74 research outputs found
RadioActive101-Learning through radio, learning for life: an international approach to the inclusion and non-formal learning of socially excluded young people
This article describes an original international approach to inclusion and non-formal learning of socially excluded young people, through participatory internet radio - RadioActive101. First, we critically discuss the social and digital exclusion of young people. We then describe our approach - that includes partic-ipatory action research methods that are influenced by the work of Dewey and Freire, and operate as a process of complex intervention. This supports the inclusive co-production of radio content in ways that support non-formal learning in two EU contexts – the UK and Portugal. We then summarise and compare a qualitative investigation of RadioActive101. This showed positive results, with important similarities and differences between the two contexts. Participants reported that RadioActive101 was motivating and contributed to the development of contemporary skills, and also stimulated improvements in psychosocial dimensions such as confidence (self-efficacy) and self-esteem. This investigation informed the development of an original recog-nition system for non-formal learning that maps EU Key Competences for Lifelong Learning to radio practic-es and activities that are recognised through electronic badges. Our final reflections emphasise that in order to support the non-formal learning of socially excluded young people we must foreground our attention to foster-ing psychosocial dimensions alongside developing contemporary competences
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New Corporate Responsibilities in the Digital Economy
Theories that relate to digital technology and CSR have been dominated by online CSR communication and disclosure practices. Almost entirely absent in such CSR research is a consideration of new areas of responsibility that are emerging from digital technologies and related online communication platforms. We argue that responsibility in the use of digital technologies requires more than just legal compliance. We therefore ask what it means to be a responsible corporation in the digital economy? We then establish an extended agenda for responsibility in the digital economy by identifying potential areas of irresponsibility and highlighting new responsibilities related to, for example: use of consumer data; service continuation; control of digital goods, and; the use of artificial intelligence. In doing so, we address a need to theorize responsibilities derived from the use of technologies that have been previously silent in CSR literature or only tangentially discussed within the domain of CSR communication, even as they are a focus in other fields (especially legal compliance, or organizational performance)
Comprehending digital disparities in Africa
Experiences from various locations in several sub-Saharan African countries have been carefully selected in this collection with the aim of providing an updated account on the digital divide and its impact in Africa
On optimum tin-walled closed cross section
This paper deals with the problem of finding
a minimum area thin-walled closed cross section with pre-
scribed constant thickness and flexural rigidity. The cross
sectionis supposed to be double symmetrical with respect to
the Cartesianreference system(x0y),where 0 isthe centroid
of the cross section, and subjected to a bending moment
M. The vector M is taken to be non-coincident with the x
or y axis. This means that to represent the flexural rigidity
both Ixand Iymoments of inertia are required. The func-
tion describing the centerline of the thin-walled closed cross
section is taken as unknown.
The solution of this problem shows that such a centerline
is an ellipse
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