553 research outputs found
Actors and networks or agents and structures: towards a realist view of information systems
Actor-network theory (ANT) has achieved a measure of popularity in the analysis of information systems. This paper looks at ANT from the perspective of the social realism of Margaret Archer. It argues that the main issue with ANT from a realist perspective is its adoption of a `flat' ontology, particularly with regard to human beings. It explores the value of incorporating concepts from ANT into a social realist approach, but argues that the latter offers a more productive way of approaching information systems
The institutional shaping of management: in the tracks of English individualism
Globalisation raises important questions about the shaping of economic action by cultural factors. This article explores the formation of what is seen by some as a prime influence on the formation of British management: individualism. Drawing on a range of historical sources, it argues for a comparative approach. In this case, the primary comparison drawn is between England and Scotland. The contention is that there is a systemic approach to authority in Scotland that can be contrasted to a personal approach in England. An examination of the careers of a number of Scottish pioneers of management suggests the roots of this systemic approach in practices of church governance. Ultimately this systemic approach was to take a secondary role to the personal approach engendered by institutions like the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, but it found more success in the different institutional context of the USA. The complexities of dealing with historical evidence are stressed, as is the value of taking a comparative approach. In this case this indicates a need to take religious practice as seriously as religious belief as a source of transferable practice. The article suggests that management should not be seen as a simple response to economic imperatives, but as shaped by the social and cultural context from which it emerges
Study protocol for screening and diagnosis of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) among young people sentenced to detention in Western Australia
Introduction: Prenatal alcohol exposure can cause lifelong disability, including physical, cognitive and behavioural deficits, known as fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD). Among individuals with FASD, engagement with justice services is common. Little is known about the prevalence of FASD among young people engaged with the Australian justice system. This study aims to establish FASD prevalence among sentenced young people in detention in Western Australia (WA), and use the findings to develop a screening tool for use among young people entering detention. Translation of these results will guide the management and support of young people in detention and will have significant implications on the lives of young people with FASD and the future of Australian youth justice services. Methods and analysis: Any sentenced young person in WA aged 10-17...years 11...months is eligible to participate. Young people are assessed for FASD by a multidisciplinary team. Standardised assessment tools refined for the Australian context are used, acknowledging the language and social complexities involved. Australian diagnostic guidelines for FASD will be applied. Information is obtained from young people, responsible adults, teachers and custodial officers. Individualised results and management plans for each young person are communicated to the young person and responsible adult. Prevalence of FASD will be reported and multivariate methods used to identify variables most predictive of FASD and to optimise the predictive value of screening. Ethics and dissemination: Approvals have been granted by the WA Aboriginal Health Ethics Committee, University of WA Human Research Ethics Committee, Department of Corrective Services, and Department for Child Protection and Family Support. Anonymised findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed manuscripts, presentations and the media. Extensive consultation with stakeholders (including government agencies, detention centre staff, community service providers, the young people and their families or carers) will be ongoing until findings are disseminated and translated
Improving the public house in Britain, 1920-40: Sir Sydney Nevile and 'social work'
The ‘improved public house’ movement in the inter-war years was a central part of the shift towards retailing by the brewing industry. An important part of the reform movement was the alliance between certain brewers, notably Whitbread, and ‘social workers’, particularly those associated with the University settlement movement in London. Using the papers of Sydney Nevile, the importance of a particular social milieu is outlined, calling into question attempts to align the movement to improve public houses with transatlantic Progressivism. Rather, this alliance drew upon longstanding English traditions of public service and religious affiliation amongst a fraction of the gentry
Fetal alcohol spectrum disorder and youth justice: a prevalence study among young people sentenced to detention in Western Australia
Objectives: To estimate the prevalence of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) among young people in youth detention in Australia. Neurodevelopmental impairments due to FASD can predispose young people to engagement with the law. Canadian studies identified FASD in 11%–23% of young people in corrective services, but there are no data for Australia. Design: Multidisciplinary assessment of all young people aged 10–17 years 11 months and sentenced to detention in the only youth detention centre in Western Australia, from May 2015 to December 2016. FASD was diagnosed according to the Australian Guide to the Diagnosis of FASD. Participants: 99 young people completed a full assessment (88% of those consented; 60% of the 166 approached to participate); 93% were male and 74% were Aboriginal. Findings: 88 young people (89%) had at least one domain of severe neurodevelopmental impairment, and 36 were diagnosed with FASD, a prevalence of 36% (95% CI 27% to 46%). Conclusions: This study, in a representative sample of young people in detention in Western Australia, has documented a high prevalence of FASD and severe neurodevelopmental impairment, the majority of which had not been previously identified. These findings highlight the vulnerability of young people, particularly Aboriginal youth, within the justice system and their significant need for improved diagnosis to identify their strengths and difficulties, and to guide and improve their rehabilitation
Organization theory and military metaphor: time for a reappraisal?
A ‘conventional’ use of military metaphor would use it to convey attributes such as hierarchical organization, vertical communication and limited autonomy. This is often used in contrast to a looser form of organization based on the metaphor of the network. However, this article argues that military practice is more complex, with examples of considerable autonomy within the constraints of central direction. It is suggested that not only might this be a more useful metaphor for many contemporary organizations, but also that simplistic uses of military metaphor divert our attention away from the functions that management hierarchies play. The discussion is embedded within a critical realist account of metaphor, arguing for both its value and the need for its further development
How and When Socially Entrepreneurial Nonprofit Organizations Benefit From Adopting Social Alliance Management Routines to Manage Social Alliances?
Social alliance is defined as the collaboration between for-profit and nonprofit organizations. Building on the insights derived from the resource-based theory, we develop a conceptual framework to explain how socially entrepreneurial nonprofit organizations (SENPOs) can improve their social alliance performance by adopting strategic alliance management routines. We test our framework using the data collected from 203 UK-based SENPOs in the context of cause-related marketing campaign-derived social alliances. Our results confirm a positive relationship between social alliance management routines and social alliance performance. We also find that relational mechanisms, such as mutual trust, relational embeddedness, and relational commitment, mediate the relationship between social alliance management routines and social alliance performance. Moreover, our findings suggest that different types of social alliance motivation can influence the impact of social alliance management routines on different types of the relational mechanisms. In general, we demonstrate that SENPOs can benefit from adopting social alliance management routines and, in addition, highlight how and when the social alliance management routines–social alliance performance relationship might be shaped. Our study offers important academic and managerial implications, and points out future research directions
Measuring, in solution, multiple-fluorophore labeling by combining Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy and photobleaching
Determining the number of fluorescent entities that are coupled to a given
molecule (DNA, protein, etc.) is a key point of numerous biological studies,
especially those based on a single molecule approach. Reliable methods are
important, in this context, not only to characterize the labeling process, but
also to quantify interactions, for instance within molecular complexes. We
combined Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS) and photobleaching
experiments to measure the effective number of molecules and the molecular
brightness as a function of the total fluorescence count rate on solutions of
cDNA (containing a few percent of C bases labeled with Alexa Fluor 647). Here,
photobleaching is used as a control parameter to vary the experimental outputs
(brightness and number of molecules). Assuming a Poissonian distribution of the
number of fluorescent labels per cDNA, the FCS-photobleaching data could be
easily fit to yield the mean number of fluorescent labels per cDNA strand (@
2). This number could not be determined solely on the basis of the cDNA
brightness, because of both the statistical distribution of the number of
fluorescent labels and their unknown brightness when incorporated in cDNA. The
statistical distribution of the number of fluorophores labeling cDNA was
confirmed by analyzing the photon count distribution (with the cumulant
method), which showed clearly that the brightness of cDNA strands varies from
one molecule to the other.Comment: 38 pages (avec les figures
Adipose tissue pathways involved in weight loss of cancer cachexia
White adipose tissue (WAT) constitutes our most expandable tissue and largest
endocrine organ secreting hundreds of polypeptides collectively termed adipokines.
Changes in WAT mass induce alterations in adipocyte secretion and function, which
are linked to disturbed whole-body metabolism. Although the mechanisms controlling
this are not clear they are dependent on changes in gene expression, a complex process
which is regulated at several levels. Results in recent years have highlighted the role of
small non-coding RNA molecules termed microRNAs (miRNAs), which regulate gene
expression via post-transcriptional mechanisms. The aim of this thesis was to
characterize global gene expression levels and describe novel miRNAs and adipokines
controlling the function of human WAT in conditions with pathological increases or
decreases in WAT mass. Obesity and cancer cachexia were selected as two models
since they are both clinically relevant and characterized by involuntary changes in
WAT mass.
In Study I, expressional analyses were performed in subcutaneous WAT from cancer
patients with or without cachexia and obese versus non-obese subjects. In total, 425
transcripts were found to be regulated in cancer cachexia. Pathway analyses based on
this set of genes revealed that processes involving extracellular matrix, actin
cytoskeleton and focal adhesion were significantly downregulated, whereas fatty acid
metabolism was upregulated comparing cachectic with weight-stable cancer subjects.
Furthermore, by overlapping these results with microarray data from an obesity study,
many transcripts were found to be reciprocally regulated comparing the two conditions.
This suggests that WAT gene expression in cancer cachexia and obesity are regulated
by similar, albeit opposing, mechanisms.
In Study II, the focus was on the family of
fibroblast growth factors (FGFs), members of which have recently been implicated in
the development of obesity and insulin resistance. A retrospective analysis of global
gene expression data identified several FGFs (FGF1/2/7/9/13/18) to be expressed in
WAT. However, only one, FGF1, was actively secreted from WAT and predominantly
so from the adipocyte fraction. Moreover, FGF1 release was increased in obese
compared to non-obese subjects, but was not normalized by weight loss. Although the
clinical significance of these findings is not yet clear, it can be hypothesized that FGF1
may play a role in WAT growth, possibly by promoting fat cell proliferation and/or
differentiation.
In Study III, we identified adipose miRNAs regulated in obesity. Out
of eleven miRNAs regulated by changes in body fat mass, ten controlled the production
of the pro-inflammatory chemoattractant chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2 (CCL2)
when overexpressed in fat cells and for two, miR-126 and -193b, signaling circuits
were defined.
In Study IV, a novel adipokine, semaphorin 3C (SEMA3C), was
identified by combining transcriptome and secretome data. Detailed studies focusing on
SEMA3C revealed that this factor was secreted from adipocytes and induced the
expression of extracellular matrix and matricellular genes in preadipocytes.
Furthermore, SEMA3C mRNA levels correlated with interstitial fibrosis and insulin
resistance in WAT derived from subjects with a wide range in BMI.
In summary, the results presented in this thesis have delineated transcriptional
alterations in WAT in two clinically relevant conditions, obesity and cancer cachexia.
This has allowed the identification of novel adipokines and microRNAs with potential
pathophysiological importance. These findings form the basis for further studies aiming
at understanding the central role of WAT in disorders associated with metabolic
complications
- …