1,138 research outputs found
Work Life Benefit Needs for the City of Lafayette, Colorado
Successful organizations create great people places. They focus on both human and financial assets by placing a heavy emphasis on meeting the needs of employees. Work and personal life are often viewed as competing priorities, yet some organizations are realizing the complimentary nature of the two. Results are a more collaborative approach to achieving work and personal objectives, with benefits to both the organization and the employee. Utilizing an action research methodology of diagnosing, action planning, implementing, and evaluating, this paper will evaluate work life benefit issues at the City of Lafayette. Action research is a cyclical inquiry process that involves diagnosing a problem situation, planning action steps, implementing, and evaluating the intervention
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A proposed physical education program for the fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth grade boys in the two elementary schools of Arlington, Texas
The problem of this study was to formulate a proposed physical education program for the fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth grade boys in the two elementary schools of Arlington, Texas. The plan will be based upon accepted educational purposes and sound physical education concepts
The Mg2+ requirements of nonactivated and activated rat liver phosphorylase kinase Inhibition of the activated form by free Mg2+
AbstractIncubation of rat liver phosphorylase kinase in the presence of MgATP results in a time-dependent increase in activity, i.e., activation. Determination of the magnitude of activation depends, in large part, on the relative concentrations of Mg2+ and ATP used in the phosphorylase kinase activity assay, such that as the Mg2+ to ATP ratio increases less activation is detectable. Prior to activation, maximal activity of nonactivated phosphorylase kinase requires a 2–3 fold molar excess of Mg2+ (i.e., free Mg2+) over ATP. MgATP-dependent activation of the enzyme results in an alteration in the free Mg2+ requirement such that the activity of the activated enzyme is sharply inhibited by the free cation. Inhibition by free Mg2+ of the activated enzyme is rapidly reversed by removal of free Mg2+ but is not affected by addition of Ca2+. Both nonactivated and activated forms of enzyme appear to be inhibited by free ATP4–. The results show that the use of high concentrations of free Mg2+ in the phosphorylase kinase activity assay can blunt or completely obscure changes in enzyme activity following activation of the enzyme
Transaction Costs and Outsourcing Decisions in Small and Medium-Sized Family Firms
An important difference between family and nonfamily firms, and among different types of family firms, is in the way they make outsourcing decisions and thereby define the boundaries of the firm. The authors propose that transaction costs arising from human asset specificity, threats of opportunism, and risk aversion will make small-and medium-sized family firms operating with technologies of low to medium complexity less likely to outsource than comparable nonfamily firms. The authors also argue that the limiting influence of transaction costs on the outsourcing decisions of family firms may be mitigated by variations in available suppliers, goals, and ownership structures
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A roadmap for China to peak carbon dioxide emissions and achieve a 20% share of non-fossil fuels in primary energy by 2030
As part of its Paris Agreement commitment, China pledged to peak carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions around 2030, striving to peak earlier, and to increase the non-fossil share of primary energy to 20% by 2030. Yet by the end of 2017, China emitted 28% of the world's energy-related CO2 emissions, 76% of which were from coal use. How China can reinvent its energy economy cost-effectively while still achieving its commitments was the focus of a three-year joint research project completed in September 2016. Overall, this analysis found that if China follows a pathway in which it aggressively adopts all cost-effective energy efficiency and CO2 emission reduction technologies while also aggressively moving away from fossil fuels to renewable and other non-fossil resources, it is possible to not only meet its Paris Agreement Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) commitments, but also to reduce its 2050 CO2 emissions to a level that is 42% below the country's 2010 CO2 emissions. While numerous barriers exist that will need to be addressed through effective policies and programs in order to realize these potential energy use and emissions reductions, there are also significant local environmental (e.g., air quality), national and global environmental (e.g., mitigation of climate change), human health, and other unquantified benefits that will be realized if this pathway is pursued in China
Normative Alethic Pluralism
Some philosophers have argued that truth is a norm of judgement and have provided a variety of formulations of this general thesis. In this paper, I shall side with these philosophers and assume that truth is a norm of judgement. What I am primarily interested in here are two core questions concerning the judgement-truth norm: (i) what are the normative relationships between truth and judgement? And (ii) do these relationships vary or are they constant? I argue for a pluralist picture—what I call Normative Alethic Pluralism (NAP)—according to which (i) there is more than one correct judgement-truth norm and (ii) the normative relationships between truth and judgement vary in relation to the subject matter of the judgement. By means of a comparative analysis of disagreement in three areas of the evaluative domain—refined aesthetics, basic taste and morality—I show that there is an important variability in the normative significance of disagreement—I call this the variability conjecture. By presenting a variation of Lynch’s scope problem for alethic monism, I argue that a monistic approach to the normative function of truth is unable to vindicate the conjecture. I then argue that normative alethic pluralism provides us with a promising model to account for it
Pennsylvania Folklife Vol. 35, No. 3
• The First German Broadside and Newspaper Printing of the American Declaration of Independence • An Overview of Flax and Linen Production in Pennsylvania • A Civil War Soldier\u27s Tale • Samuel W. Pennypacker\u27s Translation of the Haslibacher Hymn • An Autobiographical Sketch of Mrs. Sarah Hunter • In Memoriam: Earl F. Robacker, 1904-1985 • Aldes un Neies / Old & Newhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/pafolklifemag/1111/thumbnail.jp
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