2,979 research outputs found
Staying Engaged, Stepping Up: Succession Planning and Executive Transition Management for Nonprofit Boards of Directors
Provides a set of tools and resources to help boards prepare for leadership transitions. Includes case studies of two nonprofit organizations and their experience managing executive transitions
Capturing the Power of Leadership Change: Using Executive Transition Management to Strengthen Organizational Capacity
Describes a model for managing an executive transition, and outlines the opportunities available for providing support systems that help organizations survive and succeed before, during, and after a leadership transition in nonprofit organizations
Deep neutral hydrogen observations of Leo T with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope
Leo T is the lowest mass gas-rich galaxy currently known and studies of its
gas content help us understand how such marginal galaxies survive and form
stars. We present deep neutral hydrogen (HI) observations from the Westerbork
Synthesis Radio Telescope in order to understand its HI distribution and
potential for star formation. We find a larger HI line flux than the previously
accepted value, resulting in a 50% larger HI mass of 4.1 x 10^5 Msun. The
additional HI flux is from low surface brightness emission that was previously
missed; with careful masking this emission can be recovered even in shallower
data. We perform a Gaussian spectral decomposition to find a cool neutral
medium component (CNM) with a mass of 3.7 x 10^4 Msun, or almost 10% of the
total HI mass. Leo T has no HI emission extending from the main HI body, but
there is evidence of interaction with the Milky Way circumgalactic medium in
both a potential truncation of the HI body and the offset of the peak HI
distribution from the optical center. The CNM component of Leo T is large when
compared to other dwarf galaxies, even though Leo T is not currently forming
stars and has a lower star formation efficiency than other gas-rich dwarf
galaxies. However, the HI column density associated with the CNM component in
Leo T is low. One possible explanation is the large CNM component is not
related to star formation potential but rather a recent, transient phenomenon
related to the interaction of Leo T with the Milky Way circumgalactic medium.Comment: accepted for publication in A&A; 12 pages, 13 figure
China's absorptive State: research, innovation and the prospects for China-UK collaboration
China's innovation system is advancing so rapidly in multiple directions that the UK needs to develop a more ambitious and tailored strategy, able to maximise opportunities and minimise risks across the diversity of its innovation links to China. For the UK, the choice is not whether to engage more deeply with the Chinese system, but how.
This report analyses the policies, prospects and dilemmas for Chinese research and innovation over the next decade. It is designed to inform a more strategic approach to supporting China-UK collaboration
The Trial of Harry Dexter White: Soviet Agent of Influence
The Red Scare of the late 1940s and 1950s was fueled by claims of governmental espionage from former members of the communist underground. Harry Dexter White, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury was accused of being a Soviet agent of influence. This paper will analyze the current issues in the discussion of Soviet espionage and focus on White\u27s activities in this regard. The evidence on White is clear enough to show that he did pass sensitive information to the Soviets. He also succeeded in subverting American policy to favor Soviet interests over U.S. interests. White\u27s activities in government service suggest that American government officials passed on vital government information to the Soviet Union and subversive activity went on in the U.S. in the 1930s and 1940s
Founder Transitions: Creating Good Endings and New Beginnings
Examines the challenges presented by nonprofit leadership transitions involving founders or long-term executives. Provides advice for executives and their boards in confronting the complex issues these transitions present
An Analysis of Citizenship Education in Maine Middle Schools
An essential responsibility of public schooling is to cultivate civic awareness in students and prepare them to participate in a democratic society. Schools have, however, broadly failed this task, a trend the Maine Department of Education has attempted to reverse through policy. The 2019 edition of the MDoE’s Maine Learning Results (“MLR”) standards mandates that middle school social studies teachers implement civic action and service-learning projects (a.k.a. “citizenship education”) to address community needs and foster students’ civic identity. Existing literature suggests that citizenship education improves students’ civic awareness, community engagement, and future voting behavior, but the effectiveness of this new policy—particularly in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic—is unmeasured. More broadly, the diversity of citizenship education efforts present among the population is unmeasured. This mixed-methods exploratory study analyzed the approaches toward citizenship education undertaken by Maine middle school social studies teachers and the factors affecting those approaches, as well as the effect of the MLR on those efforts. Data collection occurred over three phases: a survey sent to the population that collected information about teachers\u27 citizenship education efforts, an interview phase that expanded on that data with in-depth information about teachers and their efforts, and a revised survey sent again to the population that addressed the shortcomings of the initial survey protocol. Findings revealed infrequent engagement with citizenship education across the population and minimal influence of the MLR. However, these findings also highlighted instances of exemplary citizenship education happening independent of the MLR. Potential supports to encourage and spread such efforts are discussed
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