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Taking your eyes off the objective: the relationship between income sources and satisfaction with achieving objectives in the UK third sector
As a major funder of the Third Sector, recent cuts in UK Government spending may require Third Sector Organisations (TSOs) to turn to other sources of funding, such as trading activities and public sector contracts. It has been argued that such changes can lead to economic objectives overwhelming social ones. This study utilises data from the 2008 National Survey of Third Sector Organisations (NSTSO) to examine the relationship between the use of these alternative funding sources and organisations’ perceived success in achieving their primary objectives. As predicted by theory, a negative relationship between income from trading activities and achievement of objectives is found. Interestingly public sector contracts do not show a significant link with achievement of objectives. Social enterprise should therefore not be seen as an unqualified panacea for difficulties in social welfare provision in the UK, but public sector contracts need not necessarily lead to a loss of those elements that make the Third Sector provision attractive
A network-based view of regional growth
The need to better understand the mechanisms underlying regional growth patterns is widely recognised. This paper argues that regional growth is partly a function of the value created through inter-organisational flows of knowledge within and across regions. It is proposed that investment in calculative networks by organisations to access knowledge is a form of capital, termed network capital, which should be incorporated into regional growth models. The paper seeks to develop a framework to capture the value of network capital within these models based on the spatial configuration and the nature of the knowledge flowing through networks
Hydrodynamics of photoionized columns in the Eagle Nebula, M 16
We present hydrodynamical simulations of the formation, structure and
evolution of photoionized columns, with parameters based on those observed in
the Eagle Nebula. On the basis of these simulations we argue that there is no
unequivocal evidence that the dense neutral clumps at heads of the columns were
cores in the pre-existing molecular cloud. In our simulations, a variety of
initial conditions leads to the formation and maintenance of near-equilibrium
columns. Therefore, it is likely that narrow columns will often occur in
regions with large-scale inhomogeneities, but that observations of such columns
can tell us little about the processes by which they formed. The manner in
which the columns in our simulations develop suggests that their evolution may
result in extended sequences of radiation-induced star formation.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, Latex, MN macros, in press with MNRA
THE REAL RATE OF PROTECTION: THE STABILIZING EFFECT OF PRICE POLICIES AND DIRECT PAYMENTS
Traditional indicators of protection refer to the level effect of price policies on income and ignore the stabilizing effect. We derive a measure of the real rate of protection which incorporates these dual dimensions. The income stabilizing effects of price policy protection lead to a greater level of real protection than would be measured conventionally. Computed real protection rates for the European Union wheat market over the pre- and post-MacSharry reform periods were found to be some 3-5 percent greater than traditional indicators. Moreover, the compensatory payments to farmers following the 1992 reforms had a major risk reducing impact.International Relations/Trade,
Steady-state attitude control propulsion systems computer program documentation and user's manual, volume 1
Computer program documentation and user manual for steady state attitude control propulsion system - vol.
Adherence to cardiac rehabilitation guidelines: a survey of rehabilitation programmes in the United Kingdom
Two key recommendations of recent guidelines are that cardiac rehabilitation requires the skills of a range of professionals and that the patient should receive a menu based programme after an individual assess ment of needs. A previous survey of 25 cardiac rehabilitation programmes found little congruence with these guidelines and noted that physicians were particularly unlikely to be involved. We extended this inquiry to include all of the discoverable rehabilitation programmes in the United Kingdom
Steep Slopes and Preferred Breaks in GRB Spectra: the Role of Photospheres and Comptonization
The role of a photospheric component and of pair breakdown is examined in the
internal shock model of gamma-ray bursts. We discuss some of the mechanisms by
which they would produce anomalously steep low energy slopes, X-ray excesses
and preferred energy breaks. Sub-relativistic comptonization should dominate in
high comoving luminosity bursts with high baryon load, while synchrotron
radiation dominates the power law component in bursts which have lower comoving
luminosity or have moderate to low baryon loads. A photosphere leading to steep
low energy spectral slopes should be prominent in the lowest baryon loadComment: ApJ'00, in press; minor revs. 10/5/99; (uses aaspp4.sty), 15 pages, 3
figure
The relationship between induced fluid structure and boundary slip in nanoscale polymer films
The molecular mechanism of slip at the interface between polymer melts and
weakly attractive smooth surfaces is investigated using molecular dynamics
simulations. In agreement with our previous studies on slip flow of
shear-thinning fluids, it is shown that the slip length passes through a local
minimum at low shear rates and then increases rapidly at higher shear rates. We
found that at sufficiently high shear rates, the slip flow over atomically flat
crystalline surfaces is anisotropic. It is demonstrated numerically that the
friction coefficient at the liquid-solid interface (the ratio of viscosity and
slip length) undergoes a transition from a constant value to the power-law
decay as a function of the slip velocity. The characteristic velocity of the
transition correlates well with the diffusion velocity of fluid monomers in the
first fluid layer near the solid wall at equilibrium. We also show that in the
linear regime, the friction coefficient is well described by a function of a
single variable, which is a product of the magnitude of surface-induced peak in
the structure factor and the contact density of the adjacent fluid layer. The
universal relationship between the friction coefficient and induced fluid
structure holds for a number of material parameters of the interface: fluid
density, chain length, wall-fluid interaction energy, wall density, lattice
type and orientation, thermal or solid walls.Comment: 33 pages, 14 figure
Classification by means of B-spline potential functions with applications to remote sensing
A method is presented for using B-splines as potential functions in the estimation of likelihood functions (probability density functions conditioned on pattern classes), or the resulting discriminant functions. The consistency of this technique is discussed. Experimental results of using the likelihood functions in the classification of remotely sensed data are given
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