente, revelando sua natureza multidisciplinar. Apenas 26 países sediaram estudos, número reduzido diante da amplitude do problema. A maioria dos estudos não abordou as consequências da violência de gênero, demonstrando uma importante lacuna na produção científica. Esta pesquisa evidenciou pontos pouco explorados pela produção científica, servindo de orientação para futuros estudos
Critical perspectives on CSR and development: What we know, what we don't know, and what we need to know
The May 2005 issue of International Affairs addressed the theme of critical perspectives on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in the developing world. The aim of this article is to take the debate a step further. Five researchers and practitioners on corporate social responsibility and development in various regions in the developing world - Central America, Pakistan, China, Vietnam, Argentina and India - using knowledge gained by their empirical research, argue that the management-oriented perspective on CSR and development is one-sided. While recognizing that critical approaches to the question have emerged, there is still a need to know which issues should form part of a critical research agenda on CSR and development. In this article the authors seek to fill this gap in order to facilitate a more in-depth investigation of what CSR initiatives can or cannot achieve in relation to improving conditions of workers and communities in the global South. They suggest that a critical research agenda on CSR and development should encompass four areas: a) the relationship between business and poverty reduction; b) the impact of CSR initiatives; c) governance dimensions of CSR; and d) power and participation in CSR. Such an alternative critical approach focuses on society's most vulnerable groups and adopts a 'people-centred' perspective as a counterbalance to the dominant 'business case' perspective. The authors conclude that this has significant implications for CSR practice. © The Royal Institute of International Affairs 2006
Endoglin regulates nitric oxide-dependent vasodilatation
23 p.-8 fig.Endoglin is a membrane glycoprotein that plays an important role in cardiovascular development and angiogenesis. We examined the role of endoglin in the control of vascular tone by measuring nitric oxide (NO)-dependent vasodilation in haploinsufficient mice (Eng(+/-)) and their Eng(+/+) littermates. The vasodilatory effect of acetylcholine, bradykinin, and sodium nitroprusside was assessed in anesthetized mice; in isolated, perfused hindlimbs; and in aortic rings. The substantial hypotensive and vasodilatory response induced by acetylcholine and bradykinin in Eng(+/+) was markedly reduced in Eng(+/-) mice. Both kinds of animals had similar responses to sodium nitroprusside, suggesting that the deficient vasodilatory effect is not due to a NO response impairment. Urinary and plasma concentrations of nitrites, a NO metabolite, were lower in Eng(+/-) than in Eng(+/+) mice. The levels of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) in kidneys and femoral arteries were about half in Eng(+/-) than in Eng(+/+) mice and were also reduced in primary cultures of aortic endothelial cells from Eng(+/-) compared with those from Eng(+/+) mice. Furthermore, overexpression or suppression of endoglin in cultured cells induced a marked increase or decrease in the protein levels of eNOS, respectively. Thus, our results in vivo and in vitro demonstrate a relationship between endoglin and NO-dependent vasodilation mediated by the regulation of eNOS expression.This study was supported by grants from Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología(SAF2001/1701 to J. M. López-Novoa and SAF2000-0132 to C. Bernabéu); Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid (to C. Bernabéu); and Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria (PI020200 to C.Bernabéu). Dr. M. Jerkic is supported by a Visiting Professor Tenure of the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología.Peer reviewe