1,795 research outputs found

    Learning from the Past and Future: Leadership for a New Era

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    The Leadership Learning Community (LLC) believes that it is important to ask ourselves what in our current consciousness about leadership needs to change if we are to tackle the problems that we all care so deeply about. For the past eight years the Leadership Learning Community has engaged hundreds of leadership development funders, program staff and researchers in learning about how to cultivate leadership that is inclusive, rooted in community values, action-oriented and focused on results. We have identified the need for a much broader and more culturally inclusive approach to cultivating and sustaining leadership that focuses on nurturing and supporting teams, networks, and communities; and prepares individuals to lead collectively with others whose leadership cultures and practices differ from their own

    Friendship networks and social status

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    In empirical studies of friendship networks participants are typically asked, in interviews or questionnaires, to identify some or all of their close friends, resulting in a directed network in which friendships can, and often do, run in only one direction between a pair of individuals. Here we analyze a large collection of such networks representing friendships among students at US high and junior-high schools and show that the pattern of unreciprocated friendships is far from random. In every network, without exception, we find that there exists a ranking of participants, from low to high, such that almost all unreciprocated friendships consist of a lower-ranked individual claiming friendship with a higher-ranked one. We present a maximum-likelihood method for deducing such rankings from observed network data and conjecture that the rankings produced reflect a measure of social status. We note in particular that reciprocated and unreciprocated friendships obey different statistics, suggesting different formation processes, and that rankings are correlated with other characteristics of the participants that are traditionally associated with status, such as age and overall popularity as measured by total number of friends.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure

    Note on Logarithmic Switchback Terms in Regular and Singular Perturbation Expansions

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    The occurrence of logarithmic switchback is studied for ordinary differential equations containing a parameter k which is allowed to take any value in a continuum of real numbers and with boundary conditions imposed at x = Īµ and x = āˆž. Classical theory tells us that if the equation has a regular singular point at the origin there is a family of solutions which varies continuously with k, and the expansion around the origin has log x terms for a discrete set of values of k. It is shown here how nonlinearity enlarges this set so that it may even be dense in some interval of the real numbers. A log x term in the expansion in x leads to expansion coefficients containing log Īµ (switchback) in the perturbation expansion. If for a given value of k logarithmic terms in x and Īµ occur they may be obtained by continuity from neighboring values of k. Switchback terms occurred conspicuously in singular-perturbation solutions of problems posed for semi-infinite domain x ā‰„ Īµ. This connection is historical rather than logical. In particular we study here switchback terms for a specific example using methods of both singular and regular perturbations

    The Penetration of a Finger into a Viscous Fluid in a Channel and Tube

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    The steady-state shape of a finger penetrating into a region filled with a viscous fluid is examined. The two-dimensional and axisymmetric problems are solved using Stokes equations for low Reynolds number flow. To solve the equations, an assumption for the shape of the finger is made and the normal-stress boundary condition is dropped. The remaining equations are solved numerically by covering the domain with a composite mesh composed of a curvilinear grid which follows the curved interface, and a rectilinear grid parallel to the straight boundaries. The shape of the finger is then altered to satisfy the normal-stress boundary condition by using a nonlinear least squares iteration method. The results are compared with the singular perturbation solution of Bretherton (J. Fluid Mech., 10 (1961), pp. 166ā€“188). When the axisymmetric finger moves through a tube, a fraction mm of the viscous fluid is left behind on the walls of the tube. The fraction mm was measured experimentally by Taylor (J. Fluid Mech., 10 (1961), pp. 161ā€“165) as a function of the dimensionless parameter ĀµU/T. The numerical results are compared with the experimental results of Taylor

    A Fixed-Point Algorithm for Closed Queueing Networks

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    In this paper we propose a new efficient iterative scheme for solving closed queueing networks with phase-type service time distributions. The method is especially efficient and accurate in case of large numbers of nodes and large customer populations. We present the method, put it in perspective, and validate it through a large number of test scenarios. In most cases, the method provides accuracies within 5% relative error (in comparison to discrete-event simulation)

    Caldwell, Gaylon Oral History Interview

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    Dean of Elbert Covell College and professor of Political Science (1970-1982). Topics include:Early impressions of Covell College faculty, effect of Latin American economics on Covell student enrollment, imbalance among Latin American students enrolled at Covell, how American students benefited from education at Covell, attitude of University administration toward deansā€™ and facultyā€™s participation in policy formation, relations with other deans and department chairs at College of the Pacific.https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/esohc/1069/thumbnail.jp

    Panel: "Politics and Religion in America" Abstract

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    "It's the real thing": performance and murder in Sweden.

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    The article investigates contemporary experimental theatre in Sweden. It sums up and probes the implications of Sju tre (1999), the most controversial theatre production in Sweden in modern times. Lars Nor'n, the playwright and director, staged a dialogue involving three real convicts, of whom two were outspoken Nazis. The article explores the uncertain boundaries between aesthetic, ethical, and political issues with ramifications regarding the wider public opinion in Sweden, on racism and crime. It is methodologically motivated by reception research, performativity and idealogical discourse. By virtue of its performative impact, the theatrical event proved to be directly linked with critical questions of democracy, although conceivably at the expense of the artistic integrity of the director and the theatre as creator of public opinion. The article points to a paradox of democracy whereby hate speech is at once allowed and unjustified in the theatre as national arena. The actors are described and analysed as parasites in a societal body, that in Sju tre, becomes politically epitomised

    The Ambivalence of Catholic Compassion

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