948 research outputs found

    Constitutional Law - Eighth Amendment - Aversion Therapy as Cruel and Unusual Punishment

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    The Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit has held that injection of the drug apomorphine as an agent of aversion therapy constitutes cruel and unusual punishment violative of the eighth amendment when administered to nonconsenting inmates of the Iowa Security Medical Facility. Knecht v. Gillman, 488 F.2d 1136 (8th Cir. 1973)

    Constructing deal networks : brokers as network 'architects' in the U.S. IPO market and other examples.

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    We introduce the concept of the network architect to extend theory explaining how brokers create and manage structural holes in mediated markets. We argue that a broker's social resources and dependence on the market, along with exogenous deal conditions, influence the broker's motivations and willingness to make tradeoffs between long-term and short-term considerations when constructing deal networks. We develop our model and propositions in the context of the U.S. initial public offerings market and then generalize these arguments to other market contexts

    Diversification and hybridization in firm knowledge bases in nanotechnologies

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    The paper investigates the linkages between the characteristics of technologies and the structure of a firms' knowledge base. Nanotechnologies have been defined as converging technologies that operate at the nanoscale, and which require integration to fulfill their economic promises. Based on a worldwide database of nanofirms, the paper analyses the degree of convergence and the convergence mechanisms within firms. It argues that the degree of convergence in a firm's nano-knowledge base is relatively independent from the size of the firm's nano-knowledge base. However, while firms with small nano-knowledge bases tend to exploit convergence in each of their patents/publications, firms with large nano-knowledge bases tend to separate their nano-R&D activities in the different established fields and achieve diversity through the juxtaposition of the output of these independent activitie

    The burden of celebrity: The impact of CEO certification contests on CEO pay and performance

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    We used the results from Financial World's widely publicized certification contest, CEO of the Year, to investigate the impact of such contests on firm performance and executive compensation. A certification contest ranks actors on performance criteria that key stakeholders accept as credible and legitimate. We found that certified CEOs received higher compensation than noncertified CEOs when performance was high but lower remuneration when performance was poor. Although certifications generate positive abnormal returns when they are first announced, the longer-term impact of CEO certifications appears to be negative

    A heuristic approach to interdisciplinary theory development : nurturing a renaissance in strategic management

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    Includes bibliographical references (35-37)

    The sources of management innovation: when firms introduce new management practices

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    Management innovation is the introduction of management practices new to the firm and intended to enhance firm performance. Building on the organizational reference group literature, this article shows that management innovation is a consequence of a firm's internal context and of the external search for new knowledge. Furthermore the article demonstrates a trade-off between context and search, in that there is a negative effect on management innovation associated with their joint occurrence. Finally the article shows that management innovation is positively associated with firm performance in the form of subsequent productivity growth
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