4,594 research outputs found

    Rethinking inventories in the digital age: the case of the Old Bailey

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    This article builds on the digitized version of the Old Bailey Proceedings (www.oldbaileyonline.org) by first extracting the indictments from the surrounding text and then subjecting the words they include, and objects they describe, to analysis. This entails working with a corpus of over a million words. At this scale, close reading no longer serves the historian well. It would require far more time than is reasonable or feasible; and a strategy of ‘distant reading’ is adopted here to allow analysis to focus on larger units of text

    Martian atmospheric compositional analysis- its biological significance first quarterly progress report, 15 may - 15 aug. 1965

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    Biological significance of Martian atmospheric compositional analysis, and life detection studies of chemical free energy in surface matte

    Chattel Loan Act -- Holder in Due Course

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    The Relationship Between Toxic Leadership, Organizational Citizenship, and Turnover Behaviors Among San Diego Nonprofit Paid Staff

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    Toxic leadership is associated with a number of negative consequences to the long-term health and welfare of people in organizations. Destructive leader styles redirect employee efforts from mission accomplishment to self-protection and survival behaviors, undermining the organization. Increased demand and decreased funding are characteristic of the nonprofit sector. Therefore, successful nonprofit organizations tend to rely on creativity and innovation to ensure their communities are appropriately and sufficiently sustained. Supportive, not toxic, leadership helps foster organizational environments that encourage prudent risk-taking and innovation. This concurrent mixed methods study explored the relationship between toxic leadership and organizational citizenship and turnover behaviors among 471 survey respondents from a sample of San Diego nonprofit paid staff, and considered the influence commitment has on those relationships. An open ended question for those who reported experiencing toxic leadership provided additional context and depth as to why employees stayed in an organization in spite of abusive supervision. The findings of the study are of interest to leaders and managers of nonprofit organizations to develop policies and training processes as they strive to recruit, retain and develop talented employees. Toxic supervision was found to exist in San Diego nonprofit organizations. However, its effect on organizational citizenship (OCB) and turnover behaviors was inconclusive, as was the influencing effect of commitment, in this study. However, both commitment and OCB-like ideas emerged as stated reasons that participants did not leave the organization, as did career, resilience and opportunity concepts. These identified variables suggest complex relationships that act in concert to influence staff retention indicating possible important opportunities for future research

    Alien Registration- Hitchcock, Ira J. (Limestone, Aroostook County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/35084/thumbnail.jp

    Bicycle Safety Supplement to Teacher Buggy Driving Safety Curriculum

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    Controlled adsorption of metallic nanoparticles on polymeric microcapsules with a view to growing secondary continuous metal films

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    Small, volatile actives cannot be micro-encapsulated efficiently over the lifetime of a product using current encapsulation techniques. This is due to the inherent porosity of the polymeric membranes which are used as the capsule shell material. We have developed a method for preventing undesired loss of encapsulated actives which prevents loss of the core into ethanol over 90 days +. Oil core microcapsules are produced using oil-in-water emulsification followed by co-solvent extraction to precipitate a polymeric shell around the oil core. Metallic catalytic nanoparticles are then physically adsorbed onto the microcapsules and used to catalyse the growth of a continuous secondary metallic film via electroless deposition. It is important to have good control over the primary nanoparticle adsorption density which requires a good control over and understanding of the original nanoparticle (NP) synthesis. In this work we use Quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to demonstrate the ability to control NP adsorption densities by varying several parameters such as concentration of polymeric stabiliser used in the original NP dispersion synthesis and NP dispersion concentration. We show that NP films form in seconds and demonstrate good adsorption energies. We also discuss/explain the semi regular hexagonal packing of the NP cores we observe under TEM. Please click Additional Files below to see the full abstract
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