3,912 research outputs found

    Reputation Management: Corporate Image and Communication

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    Reputation was, is, and always will be of immense importance to organisations, whether commercial, governmental or not-for-profit. To reach their goals, stay competitive and prosper, good reputation paves the organisational path to acceptance and approval by stakeholders. Even organisations operating in difficult ethical environments - perhaps self-created - need to sustain a positive reputation where possible. Argenti & Druckenmiller argue that, “organisations increasingly recognize the importance of corporate reputation to achieve business goals and stay competitive” (Argenti & Druckenmiller 2004, p.368). While there are many recent examples of organisations whose leadership and business practice behaviours have destroyed their reputation, such as Enron, Arthur Andersen, Tyco and WorldCom, the positive case for reputation is that it has fostered continued expansion of old stagers like Johnson & Johnson and Philips and innovators such as Cisco Systems, who top recent rankings of the most respected organisations in the US and Europe. What is evident is that reputation does not occur by chance. It relates to leadership, management, and organisational operations, the quality of products and services, and - crucially - relationships with stakeholders. It is also connected to communication activities and feedback mechanisms. This chapter will consider the definitions and nature of reputation and its management, best practice and evaluation. It will also discuss the boundaries between branding, image and reputation

    Small Community Level Social Accounting Matrices and their Application to Determining Marine Resource Dependency

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    Social accounting matrices (SAMs) are constructed for two communities on the West Coast which have previously been classified as natural resource dependent; Westport, Washington and Newport, Oregon. The SAMs are constructed in an innovative way that allows for the economic dependency and utilization of natural resources, especially marine resources, to be examined in detail. The SAM utilizes data from a mix of publically available secondary sources and data collected directly from local governments. The SAMs are then subjected to an economic base analysis to develop indices of economic dependence. The results of this study indicate that while fishing and fish processing are no longer a major source of gross measures of output, employment, wages, or gross regional product (GRP) in any state or even county on the West Coast; from an economic export income perspective cities such as Westport, Washington are heavily dependent on these industries for their economic base.Marine resource dependency, social accounting matrix, economic base, Community/Rural/Urban Development, Environmental Economics and Policy, Research Methods/ Statistical Methods, R11, R15, Q22,

    Erasmus, Luther, and Aquinas

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    One of the most recent additions to the growing Roman Catholic literature on Luther is a study of his doctrine of the bondage of the will in the light-as the subtitle of the German edition says-of the Biblical and ecclesiastical tradition. Its author, Harry J. McSorley, endorses Luther\u27s own view of the outstanding importance of his De servo arbitrio as dealing with the most central issue of his reforming work. He also endorses Luther\u27s claim that his primary concern was a reformation, not simply of practical abuses but of doctrine, and he fully agrees that no area of doctrine in Luther\u27s time was more in need of reform than that of grace and free will. What is more, he argues that Luther\u27s view on this subject is in intention, if not always in his way of expressing it, entirely in harmony with authentic Catholic teaching, of which in his time there was a widespread and disastrous ignorance

    A comparison between the pharmacological responsiveness of sensory nerve endings and sympathetic ganglion cells

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    The effects of a number of agonists, antagonists and local anaesthetics on electrical activity in fibres of the rabbit saphenous nerve in situ, and. on the surface potential of the isolated superior cervical ganglion of the rat have been studied.Acetylcholine, carbachol, methacholine, pilocarpine, Mcl A343, nicotine, tetramethylammonium, dimethylphenylpiperazinium, histamine, 5- hydroxytryptamine, bradykinin and angiotensin induced an afferent discharge in fibres of the rabbit saphenous nerve on intra- arterial injection into the skin. The same compounds depolarized the isolated . ganglion, although the rank orders of potency differed somewhat in the two preparations. The use of the appropriate agonists and. antagonists showed. that the cholinoceptive sites could be subdivided. into muscarinic and nicotinic receptors, the latter predominating in both tissues.Adrenaline and noradrenaline first augmented and then depressed. the acetylcholine -induced. discharge in the saphenous nerve; these effects were mediated via a- adrenoreceptors. Isoprenaline produced a prolonged small. increase in the acetylcholine -induced. discharge and this effect was mediated via ß- adrenoreceptors. In the isolated ganglion, adrenaline and. noradrenaline produced. a weak, a- receptormediated, hyperpolarization.Drugs possessing a nicotinic action gave rise to a secondary hyperpolarization of the ganglion cells which followed the initial depolarization on washing the tissue. Some evidence was obtained suggesting that this hyperpolarization was not a rebound phenomenon consequent upon the initial depolarization, but was due to the release of catecholamine within the ganglion. Drugs with a muscarinic action gave rise to a late post-washing depolarization which appeared to be mediated via muscarinic receptors.Guanethidine blocked. the action of acetylcholine on the saphenous nerve and. on the ganglion, but only in the former preparation did the effect resemble the adrenergic neurone blocking action of the drug in being reversed by d.examphetamine.No evidence was forthcoming to support the concept of the existence of a synaptic gap associated. with sensory endings: natural touch responses were still present at a time when drug - induced discharges had, been extinguished by antagonistic agents.A brief study was made of the effect of local anaesthetics and. drugs with local anaesthetic properties upon both preparations. It is suggested. that the rabbit saphenous nerve preparation may provide an additional means of assessing the potency and. durability of local anaesthetic agents.The results are discussed. in relation to the effects of the drugs on other non-myelinated neuronal membranes

    Second beyond the tide: a history of Wayland, Massachusetts, for secondary schools

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    Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University PLEASE NOTE: page 71 is missing from the physical thesis

    THE ECONOMIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS OF COLORADO'S GOLF INDUSTRY

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    Community/Rural/Urban Development, Environmental Economics and Policy,

    Culture of Ornamental Proteas

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    Descriptions of selected proteas, as well as those suggested for landscape use and cut flowers, are included. Guidelines for propagation, cultivation and marketing are given
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