Academic literature on the topic 'Role of dominant values'

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Journal articles on the topic "Role of dominant values"

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Veljanovska, Vera, Menka Trepalkovska, and Blagoj Dimitrov. "DOMINANT VALUES IN THE ORGANIZATION." Knowledge International Journal 26, no. 6 (March 18, 2019): 1869–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.35120/kij26061869v.

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Throughout the organization, the work and development of an educational institution or organization tends to establish a recognizable positive culture and working environment. This culture can often be inherited (but with a tendency to sustain it) from its original founders, which are aimed at maintaining and upgrading the positive effects, and removing the negative sides. It will be easy to maintain and upgrade the recognizable positive culture and working environment if we have a good organizational culture in the school or organization. Organizational culture is the result of the knowledge, skills and abilities of the manager to design the organization, and not less valuable is the desire of all members to contribute in the organization, to work and team-co-operate with each other.Organizational culture is a system of built common values, norms, attitudes, beliefs, a way of thinking and behavior that are common to all members in an educational institution or organization. Organizational culture gives a clear picture of the built and established interpersonal relationships in the school or organization. For this reason, we want to further improve and raise the mutual cooperation between pupils, students and teachers, with parents and institutions in the local self-government. Improving the school culture and the working climate will be achieved through constant care and involvement of the employees, students, parents and institutions in the school life of the local self-government.As a teacher of Macedonian language and literature, through my many years of experience and cooperation with other schools and institutions, and participating in a large number of events, I have knowledge of the role of the teaching subject Macedonian Language and Literature in the formation and construction of the child person as a good speaker, presenter, interlocutor, in enriching the dictionary fund, fostering and expressing the Macedonian literary language, developing love for the book, film, Macedonian culture, creativity, cultural heritage, building of moral, ethical and aesthetic values, norms and attitudes.
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Lock, Jean. "The Effect of Ideology in Gender Role Definition: China as a Case Study." Journal of Asian and African Studies 24, no. 3-4 (1989): 228–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685217-90007250.

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Male and female roles are defined by soeiety in aecordanee with eultural values and dominant ideologies. But gender-role definitions do not remain constant over time. When dominant ideologies clash with eultural values, gender-roles may be redefined. To illustrate this, the present paper eompares gender-role expeetations in China before the revolution and after the establishment of the soeialist system, espeeially during theCultural Revolution (1966-76). Family roles, work roles, and other role expeetations for females in these two periods are examined. The study eoncludes that politieal ideology strongly influenees gender-role definitions and expeetations in soeiety. The redefinition of gender-roles tends to be more effeetive when it is eonsistent with the dominant ideology and soeial values. Gender-role expeetations are an important refleetion of the dominant ideology of society at any partieular period of time.
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Parkhurst, Gregory M., and Clifford Nowell. "The Role of Confidence in Truthful Revelation of Private Values." Agricultural and Resource Economics Review 43, no. 2 (August 2014): 193–208. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1068280500004275.

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Recent research shows that disparities between willingness to pay (WTP) and willingness to accept (WTA) disappear with market experience and training. In effect, preferences can be refined by eliminating subjects’ misconceptions regarding elicitation procedures. We use a stated measure of confidence as a proxy for misconceptions and test the influence of confidence on truthful revelation of induced values in WTP and WTA auctions using the Becker-DeGroot-Marschak (BDM) mechanism. The results indicate that confidence matters for buyers and sellers. With confidence, WTA and WTP measures converge, and people with greater confidence choose the dominant bidding strategy more frequently.
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Sokic, Maja. "Needs, values and aspirations of rural youth." Zbornik Matice srpske za drustvene nauke, no. 118-119 (2005): 365–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/zmsdn0519365s.

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Contemporary Serbian society faces increasing social and economical problems as results of social crisis. Such problems reflect on the quality of life of all social groups. Problems of one of the social groups, rural youth, are particularly interesting, specially regarding to specifics of its social status, role they were (un)rightfully given and problems they are facing. The paper is focused on determinating dominant needs, values and aspirations of rural youth, as well as their social potential, willingness to take an active role in social changes. The sample the research was based on consists of young rural population of Sivac, third biggest settlement in the municipality of Kula. The research addresses 107 persons, age from 19 to 30 years, living in Sivac and deals with issues such as their opinions on social environment they are living in, family, spare time, religion, values and needs etc. Theoretical analysis of the problems is followed by empirical data collected by a questionnaire. Specific issues are being analyzed through the prism of dominant social processes and relations. The research was conducted in April 2004.
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Satkunasingam, Elsa, Aaron Yong, and Sern Cherk. "The influence of cultural values on the board of directors: Lessons from five corporations." Corporate Ownership and Control 9, no. 4-2 (2012): 221–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.22495/cocv9i4c2art3.

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The Malaysian Code of Corporate Governance 2000 emphasises the monitoring role of the Board of Directors, especially that of independent directors. It has not however taken into account the cultural values in Malaysia which do not encourage differences of opinion or criticisms and has failed to provide sufficient safeguards for directors to exercise their role effectively. As a result, it is relatively easy for dominant Chairmen or CEOs especially in government-linked companies or CEO dominated companies to control the Board or senior management with very little opposition. This paper will discuss several incidences of financial mismanagement in companies caused by dominant directors with very little opposition from the rest of the board. It will highlight that the law has to take cultural values more seriously in order to equip the Board and especially independent directors with the ability to challenge dominant Board members.
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Wilson, Christopher. "How dominant coalition members’ values and perceptions impact their perceptions of public relations participation in organizational decision making." Journal of Communication Management 20, no. 3 (August 1, 2016): 215–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jcom-07-2015-0058.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to understand the extent to which dominant coalition members’ values and perceptions influence their perceptions of public relations participation in organization-level decision making. Research in this area has largely focussed on the relationship between practitioner roles and decision-making inclusion. Design/methodology/approach – The population of interest was dominant coalition members of for-profit, government, and nonprofit organizations in the USA. Data were collected through a national survey to a nonrandom sample of 201 dominant coalition members. Findings – Results indicate that dominant coalition members’ values of organizational openness to the environment and perceived substantive autonomy of the organization positively predicted perceptions of public relations participation in organizational decision making. Perceived manager role potential of the public relations department also had significant predictive power. Originality/value – While research has focussed primarily on the characteristics that public relations practitioners can develop to earn a seat at the management table, little is known about the characteristics of dominant coalition members that influence whether or not a seat is made available or the degree to which public relations is perceived to participate in decision making.
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De Wet, Gideon. "passing of the Dominant Paradigm." Communicare: Journal for Communication Studies in Africa 9, no. 1 (November 10, 2022): 55–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.36615/jcsa.v9i1.2044.

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In this paper an attempt is made to contribute towards a better understanding regarding the role and application of mass media (TV) with reference to developmental efforts. A theoretical and explorative overview will be posed deal Ing with three interlocking areas: 1. A retrospective analysis and discus sion of Rogers' (1976) article on "Communication and Development: The Passing of the Dominant Paradigm." An attempt is made, in an Integrated fashion, to analy, the Im plications of Rogers' (1976) declara tion that the dominant paradigm has passed. 2. Secondly, and as a result of serious methodological questions regarding the analysis and Interpretion of developmental communication ef forts, an attempt is made to pose theoretical considerations which can lead to the structuring of an alter native developmental approach with reference to rural development. 3. The third area, which could be regard ed as a natural consequence of the above-mentioned, deals with the role of the mass media (TV) with reference to rural development. The analysis In cludes an overview on media Involve ment in development as well as the specific applicability of "big media" in "little worlds". The emphasis shifts to message content where the impor tance of cultural values and the cultural convergence of messages is emphasised.
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Savic, Mico. "Nietzsche’s critique of moral values." Filozofija i drustvo 23, no. 3 (2012): 348–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/fid1203348s.

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In this article the author argues that Nietzsche?s critique of morality is based on his metaphysics in which the notion of will to power conceived in the spirit of the Greek concept of physis plays a key role. He demonstrates that the revaluation of all values as overcoming of Platonist-Christian nihilism is aimed at the affirmation of ?living in accordance with nature?, whereby nature is understood just as physis. He also shows why, for Nietzsche, pretension to universality and objectivity of the dominant value system is not justified. Finally, the author points to the difficulties of Nietzsche?s (inverse) Platonism and concludes that the failure of modernity to justify morality imposes the task of examining the possibilities of rehabilitation of Aristotle?s practical philosophy.
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Bulankina, N. E. "СOMMUNICATION COMPETENCE OF A PEDAGOGUE AS A DOMINANT VALUE: POSTMODERN CONTEXT." Educational Psychology in Polycultural Space 53, no. 1 (2021): 37–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.24888/2073-8439-2021-53-1-37-44.

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The problem of this article concerns the value of the communication skills and competence that has steadily risen on the Communicative Stock Exchange over the past ten years due to both global challenges of the modernity, and the current status of Russian public education development in terms of introducing culture of communication into everyday lessons. The purpose of this study is to substantiate the need for the required competence of teachers across all subjects at Regional Destination of cross-border characteristics, and to fill in the gap in the management of current professional education of a pedagogue. Scientific exposition and introduction to the problem will set out the theoretical background of technology, pedagogy and knowledge content of culture of communication and the rational for using it not just in language learning, but in all learning that is based on the ideas and principles of regional and axiological approaches to improving the methodology and scientific support of the tutorials intended for in-service teachers and teaching staff of regional consulting centers. The results of this research cover a) the constructs of the regional project the focus of which is on three main areas of supplementary techniques for doing, being and facing daily difficult situations of communication with others within the routine of the Regional Methodology Centers; b) the answer to the question of how to improve language education, both teaching and learning, spoken communication skills, understanding of text, etc; c) the tutorial practice support for the management of which the Institute Departments are responsible. This comprehensive model of the management of the Regional Methodology Centers presents a number of practical pieces of advice which have focused on the creation of the right atmosphere, both on the role of the pedagogue and the role of the most cooperative students/teachers, on the need of careful planning, timing and preparation during lessons using modern techniques (drama, project works, online and offline activities, business games, modern lesson and its criteria, etc ) for improving the presentation of activities in the regional development spaces, etc. In conclusion the article presents some ideas for further research of the possibilities of the Regional Consulting Centers in improving teachers’ presentation activities in terms of languages for special purposes in the communicative professional spaces.
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Freitas, Ka'ipo B., and Paul W. Dixon. "A COSMOLOGY OF HAWAIIAN AND WESTERN VALUES." Social Behavior and Personality: an international journal 25, no. 1 (January 1, 1997): 59–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.2224/sbp.1997.25.1.59.

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A value study was conducted using a modified form of Rokeach's Value Schedule (D) on a research sample of 96 divided into four groups of 24, with an equal number of men and women. This sample included incarcerated men and women and non-incarcerated men and women. As this study was conducted in Hawaii, it was hypothesized that the now dominant, competitive corporate societal model would give rise to societal pressures which would force those holding the traditional Aloha or love-oriented model of societal values into a conflicting role in this current society. This hypothesis was borne out in these transgenerational observations which showed that when using a Varimax orthogonal rotation on eighteen values, both the incarcerated men and women had factors which showed retention of the traditional family-oriented system of values. The non-incarcerated men had a very subordinate factor which included love-oriented values while the non-incarcerated women had no family-oriented value factor. This last group's absence of Aloha was interpreted as showing a non-conflicting integration into the now dominant, materialistic corporate value structure of Hawaiian society.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Role of dominant values"

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Povee, Kate. "The identities and social roles of people with intellectual disabilities: Challenging dominant cultural worldviews, values and mythologies." Thesis, Curtin University, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/785.

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The aim of this research was to explore the social construction of intellectual disability and to increase the power of people with intellectual disabilities in the research process. Informed by a contextualist perspective, this research was conducted within a participatory framework. Causal layered analysis was used to deconstruct the data revealing a complex dynamic of worldviews and mythologies which served to dehumanise people with intellectual disabilities and blame them for their own fate (victim blaming).
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LEIPOLDT, Erik, and eleipoldt@upnaway com. "Good life in the balance: a cross-national study of Dutch and Australian disability perspectives on euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide." Edith Cowan University. Education And Arts: School Of, 2003. http://adt.ecu.edu.au/adt-public/adt-ECU2006.0010.html.

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This is a cross-national qualitative study with the purpose of obtaining perspectives held by people with quadriplegia and leading figures in disability movements in the Netherlands and Australia on the issues of euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide (EPAS). A disability voice is not prominent in public debate on EPAS in Australia or the Netherlands, even though people with disabilities are often thought to be vulnerable in relation to EPAS policies. Disability perspectives are potentially valuable in illuminating issues in relation to euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide, because issues of dependence, independence, and individual autonomy play important roles in relation to both EPAS and to living with disability. The study's methodology uses a phenomenological approach and incorporates aspects of heuristics and grounded theory. Its conceptual framework incorporates MacIntyre's (1999) theory of acknowledged dependency and vulnerability; Habermas' (1989) theory of knowledge; and Festinger's (1959) theory of cognitive dissonance. The main sample of twenty people with quadriplegia (the grassroots sample) was interviewed in the Netherlands and in Australia.
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Leipoldt, Erik A. "Good life in the balance: A cross-national study of Dutch and Australian disability perspectives on euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide." Thesis, Edith Cowan University, Research Online, Perth, Western Australia, 2003. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/theses/116.

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This is a cross-national qualitative study with the purpose of obtaining perspectives held by people with quadriplegia and leading figures in disability movements in the Netherlands and Australia on the issues of euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide (EPAS). A disability voice is not prominent in public debate on EPAS in Australia or the Netherlands, even though people with disabilities are often thought to be vulnerable in relation to EPAS policies. Disability perspectives are potentially valuable in illuminating issues in relation to euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide, because issues of dependence, independence, and individual autonomy play important roles in relation to both EPAS and to living with disability. The study's methodology uses a phenomenological approach and incorporates aspects of heuristics and grounded theory. Its conceptual framework incorporates MacIntyre's (1999) theory of acknowledged dependency and vulnerability; Habermas' (1989) theory of knowledge; and Festinger's (1959) theory of cognitive dissonance. The main sample of twenty people with quadriplegia (the grassroots sample) was interviewed in the Netherlands and in Australia.
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Brdar, Minela, and Sibel Eken. "Skivbolagens roll i musikbranschen : En kvalitativ studie om skivbolagens roll." Thesis, Södertörns högskola, Institutionen för samhällsvetenskaper, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-33065.

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I takt med den digitala revolutionen har vidden av skivbolagens aktiviteter reducerats. Idag kan individer göra mycket på egen hand som skivbolagen traditionellt sett gjort för sina artister. Rollen som de spelar anses inte vara lika väsentlig i en artists karriär till följd av digitaliseringen.       Syftet med denna studie är att skapa förståelse för hur skivbolagens roll ser ut i en digitaliserad och tjänst-dominerad musikbransch. För att kunna besvara syftet har tre semistrukturerade intervjuer utförts, varav en består av två respondenter. Intervjuerna genomfördes med skivbolagen Universal Music, Amuse och ett independent bolag i Stockholm.      Studiens empiri visar att aktiviteterna som skivbolag utför är anpassat utefter digitala medier, samt att alla respondenter menar att även om artister i dagsläget kan göra allting själva, är det lättare att lyckas med hjälp av ett skivbolag.      Slutsatserna som nåtts är att skivbolagens roll ser ut på det viset att de är artisternas partner, som innebär att de är med dem, och inte för dem. Rollen skivbolagen har i en digitaliserad och tjänst-dominerad musikbransch innebär att de erbjuder artisterna kunskap, kontakter och kapital. Skivbolagens roll har försvagats inom de traditionella aktiviteterna marknadsföring och distribution, och anses istället finnas som stöd och komplement inom dessa aktiviteter. Skivbolagens roll har istället blivit viktigare när det gäller att upptäcka, bygga samt driva artisternas karriärer.
With the digital revolution, the scope of record labels’ activities have been reduced. Today, individuals can do a lot on their own, that record labels have traditionally done for their artists. The role they played is not considered as important in the career of an artist today, due to digitization.      The aim of this essay is to examine and create insight on how record labels’ role looks like in a digitalized and serice-dominated music industry. To do this, three interviews have been carried out, whereof one interview included two respondents. The interviews were held with the record labels Universal Music, Amuse and an independent label in Stockholm.      The results show that the activities that record labels perform are adjusted according to digital media. The results also show that all of the respondents claim that even though artists today can do everything on their own, it is easier to succeed with the help of a record label.      The conclusion is that the record labels’ role is that they are partners with their artists, which means that they are with them, and not for them. The role record labels have in a digitalized and service-dominated music industry is that they offer knowledge, connections and capital to their artists. The record labels’ role has been weakened within the traditional activities marketing and distribution. Instead, they are regarded as existing as a support and complement within these activities. The record labels’ role has therefore become more important in finding, building and operating artists’ careers.
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Bergquist, Olsson Frida, and Hanna Dahl. "Co-creators or puppets? : a study on AI-marketing’s role in consumers’ value co-creation." Thesis, Högskolan Kristianstad, Fakulteten för ekonomi, 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hkr:diva-22155.

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In recent years, AI has received increased attention in the field of marketing and is believed to grow even more in the future. It seems that the use of AI in marketing has a significant impact on consumer value creation. The purpose of this thesis is to explore how consumers experience the role of AI-marketing within the scope of the online customer journey, including how both positive and negative aspects of AI-based decision aids influence their value co-creation. Based on previous research, a conceptual model was created to determine whether consumers co-create or co-destroy value in the interactions with AI-based decision aids, as well as which types of values that are the outcomes. Three focus groups were used as a qualitative method to collect empirical data. Findings resulted in two main insights. Firstly, consumers experience the role of AI-based decision aids positively and can co-create values regarding economic and efficiency benefits, facilitation of information search, and more inspiring, personal and relevant experiences. Secondly, AI-based decision aids are also perceived negatively and contribute to co-destruction of value as well. Consumers experienced negative aspects regarding manipulation, limitations and loss of integrity and autonomy, as well as risks of overspending, being misled and distracted, and having irrelevant experiences. This thesis contributes with new insights into the consumer perspective of AI-marketing. Marketers can use these results to understand consumers’ value creation and avoid the negative aspects to achieve the best possible AI-marketing strategies.
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Sinnya, Utsav. "The role of customers on the co-creation of Service Climate in a restaurant setting: A Qualitative Study." Thesis, Umeå universitet, Företagsekonomi, 2014. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-88826.

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The benefits of customer co-creation of value in the service delivery process have been well established through recent literatures. However, despite the fact that there has been an increase in the awareness of the importance of customer behaviors in the service delivery process, little research has been done to investigate the role of customers and their influence in co-creating the service climate within organizations. This study captures the impact and effects of customer behaviors on the perceptions of employees towards the service climate of their respective restaurant firms.The overall objective of this thesis is to deepen the understanding of the role of customers in co-creating the service climates inside restaurant firms where co-creation of services occurs. For conducting this study, I have used the semi-structured interviews for data collection from six respondents (three customers and three employees) from three different restaurants within the city. Results indicate that customers’ participative and citizenship behaviors such as giving feedbacks, employees’ job appreciation and praise during direct interactions, advocacy through word of mouth, and sharing of knowledge and seeking of information that could benefit the firm influenced employees’ perception of their work climate. The results also showed that employees transfer these positive attitudes to their fellow employees through affective group tone through which the overall working climate within restaurants is improved.I believe that this study will be helpful to future scholars and researchers who wish to conduct further research on this particular topic as the findings from this study have increased the understanding of the role of customers in the co-creation service climates within restaurant organizations. The paper also discusses the theoretical and practical implications of the findings from this research at the end of the paper.
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Wennerholm, Elin. "Transitioning from a Goods-dominant to a Service-dominant logic : Visualizing the role of Remote Monitoring Systems." Thesis, Umeå universitet, Institutionen för informatik, 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-57087.

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The manufacturing industry is turning their attention from a solely product orientation view, to the creation of new value-adding services in order to increase their after-sales business. In this thesis, a case study was conducted in order to examine a manufacturing industry in their process of developing value-adding services. By exploring their processes in service delivery and studying their introduction of remote monitoring systems in their service distribution, the aim was to visualise the dimensions of a service system and how it changes with the introduction of an specific new technology. This study has shown that the introduction of remote monitoring systems, changes the relationship between the provider and the receiver, through the decrease of physical visits at the clients’ site, with the consequence that the close relationships between the provider and its receivers can vanish. Furthermore this study shows that remote monitoring systems affects the service system, through intertwining the technology and shared information. As the characteristics of the new technology remote monitoring systems enables new ways of information sharing and thereby becoming how the information between the provider and receiver is shared. Additionally, this study shows that in order to co-create value in a service system, the provider has to bear full responsibility in coming up with an acceptable value proposition and for the clearness in presenting the value proposal to the receiver.
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Dorval, Cynthia E. "Relational values in women's career role." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape10/PQDD_0019/MQ47998.pdf.

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Bullock, Nora B. "Examination of values instruction in education and the role of humanities in values education." Instructions for remote access. Click here to access this electronic resource. Access available to Kutztown University faculty, staff, and students only, 1988. http://www.kutztown.edu/library/services/remote_access.asp.

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Cooper, Elaine. "The role of values in the policy process." Thesis, University of Strathclyde, 2010. http://oleg.lib.strath.ac.uk:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=14448.

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Books on the topic "Role of dominant values"

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McFerran, Anne. Role reversal: Relative values. London: Times newspapers, 1989.

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Wilkinson, Charles F. Values and western water: A history of the dominant ideas. [Boulder, Colo.]: Natural Resources Law Center, University of Colorado, School of Law, 1990.

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Charlebois, Justin. Gender and the construction of dominant, hegemonic and oppositional femininities. Lanham, Md: Lexington Books, 2011.

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The role of values in careers. Charlotte, NC: IAP, INFORMATION AGE PUBLISHING, INC., 2014.

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Lennard, Henry L. The role of values in psychiatric treatment. Port Chester, N.Y: Gralnick Foundation, 1989.

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Classen, Carl Joachim. Role Models – Values – Norms in Homer's Poetry. Berlin, New York: Walter de Gruyter, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110211566.

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Rao, Brinda. Dominant constructions of women and nature in social science literature. Santa Cruz, Calif: Center for Political Ecology, 1991.

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Wickens, Ruth. Counselling, values and Christianity: The role of values in the counselling relationship. Birmingham: University of Birmingham, 1996.

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Srinivas, M. N. The cohesive role of Sanskritization and other essays. Delhi: Oxford University, 1989.

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M, Kurtines William, Azmitia Margarita, and Gewirtz Jacob L. 1924-, eds. The Role of values in psychology and human development. New York, N.Y: Wiley, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "Role of dominant values"

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Ahuja, Amit, and Susan Ostermann. "The Election Commission of India: Guardian of Democracy." In Guardians of Public Value, 37–62. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51701-4_2.

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AbstractThis chapter tells the story of how the Election Commission of India (ECI) became one of the most awe-inspiring electoral regulatory bodies in the world. One of the most widely celebrated and trusted public institutions in India, it has ensured the integrity—free and fair—of 17 national and more than 370 state elections since 1947, in what is not only the most populous but also one of the most potentially fractious democracies in the world. Ever under pressure from the executive branch and governing parties to bow to demands fed by their desire for electoral windfalls, the ECI managed to strengthen its autonomy through assertive leadership by a series of Chief Electoral Commissioners following the decline of the Congress Party’s political dominance. The rise of the Hindu Nationalist BJP as the new dominant force in Indian politics provides a crucial test for the endurance of the ECI’s role as India’s guardian of electoral integrity.
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Paredes, Mario R. "Students Are Not Customers: Reframing Student’s Role in Higher Education Through Value Co-creation and Service-Dominant Logic." In Improving the Evaluation of Scholarly Work, 31–44. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-17662-3_3.

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Nozikova, N. V. "Dominant Values of Family Purposefulness." In Smart Technologies and Innovations in Design for Control of Technological Processes and Objects: Economy and Production, 625–33. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-18553-4_76.

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Vandamme, Dorothée. "China as alternative dominant socializer." In Role Compatibility as Socialization, 176–210. New York: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003245940-7.

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Pigmans, Klara, Huib Aldewereld, Virginia Dignum, and Neelke Doorn. "The Role of Values." In Coordination, Organizations, Institutions, and Norms in Agent Systems XII, 139–48. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-66595-5_8.

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Davis, Steven I. "The Role of Values." In Leadership in Financial Services, 139–43. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230376311_5.

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Vet, Cassandra, Danny Cassimon, and Anne Van de Vijver. "Getting the Short End of the Stick: Power Relations and Their Distributive Outcomes for Lower-Income Countries in Transfer Pricing Governance." In Taxation, International Cooperation and the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, 3–27. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-64857-2_1.

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AbstractIt is widely recognized that international corporate taxation holds a distributional bias toward advanced economies and that developing countries only play a marginal role in tax governance-making. Yet, it is the ambition of both the G20 and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to integrate developing countries in the BEPS Inclusive Framework. The Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) action is the latest global initiative to update the international framework of corporate taxation and curb corporate tax avoidance. On one hand, the integration for developing countries within the policy-making forums remains incomplete and focused on the implementation of the global tax rules. On the other, even when lower-income countries have a seat at the table, uneven power relations shape the distributional outcomes of the G20-OECD tax reform project. This analysis of the power relations at play during the revision of the transactional profit split method (TPSM) reveals how dominant logics on value creation work against the material interests of developing countries in the distribution of taxing rights. Therefore, for a tax reform to be truly legitimate for developing countries, it should emancipate and even “decolonize” the discourse and ideas of the international tax regime. While the updated OECD guidelines on transfer pricing expanded the size of the overall cake of taxable profits, the dominant logics and criteria of the guidance make it difficult for lower-income countries to obtain a decent slice of the cake and actually eat it.
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Kurlberg, Nina. "The ‘Telos’ as a Lens That Illuminates Values in Practice." In Researching Values, 243–61. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-90769-3_14.

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AbstractThe central question this chapter seeks to address is, how can the perspective of institutional logics contribute to research on values in organisational practice? Drawing on empirical research conducted within an international faith-based relief and development organisation in the UK, the argument advanced in this chapter is that it is the ‘telos’ of each institutional logic in action within the organisation—that is, its ultimate aim or intention—that shapes the values in operation within organisational practice. While all institutional logics are value-based, some are more explicitly so than others. By identifying the teloi of the institutional logics dominant within organisational practice, the values tacit within it are brought to light.
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Kinoshita, Eizo. "Dominant AHP as Measuring Method of Service Values." In Multimedia Services in Intelligent Environments, 147–61. Heidelberg: Springer International Publishing, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-00372-6_8.

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Weyringer, Sieglinde, Jean-Luc Patry, and Alfred Weinberger. "Values and Knowledge Education." In Changes in Teachers’ Moral Role, 165–79. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6091-837-7_14.

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Conference papers on the topic "Role of dominant values"

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Antoci, Diana. "Values and Emotions in Personality System of Adolescents and Youths." In ATEE 2020 - Winter Conference. Teacher Education for Promoting Well-Being in School. LUMEN Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18662/lumproc/atee2020/01.

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This article addresses the problem of identifying relationship between the emotional manifestations of adolescents and young people and dominant values in their personality system in order to establish priorities in the acquisition of the components of the value orientation at the subjects. The age of adolescence is the period of social and emotional development, cognitive and emotional explosion, and psychic and value system formation. Personality formation takes place in the social environment through interrelation with parents, friends, and teachers in different life situations. Adolescents may experience positive and negative emotions of varying intensity. Emotional stability develops gradually through experiences, socialization, cognitive progress, self-knowledge and self-affirmation which are already being formed and are specific to young people. It is important to self-recognize and self-analyse by the subject of his/her own specific emotions, to determine the causes of their occurrence, to know how to regulate the negative ones. The role of emotions is enormous for the human being. The affective sphere is one of fundamental elements for: the fixation of externalized manifestations through the behavioural display of suitable emotions, shaping of attitudes, the development of beliefs and, therefore, values. These components are organized hierarchically, forming the content of value orientation or values orientation. The experimental study carried out with adolescent and young subjects consisted in determining the specificity of emotions and dominant values in adolescence and youth ages, highlighting the dynamics of emotional and value changes, and establishing the relationship between the studied variables. The experiment results provide us with the current information regarding dynamics of the relationship of emotions and values, which, therefore, allows to elaborate new ways of emotions knowing and regulating during adolescence age including youth one. These strategies can be applicable in educational institutions, ensuring by them well-being for all education actors. Well-being means not only feeling well inside, but also to be in well- being created conditions in the environment around us, favouring the wellbeing of all subjects.
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Gatapova, Elizaveta, Dmitry Zaitsev, and Oleg Kabov. "Role of Thermocapillary Convection in Rupture of a Falling Liquid Film Heated From Below." In ASME 2010 8th International Conference on Nanochannels, Microchannels, and Minichannels collocated with 3rd Joint US-European Fluids Engineering Summer Meeting. ASMEDC, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/fedsm-icnmm2010-31264.

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The present work is aimed to describe and explain the physical mechanism of the rupture of a liquid film of moderate thickness falling down a heated substrate. Our investigations are based on the experimental data obtained using IR thermography, fiber optical technique as well as theoretical estimation of critical values. We show that thermocapillary convection may be responsible for critical film thickness. By investigating the instability of thermocapillary cells we demonstrate that thermocapillary forces play a dominant role in the first and the second stages of the dry patch formation process.
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Windasari, Nila Armelia, Fu-ren Lin, and Hungwei Chen. "The Role of Social Capital on Cocreating Value for Social Enterprises: The Service Dominant Logic Perspective." In Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.24251/hicss.2017.199.

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Jadhav, Tushar, Stefano Orsino, Saurabh Patwardhan, and Pravin Nakod. "Mode Shapes and Dominant Frequency Predictions in a Swirl Stabilized Premixed Air-Methane Combustor Using Modal Analysis and Large Eddy Simulations (LES)." In ASME Turbo Expo 2017: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2017-65125.

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Stringent emission regulations force the gas turbine combustor community to come up with new designs. Lean Premixed (LPM) combustion is gaining popularity to meet the emission regulations. However, lean combustion process is prone to other issues like combustion instabilities and noise. Self-excited combustion instabilities in a gas turbine play vital role in the life cycle of combustor, noise generation and pollutant formation. If the instabilities in combustor dominate at natural modes, there are risks of resonance which can lead to bursting damage to the combustors. In the present work, modal analysis is carried out to predict the longitudinal and the transverse modes in a swirl-stabilized premixed methane-air combustor. The geometrical details and the boundary conditions used in this work are described in Broda et al. [1]. In addition to the modal analysis, Large Eddy Simulations (LES) with Flamelet Generation Manifold (FGM) combustion model are carried out to find out the instabilities and their sources. In the large eddy simulation, at the inlet of the combustor, a broadband impedance boundary condition is used. This will consider the effect of upstream travelling acoustic waves at the inlet. The outlet of combustor is specified with non-reflecting boundary condition. The inlet mass flow rate and the temperature conditions are consistent with Broda et al. [1]. The longitudinal and transverse modes predicted by the modal analysis and the dominant frequency predicted in the LES case are compared with the experimentally observed values. The predicted first longitudinal mode at ∼1760 Hz compares well with the experimental value of 1760 Hz. Predicted values of first and second tangential modes at 10459 Hz and 17344 Hz are also in good agreement with the experimental measurement. The dominant frequency predicted by the LES simulation is 1940 Hz. After applying the appropriate correction to this value for the wall heat transfer effect, it is in-line with that obtained from the modal analysis and the experiments. The spectral analysis at different probe location in LES simulation shows higher thermo-acoustic coupling at natural frequencies. In this work, the effect of variation in inlet swirl number and the temperature is also studies. The predicted trends in the change in dominant frequency with the increase in inlet swirl number and inlet temperature are captured accurately. For each condition, calculations were performed for about four flow-through times (around 12 ms) after the flow field had reached to its limit cycle to obtain statistically steady condition.
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Carvalho, Ana Carolina Vilela De, Simone Regina Didonet, and Andréa Paula Segatto. "THE ROLE OF INCUBATORS IN THE PROCESS OF COCREATING VALUE OF SOCIAL INNOVATIONS: A STUDY BASED ON SERVICE-DOMINANT LOGIC AND TRIPLE HELIX APPROACH." In 30th International Conference of the International Association for Management of Technology 2021. Red Hook, New York, USA: Curran Associates, Inc., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.52202/060557-0114.

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Bhatti, Riaz A., and Yanrong Wang. "Damping Performance of a Particle Damper in Two Dimensions." In ASME 2009 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2009-86862.

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Particle damping is a technique of achieving high structural damping with small metallic particles embedded within a cavity that is attached to the vibrating structure at the location of high vibration amplitudes. In this work, a simple yet detailed analytical model that takes into account normal as well as oblique impacts is presented to study particle damping in two dimensions under transient vibrations. The focus of the research presented here is to determine the role of major energy dissipation mechanisms such as friction and impact phenomena involved in particle damping in context of varying two dimensional cavity sizes. Particle damping is measured experimentally for an L-shaped beam in a fixed free configuration with a cavity attached at the top free end to investigate the effect of cavity size on its performance. It is observed that the peak value of the damping is mainly influenced by the cavity size in vertical direction, but the increase in cavity size in horizontal direction, makes this peak even bigger and shifts it slightly towards lower dimensionless acceleration amplitudes values. It has been found that normal impact phenomenon remains dominant in energy dissipation but the role of impact friction becomes very important and effective in the vicinity of peak specific damping capacity value with the increase in the size of the cavity. The model predictions regarding the effect of particles to structure mass ratio on the performance of particle damper are also in agreement with the reported data in the literature.
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Chan, C. L., and C. F. Chen. "Double Diffusive Convection in a Stratified Fluid Layer Induced by Thermal and Solutal Capillary Motion." In ASME 1997 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece1997-0967.

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Abstract Salt-finger convection in a double-diffusive system is a motion caused by the release of gravitational potential due to differential diffusion rates. The normal expectation is that, when gravitational field is reduced, salt-finger convection together with other convective motions driven by buoyancy forces will be rapidly suppressed. However, because the destabilizing effect of the concentration gradient is amplified by the Lewis number, with values varying from 102 for aqueous salt solutions to 104 for liquid metals, salt-finger convection may be generated at much reduced gravity levels. In the microgravity environment, the surface tension gradient assumes a dominant role in causing fluid motion. In this paper, we report experimental and numerical results showing the generation of salt-finger convection due to capillary motion on the surface of a stratified fluid layer.
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Wijewickrama, MKCS, Nicholas Chileshe, Raufdeen Rameezdeen, and J. Jorge Ochoa. "The Role of Government towards a Circular Economy in the Construction Industry: A Systematic Literature Review." In World Conference on Waste Management. The International Institute of Knowledge Management, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17501/26510251.2021.1102.

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A circular economy (CE) model provides an opportunity for the construction industry (CI) to keep the end-of-life materials in a closed loop with their maximum value while advocating the reduction of significant waste generation and natural resource extraction for the built environment. While previous studies in different geographical regions have been individually carried out on investigating the government engagement in the CE, no solitary study exists that holistically focus upon the role of government that steers the CI towards a CE. With this concern, the objectives of the current study are twofold. First, to investigate the roles through which the government contributes to implementing CE in the CI. Second, it outlines the potential research directions for future researchers to expand the domain under study. To achieve these objectives, a systematic literature review (SLR) was conducted based on the review protocol, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA). A total of 125 articles available in four search engines from 2002 to 2020 were incorporated for both descriptive and content analysis. Most articles (19) were published in the year 2019, and China is the dominant country for publishing most of the articles in the area under study. The study found that the government influences the CE in the CI by playing four significant roles: regulating, subsidizing, encouraging and informing. Herein, the government should play these four roles jointly with the amalgamation of government agencies, research institutions and nongovernment associations. The article concludes by outlining the future research priorities to advance the understanding in the domain under study. The value of the study is that it explores an overlooked area in the existing literature while providing a direction for the CI practitioners to understand the government role in paving the path to a CE. Keywords: Built environment, Circular economy (CE), Construction industry (CI), Government, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA), Systematic literature review (SLR)
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Sharma, Bharti, and Neetu Srivastava. "Fluid Flow in Between the Differentially Rotating Spherical Shells in the Presence of Toroidal Magnetic Field." In ASME 2021 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2021-66692.

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Abstract The behavior of fluid flow in differentially rotating shells with radii a and b where a < b, is discussed in the magnetic field’s presence. Out of the two significant elements of the magnetic field which are toroidal and poloidal, the toroidal magnetic field plays the dominant role for determining the behavior of fluid flow in the case of the rotating bodies. The solution for modelled equations is observed by perturbation method. Also the solution for flow quantities are observed by variable separable method for specific value of constant used in the abovementioned method.
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Al-Nahwl, Ammar A., and Martin B. Graf. "Modeling of Industrial Pumping System Dynamics." In ASME 1997 International Gas Turbine and Aeroengine Congress and Exhibition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/97-gt-353.

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A method for modeling the dynamics of industrial pumping systems is presented. The approach extends existing models for aero-engine like applications to capture dynamic features of interest in industrial, ground-based, applications. Those include the driver-driven (e.g., turbine-pump or compressor) interaction, the driver speed regulation subsystem, and their impact on stability. The method utilizes a lumped parameter modeling approach that involves developing and analyzing a set of nonlinear ordinary differential equations which describe the system dynamics. A model of a baseline industrial pumping system comprised of a turbine driving a process compressor is formulated first. Components in the compressor flow path include an inlet duct, a plenum, and a discharge valve. The resulting model captures the system’s instability onset point, the post-stall behavior, and the sensitivity to system parameters. Two non-dimensional groups are found to play a dominant role in characterizing the overall dynamics: the ratio of fluid compliance to fluid inertia on the compressor side (B-parameter), and the ratio of the mechanical inertia of the rotating assembly to the fluid inertia. Low values of the B-parameter have a strong stabilizing effect and are associated with high frequency surge oscillations. In contrast, low values of the mechanical to fluid inertia ratio have a stabilizing effect only in a limited region of the compressor operating range, and have little effect on surge frequency. For the baseline system considered in this study, stabilizing effects of these two ratios were observed at values less than 0.4 and 0.2 respectively. The baseline system model is then expanded to include a turbine speed controller. This allows examination of large transient events such as station shutdown and the phenomena of turbine hunting. It is found that the parameters of the turbine speed controller can affect the stability during such transients, but have little impact on the post-stall behavior.
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Reports on the topic "Role of dominant values"

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Obiakor, Thelma, and Kirsty Newman. Education and Employability: The Critical Role of Foundational Skills. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), November 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-ri_2022/048.

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A great deal of policy attention is paid to the role that education plays in driving employment outcomes. Most of this attention has focused on post-primary education— particularly Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET). This paper sets out the less-discussed role that foundational skills, typically built through basic primary education, play in driving employability; how foundational skills affect TVET provision; and what implications this body of evidence has for education policy. We acknowledge the need to consider how education systems build skills which will contribute to countries’ economic aspirations. However, we suggest that the dominant discourse which focuses specifically on TVET and how it can be linked to employer demands is unlikely to be successful for several reasons. Firstly, we show that foundational skills are themselves associated with economic gains for individuals and societies. This, together with the evidence showing extremely low levels of foundational skills in many countries, suggests that focusing on improving foundational skills may be a more cost-effective approach to driving employability than has been previously acknowledged. Furthermore, we show that TVET (and other later forms of education) may struggle to add value where foundational skills are not in place. Focusing large amounts of energy and resources on reforming TVET may not achieve hoped-for impacts if TVET entrants don’t have the necessary foundations to learn. We discuss the popular policy prescription of linking TVET provision to employer needs. As well as noting our concern that this focus fails to acknowledge the binding constraint of low foundational skills, we also set out why employer demand for skills may not be a good indication of actual future skills needs. We therefore suggest a more nuanced discussion on skills for employability which acknowledges economic development goals; the skills that will be needed to achieve them; and, crucially, a country’s starting point. We end the paper by highlighting the fact that unemployment and underemployment are generally caused by a lack of jobs, not a lack of skills. We therefore urge policymakers to be realistic about the extent to which any education policy—whether focusing on foundations, technical, and vocation skills or any other type of skills—can affect employment outcomes. Considering the evidence presented in this paper, we suggest that policymakers in many low- and lower-middle income countries may want to consider a stronger focus on foundational skills. The major reason for focusing on foundational skills is that a quality education is a fundamental right for all children which will allow them to experience lifelong learning. This paper sets out that foundational skills will also be the first step towards achieving a more employable workforce—but also that policymakers should consider the full range of policies that need to be in place to deliver productive employment and economic growth.
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Morrison, John F. Analyzing Interviews with Terrorists. RESOLVE Network, November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.37805/rve2020.7.

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For years the dominant narrative has been that there is a dearth of primary sources in terrorism studies. This is now changing. The talk about the scarcity of data is gradually being replaced by discussions of a “data revolution” and a “golden age” of terrorism research. We are now publishing more research based on the analysis of primary source data than ever before. Included in this has been some ground-breaking interview research with recent and former terrorists—research that could define how we think about terrorist involvement for years to come. With this increased access to data, if our research is to have any analytical value and concurrently respected both within and outside of academia, we need to actively consider how we analyze it. This chapter discusses some of the issues that need to be taken into consideration when analyzing first-hand interviews, including the importance of specificity, different available analytic techniques, the role of triangulation, and ethical practices.
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Haltiwanger, John, and James Spletzer. Between Firm Changes in Earnings Inequality: The Dominant Role of Industry Effects. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, February 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w26786.

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Waggoner, Jacqueline. Metropolitan school administrators: work values, role perceptions and burnout. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.826.

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Vuono, Jeffrey E. The Role of Values in Operations- Today, Tomorrow and Beyond. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, June 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada561710.

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Hug, Adam, Abigael Baldoumas, Katy Chakrabortty, and Danny Sriskandarajah, eds. Finding Britain's Role in a Changing World: Building a values-based foreign policy. Oxfam GB, Foreign Policy Centre, March 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2020.5730.

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Swanson, Cindy Sorg, and John B. Loomis. Role of nonmarket economic values in benefit-cost analysis of public forest management. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.2737/pnw-gtr-361.

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Lin, Sheng-Chen, and Joan Ellis. The Role of Values in the Theory of Planned Behavior: An Organic Apparel Context. Ames: Iowa State University, Digital Repository, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/itaa_proceedings-180814-839.

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Diddi, Sonali, Brittany Bloodhart, Ruoh-Nan Yan, Vickie Bajtelsmit, and Katie McShane. Predicting Consumers' Intentions to Engage in Sustainable Clothing Practices: Moderating Role of Schwartz's Personal Values. Ames: Iowa State University, Digital Repository, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/itaa_proceedings-180814-346.

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Lyzanchuk, Vasyl. COMMUNICATIVE SYNERGY OF UKRAINIAN NATIONAL VALUES IN THE CONTEXT OF THE RUSSIAN HYBRID WAR. Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, February 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2021.49.11077.

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The author characterized the Ukrainian national values, national interests and national goals. It is emphasized that national values are conceptual, ideological bases, consolidating factors, important life guidelines on the way to effective protection of Ukraine from Russian aggression and building a democratic, united Ukrainian state. Author analyzes the functioning of the mass media in the context of educational propaganda of individual, social and state values, the dominant core of which are patriotism, human rights and freedoms, social justice, material and spiritual wealth of Ukrainians, natural resources, morality, peace, religiosity, benevolence, national security, constitutional order. These key national values are a strong moral and civic core, a life-giving element, a self-affirming synergy, which on the basis of homogeneity binds the current Ukrainian society with the ancestors and their centuries-old material and spiritual heritage. Attention is focused on the fact that the current problem of building the Ukrainian state and protecting it from the brutal Moscow invaders is directly dependent on the awareness of all citizens of the essence of national values, national interests, national goals and filling them with the meaning of life, charitable socio-political life. It is emphasized that the missionary vocation of journalists to orient readers and listeners to the meaningful choice of basic national values, on the basis of which Ukrainian citizens, regardless of nationality together they will overcome the external Moscow and internal aggression of the pro-Russian fifth column, achieve peace, return the Ukrainian territories seized by the Kremlin imperialists and, in agreement will build Ukrainian Ukraine.
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