18,126 research outputs found
When affordable homeownership means doing it yourself
An affordable homeownership program that began with residents rolling up their sleeves and digging into hard work has evolved to become more efficient and effective. Franklin County's Paul Douglas explains why Rural Development Inc. got started and how its on-the-job learning has led to changes.Housing - Prices ; Housing - Massachusetts
Cultures of unruly bricolage : 'debadging' and the cultural logic of resistance
Arnould and Thompson note that the "marketplace has become a pre-eminent source of mythic and symbolic resources through which [people] construct narratives of identity' (2005: 871). Not only do consumers "actively rework and transform symbolic meanings" (ibid: 871), but in everyday practices they use "marketplace cultures [to] define their symbolic boundaries through an ongoing opposition to dominant lifestyle norms and mainstream consumer sensibilities" (ibid: 874). The paper examines identity work done with cherished possessions, in this case cars. By means of a netnography we focus on everyday practices where consumers rework brand identity towards their local identity projects
Building Jefferson\u27s future
2002 Annual report of Thomas Jefferson University
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Does it work? evaluating a new pay system
This report focuses on the evaluation of the impact of new pay systems in large, unionised multi-site organisations by the organisations themselves. Evaluation of the effectiveness of a pay system, however, does not take place in a vacuum and relates to the aims and objectives of the pay system concerned. Moreover, evaluation is not an end in itself. It is, therefore, relevant to consider if any further steps were taken as a result of evaluation. Accordingly our research questions were:
• What were the aims and objectives of organisations when introducing new pay arrangements?
• What data did organisations collect and review to inform their evaluation?
• What steps have organisations taken as a result of their evaluation?
We re-appraised our data from 10 NHS trusts in England which had introduced some innovations in pay and grading in the 1990s. Additionally, we looked at seven multi-site unionised organisations outside the NHS in both the public and private sectors, which had recently made changes to their reward systems, carrying out interviews and inspecting documents.
The main output is a template for the evaluation of Agenda for Change by NHS organisations
Effective Capacity and Randomness of Closed Sets
We investigate the connection between measure and capacity for the space of
nonempty closed subsets of {0,1}*. For any computable measure, a computable
capacity T may be defined by letting T(Q) be the measure of the family of
closed sets which have nonempty intersection with Q. We prove an effective
version of Choquet's capacity theorem by showing that every computable capacity
may be obtained from a computable measure in this way. We establish conditions
that characterize when the capacity of a random closed set equals zero or is
>0. We construct for certain measures an effectively closed set with positive
capacity and with Lebesgue measure zero
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