4,270 research outputs found
Exploring Dynamic Capabilities in Open Business Models: The Case of a Public-Private Sector Partnership
The case explores and offers insight into the boundary-spanning dynamic capabilities
evidenced by the entrepreneurial CEO of a private-sector family-owned firm from the
sensing, seizing and transforming/reconfiguring perspectives during the opportunity
identification, evaluation and pursuit of the co-creation of a public-private sector partnership
in collaboration with the CEO of a public-sector firm. This partnership, which is situated in a
city-region in the North of England, is seen through the lens of an open business model
whereby value is co-created and captured outside the boundary of a single firm, and which
involves significant financial uncertainty being assigned from the public to the private sector
The Controversy over Maltbyâs Hong Kong Dispatch
The recent release of the full text of Major-General CM. Maltbyâs Official Dispatch as the General Officer Commanding at Hong Kong (Public Record Office WO 106/240113) prompted British and Canadian newspapers to run sensational stories quoting Maltbyâs criticisms of the discipline and battlefield performance of the Canadian battalions. Maltbyâs statements, which were censored when the Dispatch was initially released, require a detailed examination and will be discussed in a future issue of CMH. In addition, the Spring 1994 issue will carry an article by Paul Dickson on âCrerar and the Decision to Garrison Hong Kong.â For the present we are publishing an exchange of correspondence, dated January 1948, between Lieutenant-Colonel G.W.L. Nicholson, then Deputy Director of the Army Historical Section, and Brigadier John H. Price who was second-in-command of the Royal Rifles of Canada in Hong Kong. Brigadier Price was asked to comment, not on the censored Dispatch, but on extracts from a draft report prepared by the Historical Section of the British Cabinet Office. This report contained the substance of the most serious charges Maltby made about the conduct of the Royal Rifles. For the information of the reader, other officers mentioned in the exchange include Brigadier C. Wallis, Indian Army, commander of the East Brigade (to which the Royal Rifles belonged), Lieutenant-Colonel W.J. Home, commander of the Royal Rifles, Lieutenant-Colonel J.L.R. Sutcliffe, Commanding Officer, Winnipeg Grenadiers, Brigadier J.K. Lawson, Commanding Officer, âCâ Force (as the Canadian contingent was known) and Colonel P. Hennessy, Lawsonâs second-in-command
Common Territory? : Comparing the IMP Approach with Economic Geography
The IMP research tradition has always been open to the cross-fertilisation of ideas with other social science disciplines that study similar phenomena. Recent years have seen a growing interest among IMP researchers in phenomena such as regional strategic networks, spatial clusters and innovation and new business development in networks. IMP papers published on these topics are increasingly citing conceptual frameworks and empirical findings from the field of economic geography. This paper discusses the development of IMP thought and the development of thought in economic geography (particularly evolutionary economic geography), and compares their approaches to the analysis of regional phenomena. The goal is to identify key ideas from economic geography that have been under-exploited in IMP research, in order to suggest original new approaches available to IMP researchers interested in these fields. A number of such ideas are explored: proximity as a multi-dimensional and multi-faceted concept; the distinction between, and relative importance of, learning activities arising automatically from being embedded in a community (local or regional buzz) and learning activities arising from positive investment in channels of communication (pipelines); the concept of relational capital developed by economic geographers; and, conceptualisations of externalities commonly used in the study of spatial clustersPeer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Equal or unequal opportunities within the criminal justice system from a rural and regional perspective
Approximately a third of NSW criminal charges are dealt with in rural and regional courts. About a third of prisoners in NSW goals come from rural and regional NSW. However, resources â legal and therapeutic â available for rural and regional defendants do not match those available for offenders located in metropolitan areas. Twenty-one significant disparities are identified. Three sources of these disparities are also identified â court proceedings, geographical remoteness, and government failures. The majority of identified disparities, it is argued, is attributable to government failure. Recent changes to sentencing law and practices in the administration of sentences are looked at from a rural perspective and potential new and continuing disparities are identified. The limitations arising from the disparities to the exercise of judicial discretion with a rural setting are explained particularly with reference to sentencing
Stably free modules and the unstable classification of 2-complexes
For all , we show that there exists a group and a non-free
stably free -module of rank . We use this to show that, for
all , there exist homotopically distinct finite -complexes with
fundamental group and with Euler characteristic exceeding the minimal value
over by . This resolves Problem D5 in the 1979 Problem List of C. T. C.
Wall. We also explore a number of generalisations and present a potential
application to the topology of closed smooth 4-manifolds.Comment: 29 pages. Potential application to 4-manifolds added. Introduction
rewritten and now includes wider discussion. Several new problems added to
the problems list in Section 12. Minor corrections made throughout. Comments
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Explicit finite-volume time-marching calculations of total temperature distributions in turbulent flow
A method was developed which calculates two-dimensional, transonic, viscous flow in ducts. The finite volume, time-marching formulation is used to obtain steady flow solutions of the Reynolds-averaged form of the Navier-Stokes equations. The entire calculation is performed in the physical domain. This paper investigates the introduction of a new formulation of the energy equation which gives improved transient behavior as the calculation converges. The effect of variable Prandtl number on the temperature distribution through the boundary layer is also investigated. A turbulent boundary layer in an adverse pressure gradient (M = 0.55) is used to demonstrate the improved transient temperature distribution obtained when the new formulation of the energy equation is used. A flat plate turbulent boundary layer with a supersonic free-stream Mach number of 2.8 is used to investigate the effect of Prandtl number on the distribution of properties through the boundary layer. The computed total temperature distribution and recovery factor agree well with the measurements when a variable Prandtl number is used through the boundary layer
Projective modules over integral group rings and Wall's D2 problem
In the first part of this thesis, we study the problem of when P âZG â QâZG
implies P â Q for projective ZG modules P, Q where ZG is the integral group
ring of a finite group G. Our main result is a general condition on G under
which cancellation holds. This builds upon the results of R. G. Swan and our
condition includes all G for which cancellation was previously known to hold.
In the second part of this thesis, we explore applications of these results to
Wallâs D2 problem which asks whether every cohomologically 2-dimensional
finite complex X is homotopy equivalent to a finite 2-complex. The case
where G â Ï1pXq has 4-periodic cohomology has been the source of many
proposed counterexamples to Wallâs D2 problem and is of special interest due
to its implications on the possible cell structures of finite PoincarÂŽe 3-complexes.
Our main result is a solution to Wallâs D2 problem for several infinite families
of groups with 4-periodic cohomology, building upon the results of F. E. A.
Johnson
Arab consumer attitutes towards international marketing as a result of the ongoing Arab Spring : a systematic literature review
Paper from the International Conference on Contemporary Marketing Issues (ICCI), Thessaloniki, 13-15 June 2012 The Middle East has been recently and continues to be affected by a phenomenon referred to popularly as the âArab Springâ. The phenomenon appears to have sparked a wave of candidness amongst Arab consumers in a way that hitherto was not apparent. A question as to whether the uprisings are about the pursuit of democracy, political reform or freedom of speech remains to be settled. The purpose of this discussion paper is to ask what effects the Arab Spring may have on marketing theory and practice. To that end, the paper presents the results of a systematic literature review pertaining to marketing in the Middle East. A quantitative bibliometric method of citation analysis is deployed to identify the range of themes that have been previously researched. From this review, the paper identifies the particular relevance of the Arab Spring phenomenon to international marketing theory and practice. Thus, this study makes the first attempt to conceptualize what the Arab Spring means for future international marketing theory and practice and marks the start of a first investigation, and potential beginning of a longitudinal study into the phenomenon as it continues to unfold, grounded firmly in the marketing discipline
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