4,089 research outputs found
Radical research as research at the roots: Practitioner self-image, public relations and ethics
Semantically, radical derives from âradixâ, the Latin for root. This paper argues that little public relations research goes back to the roots of actual practice and addresses this neglect through a project focusing on practitioner accounts of their work. When considering public relations ethics, practitioner self-images and cultural values become an essential research component. In addressing this neglected area of research, this paper examines the subjective perceptions of public relations practitioners regarding their role, commitments, and responsibilities within the framework of their specific culture and national history. In considering practitioner testimonials about professional integrity, briefs, and goals, especially as members of the society and nation to which they belong, the paper engages with ethical aspects of the practice from a cultural perspective that assumes different cultures can have different ethical expectations. In revealing the impact of features that are often âtaken for grantedâ in one country, the paper uses the example of four generations of practitioners who served one major institution in Israel to suggest how similar research at the professional roots in other nations might enable knowledge of international similarities and difference in relation to ethics in action
Normal subgroups of mapping class groups and the metaconjecture of Ivanov
We prove that if a normal subgroup of the extended mapping class group of a
closed surface has an element of sufficiently small support then its
automorphism group and abstract commensurator group are both isomorphic to the
extended mapping class group. The proof relies on another theorem we prove,
which states that many simplicial complexes associated to a closed surface have
automorphism group isomorphic to the extended mapping class group. These
results resolve the metaconjecture of N.V. Ivanov, which asserts that any
"sufficiently rich" object associated to a surface has automorphism group
isomorphic to the extended mapping class group, for a broad class of such
objects. As applications, we show: (1) right-angled Artin groups and surface
groups cannot be isomorphic to normal subgroups of mapping class groups
containing elements of small support, (2) normal subgroups of distinct mapping
class groups cannot be isomorphic if they both have elements of small support,
and (3) distinct normal subgroups of the mapping class group with elements of
small support are not isomorphic. Our results also suggest a new framework for
the classification of normal subgroups of the mapping class group.Comment: 57 pages, 11 figure
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