357 research outputs found
The Ambivalence of Promising Technology
Issues of responsibility in the world of nanotechnology are becoming explicit with the emergence of a discourse on âresponsible developmentâ of nanoscience and nanotechnologies. Much of this discourse centres on the ambivalences of nanotechnology and of promising technology in general. Actors must find means of dealing with these ambivalences. Actorsâ actions and responses to ambivalence are shaped by their position and context, along with strategic games they are involved in, together with other actors. A number of interviews were conducted with industrial actors with the aim of uncovering their ethical stances towards responsible development of nanotechnology. The data shows that standard repertoires of justification of nanotechnological development were used. Thus, the industrial actors fell back on their position and associated responsibilities. Such responses reinforce a division of moral labour in which industrial actors and scientists can focus on the progress of science and technology, while other actors, such as NGOs, are expected to take care of broader considerations, such as ethical and social issues
Humour and laughter in meetings: influence, decision-making and the emergence of leadership
Recent constructions view leadership as a process of social influence which coordinates processes of change. Moreover, such processes are not necessarily linked to role hierarchy but may be emergent and distributed within teams. However, the micro-processes through which this occurs are not well understood. The significance of the paper lies in its contribution to an understanding of the emergence of leadership in teams, and in particular how humour and laughter are drawn on as a resource by which to exert social influence. Here, we use the construct of the play frame, ‘non serious’ talk in which participants jointly construct extended humorous sequences as improvisations, to analyse how team members manoeuvre in order to accomplish influence, decision-making and leadership. In taking this approach we are not concerned with considerations of how managers use jokes to exercise control, or workers use humour to subvert management. Rather, we examine how humour, and particularly the laughter it engenders, can contribute to an understanding of organizations as centred on communication and founded on the precept that organizations are ‘talked into being’. Here we show how talk in a play frame institutes a context which can be utilised by participants to exert influence and we demonstrate the highly contingent and contextual nature of the emergence of leadership within teams
Effectiveness and tolerability of pegylated interferon alfa2b in combination with ribavirin for treatment of chronic hepatitis C: the PegIntrust study
Background and study aims : Large international clinical trials
conducted in the past 5 years rapidly improved the treatment of chronic
hepatitis C; however, it is unclear whether the advances seen in clinical
trials are being paralleled by similar improvements in routine clinical
practice. PegIntrust is a Belgian community based trial evaluating
the sustained virological response.
Patients and Methods : Observational study of 219 patients
receiving pegylated interferon alfa-2b (1.5 ÎŒg/kg/wk) and weight-based
ribavirin (800-1200 mg/day) for 48 weeks. Primary study end point
was sustained virological response (SVR), defined as undetectable
HCV RNA 6 months after the completion of treatment.
Results : In total, 108 patients (49.3 %) had undetectable HCV
RNA at the end of therapy, 91 (41.6%) attaining SVR. Of the 111
patients without an end-of-treatment response, 28 were non-responders,
and 21 had virological breakthrough. In total, 134 patients
attained early virological response (EVR); 88 (65.7%) of those patients
attained SVR. In contrast, 82 (96.5 %) of the 85 patients who did not
attain EVR also did not attain SVR. Age, fibrosis score and baseline
viral load were identified as important predictors of treatment outcome.
The most frequently reported serious adverse events resulting in treatment
discontinuation were anemia (n = 10), fatigue/asthenia/malaise (n
= 6) and fever (n = 3).
Conclusion : Our data indicate that treatment of chronic hepatitis C
with PEG-IFN alfa-2b plus weight-based ribavirin results in favourable
treatment outcomes in a Belgian cohort of patients treated in community-
based clinical practice
Theoretical studies of the historical development of the accounting discipline: a review and evidence
Many existing studies of the development of accounting thought have either been atheoretical or have adopted Kuhn's model of scientific growth. The limitations of this 35-year-old model are discussed. Four different general neo-Kuhnian models of scholarly knowledge development are reviewed and compared with reference to an analytical matrix. The models are found to be mutually consistent, with each focusing on a different aspect of development. A composite model is proposed. Based on a hand-crafted database, author co-citation analysis is used to map empirically the entire literature structure of the accounting discipline during two consecutive time periods, 1972â81 and 1982â90. The changing structure of the accounting literature is interpreted using the proposed composite model of scholarly knowledge development
Dominion cartoon satire as trench culture narratives: complaints, endurance and stoicism
Although Dominion soldiersâ Great War field publications are relatively well known, the way troops created cartoon multi-panel formats in some of them has been neglected as a record of satirical social observation. Visual narrative humour provides a âbottom-upâ perspective for journalistic observations that in many cases capture the spirit of the army in terms of stoicism, buoyed by a culture of internal complaints. Troop concerns expressed in the early comic strips of Australians, Canadians, New Zealanders and British were similar. They shared a collective editorial purpose of morale boosting among the ranks through the use of everyday narratives that elevated the anti-heroism of the citizen soldier, portrayed as a transnational everyman in the service of empire. The regenerative value of disparagement humour provided a redefinition of courage as the very act of endurance on the Western Front
Iâm not joking! The strategic use of humour in stories of racism
This study examines the use of humour by Black football coaches in England as a rhetorical device against racism. The paper draws on humour studies and critical race theory to illustrate signs of humour as defence. Research on humour has popularly explored the ambiguities and qualities of humour and, in particular, joke telling through its use as a foil to stem racial ills is less well understood. Where previous work has focused on explicit joke telling/banter in sport, this paper examines how techniques of humour are used in everyday racialised experiences. The use of techniques of humour enables feelings of subordination, and humiliation to be transposed into forms of resistance, while its physiological and psychological benefits can lead to inter-racial relief and catharsis. The paper concludes that techniques of humour remain underexplored as important tools of resistance to everyday racism
Community indicators: a framework for observing and supporting community activity on Cloudworks
Cloudworks (Cloudworks.ac.uk) is a social networking site designed for sharing, finding and discussing learning and teaching ideas and experiences. Design and development of the site has been based on an iterative analysis, development and implementation approach, underpinned by ongoing research and evaluation. To this end, we have been seeking to establish strategies to enable us to systematically position transactions and emerging patterns of activity on the site so that we can more reliably use the empirical evidence we have gathered (Galley, 2009a, Galley 2009b, Alevizou et al., 2010a, Conole et al, 2010). In this paper we will introduce a framework we have developed for observing and supporting community development on the site. In building our framework we have used empirical evidence gathered from the site, then related it to the literature from a range of disciplines concerned with professional and learning communities. We link research relating to distance learning communities with studies into Computer Mediated Communication (CMC), self-organising communities on the web, and wider research about the nature of learning organisations and continuous professional development. We argue that this framework can be used to capture the development of productive communities in the space (i.e. how far cohesive, productive groups can be said to be emerging or not) and also help focus futur
Reflectivity, Reflexivity, Reflexivism: IR's 'Reflexive Turn' - and Beyond
The notion of âreflexivityâ has been so intimately tied to the critique of positivism and empiricism in International Relations (IR) that the emergence of post-positivism has naturally produced the anticipation of a âreflexive turnâ in IR theory. Three decades after the launch of the post-positivist critique, however, reflexive IR has failed to impose itself as either a clear or serious contender to mainstream scholarship. Reasons for this failure include: the proliferation of different understandings of âreflexivityâ in IR theory that entail significantly different projects and concerns for IR scholarship; the equation of âreflexive theoryâ with âcriticalâ and âemancipatory theoryâ and the consequent confusion of ethical/normative issues with strictly epistemic/theoretical ones; and the refusal to consider reflexive IR as a âresearch programmeâ concerned with empirical knowledge, not just meta-explanation. The development of reflexivity in IR theory as a sustainable cognitive and praxeological effort is nonetheless possible â and still needed. This article suggests what taking the âreflexive turnâ would really entail for IR.</jats:p
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