8,845 research outputs found
The distinctive challenges and opportunities for creating leadership within social enterprises
Purpose
The purpose of this study is to present a systematic assessment of the distinctive challenges and opportunities associated with creating leadership within the realm of social enterprise. A modified and expanded form of Grintâs leadership lenses heuristic framework (i.e. person, position, process, performance, purpose and place) is used to examine and highlight what is particular about creating leadership in social enterprises by virtue of their distinctive missions, strategic contexts, legal forms and organisational structures and cultures. Based on this initial exploration, five research priorities are identified to better understand and then develop leadership practice in the social enterprise realm.
Design/methodology/approach
An enhanced heuristic framework for systematically examining leadership within the social enterprise research literature has been applied, drawing on the leadership practice literature. The application is illustrated through six instrumental case studies.
Findings
While there are a number of similarities between leading in the social enterprise realm and leading within the private, public and not-for-profit sectors, the levels of complexity, ambiguity and the lack of an established theoretical and practical knowledge base makes creating leadership in the social enterprise sector that much more challenging. On the positive side of the ledger, the fact that the purpose is at the core of social enterprise means that it is relatively easier to use the purpose to create a basis for common meaningful action, compared to leadership within the private and public sectors. Related to this, given the strongly local or âglocalâ nature of social enterprise, a ready opportunity exists for leaders to draw upon a place as a strategic resource in mobilising followers and other stakeholders. The novel, uncertain and pioneering nature of a social enterprise is also arguably more tolerant and accommodating of a leadership mindset that focuses on posing questions regarding âwickedâ problems compared to public, private for-profit and, indeed, traditional not-for-profit sector organisations.
Originality/value
As far as we can ascertain, this is the first systematic attempt to examine the distinctive challenges and opportunities associated with creating leadership within the social enterprise realm. The application of the heuristic framework leads to the identification of five key inter-related lines of empirical research into leadership practices within social enterprises.
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What should economists measure? The implications of mass production vs. mass customization
Consumer behavior ; Production (Economic theory) ; Productivity
Country-bashing tariffs: do bilateral trade deficits matter?
Balance of trade ; Tariff
Variety, globalization, and social efficiency
This paper puts recent work on the benefits of variety into the context of an exact quantitative analysis of the Dixit-Stiglitz-Krugman model of monopolistic competition. We show that the gains from international trade are almost completely determined by the increase in variety and not economies of scale, and that the social efficiency question is quantitatively insignificant. These results follow from allowing the number of varieties to affect the elasticity of demand facing each firm. Most applications of the DSK model abstract from varietyâs effect by assuming that the elasticity of demand facing each firm equals the elasticity of substitution in a CES utility function, thus fixing the output of each firm by the resulting markup over marginal costs. Finally, we develop a precise expression for real per capita income with any number of sectors. ; Also issued as Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute Working Paper No. 15
Nonlinear Propagation of Light in One Dimensional Periodic Structures
We consider the nonlinear propagation of light in an optical fiber waveguide
as modeled by the anharmonic Maxwell-Lorentz equations (AMLE). The waveguide is
assumed to have an index of refraction which varies periodically along its
length. The wavelength of light is selected to be in resonance with the
periodic structure (Bragg resonance). The AMLE system considered incorporates
the effects non-instantaneous response of the medium to the electromagnetic
field (chromatic or material dispersion), the periodic structure (photonic band
dispersion) and nonlinearity. We present a detailed discussion of the role of
these effects individually and in concert. We derive the nonlinear coupled mode
equations (NLCME) which govern the envelope of the coupled backward and forward
components of the electromagnetic field. We prove the validity of the NLCME
description and give explicit estimates for the deviation of the approximation
given by NLCME from the {\it exact} dynamics, governed by AMLE. NLCME is known
to have gap soliton states. A consequence of our results is the existence of
very long-lived {\it gap soliton} states of AMLE. We present numerical
simulations which validate as well as illustrate the limits of the theory.
Finally, we verify that the assumptions of our model apply to the parameter
regimes explored in recent physical experiments in which gap solitons were
observed.Comment: To appear in The Journal of Nonlinear Science; 55 pages, 13 figure
Studies on Nucleic Acid Reassociation Kinetics: Retarded Rate of Hybridization of RNA with Excess DNA
The rate of reaction of excess double-stranded bacteriophage phi X174 and plasmid RSF2124 DNA drivers with enzymatically synthesized asymmetric RNA tracers was measured. Other reactions were carried out with excess Escherichia coli DNA and E. coli RNA labeled in vivo. RNA and DNA fragment lengths were held approximately equal. For each case it was shown that in DNA excess the rate constant for RNA· DNA hybridization is 3- to 4.5-fold lower than that of the renaturation rate constant for the driver DNA. This retardation was also observed in pseudo-first-order hybridization reactions driven by excess strand-separated RSF2124 DNA. It was concluded that the rate constant for RNA· DNA hybridization depends partially on which species is in excess
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