Academic literature on the topic 'Society for the Emancipation of Industry'

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Journal articles on the topic "Society for the Emancipation of Industry"

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Krešić, Mirela. "In Pursuit of Economic Emancipation." Review of Croatian history 19, no. 1 (December 20, 2023): 77–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.22586/rch.v19i1.28476.

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The aim of the paper is to explore the interaction between regulatory provisions governing the status of women, which were part of Croatia’s legal system as it developed in the period of history called the short 19th century (1848-1914). The Austrian General Civil Code, the Hungarian-Croatian Trade Code and Industry Act and the Croatian School Act constitute the backbone of the research. More specifically, the focus is on the provisions that enabled the economic emancipation of women in the context of guaranteed gender equality and access to education. Given the economic circumstances in the period under review, the opportunities as well as the restrictions faced by women in the labour market of the time, our intention is to ascertain whether and if so in what way the Austrian and Hungarian-Croatian acts, accompanied by Croatia’s autonomous legislative framework, influenced the process of transformation of the traditional understanding of the status of women in society.
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LEE, Yong-Jae. "In the Shadow of Democracy : Alexis de Tocqueville on Race and Slavery." Korean Society of the History of Historiography 45 (June 30, 2022): 209–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.29186/kjhh.2022.45.209.

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Tocqueville's masterpiece, Democracy in America analyzes the institutions and moeurs of American democratic society. In America, Tocqueville saw not only white man’s democratic culture and politics, but also the shadows of democracy, such as racial conflict and slavery. Tocqueville said that slavery was the most serious evil that threatened the future of the United States. Nevertheless, as long as the white stubbornly refuse to abolish slavery, it is impossible to legally achieve emancipation in the South, where democratic self-government is established. Pessimistic about America's future, Tocqueville diagnoses that the abolition of slavery is more likely to be achieved in the French Caribbean than in the America. Tocqueville also shows a realistic and practical approach to the issue of slavery in the French colonies. He argues that the colonial industry should be maintained even after the emancipation, indemnities being paid to the slave owners. Tocqueville expands the issue of the emancipation of slaves to the level of national strategy and interests. He even argued that abolition was necessary to maintain the colony, and that some exceptional measures such as a provisional banning of the purchase of land by emancipated blacks, were necessary to maintain the colony's industry and economy. The the colonial economy and the white farmers’ interests took precedence over the freedom of black people. The liberal politician Tocqueville stands at a crossroads between the humanitarianism of Emancipation and the realism of the national interests.
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Alsayyed, Niveen Mazen, and Julian Randall. "Feminist Emergence in a Traditionally Male Industry: Case from Jordan—The Jordanian Banking Industry." Administrative Sciences 13, no. 2 (January 30, 2023): 39. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/admsci13020039.

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Purpose: This research explored the role of female managers as change agents and the “problem of making women visible,” specifically in top management positions in in Jordanian banking industry. Methods: This research design is built on the basis of qualitative research, analyzing the perceptions in the mind of research subjects. Interviews were conducted with 32 participants from the Jordanian banking industry. Findings: Our research has revealed different and important insights into the changing role of Jordanian female workers, not only in such a male-dominant industry but also more broadly in Jordan’s wider society, in which the Arab masculine culture has been dominant. The positive impact of increased acceptance of females’ roles is significantly evident in our research, and we support the assertion that women can survive and prosper in the face of Arab or Eastern culture traditions. In addition, we asserted that females’ managers are deemed to be internal change agents through their knowledge, experience, and leadership traits and behavior. Conclusions: We shed the light on emancipation, in which females have had the opportunity to cross previous social and taken-for-granted boundaries, and which has eroded gender-biased boundaries and behavior as a response to the situational demands.
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BUJA, Elena. "On the changing occupational roles of women in 20th century Korean society." Bulletin of the Transilvania University of Brasov. Series IV: Philology and Cultural Studies 14 (63), no. 1 (November 2021): 49–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.31926/but.pcs.2021.63.14.1.4.

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The events that occurred in the Korean peninsula in the past 100 years, such as the conversion of Koreans to Christianity, which appealed to many women especially due to the fact that “it advocated human rights, social equality, and other democratic principles” (De Mente 2017, 661), the Japanese colonization of the country (1910-1945), which granted the Korean women the right to institutional education, and the rapid growth of industry starting with the early 1960s, a phenomenon that enabled young girls to work outside their houses as soon as they graduated from high school or college were important factors in the social emancipation of Korean women. This emancipation brought with it a change in the ‘jobs’ or ‘occupations’ women had, from more traditional ones, like jungmae (matchmakers), haenyeo (sea divers), to more modern ones, such as factory workers, university professors or office employees. The current paper aims to bring to the fore these changes by making use of primary data gathered from various novels authored by Korean and American-Korean, as well as secondary data (Statistics Korea), and to show that these changes are part and parcel of women’s liberation movement. The theoretical framework employed is content analysis (Baker 1994, Cohen et al. 2018), according to which the fragments excerpted from the novels will be categorized in terms of the occupational themes. The findings of the analysis will show that despite the fact that for a long period of time Korean women were enslaved, being confined in their parents’ or in-laws’ homes, their aspirations for better jobs, mainly held by men, were fulfilled only when they achieved a certain degree of social freedom.
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Bonifazio, Paola. "Photoromance, she read: Fandom and the politics of Italian media." Journal of Italian Cinema & Media Studies 10, no. 1 (January 1, 2022): 3–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jicms_00099_1.

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This article examines Italian non-fiction media productions of the late 1950s and 1960s that represent the photoromance industry and its female fans. I argue that state-controlled and/or privately owned media outlets and their contributors (among them, Cesare Zavattini and Mario Soldati) scapegoated photoromances in defence of moral, social and cultural respectability, but also on the basis of anxieties towards the increasing role played by female audiences in the making of culture. Furthermore, I show that politically engaged documentaries similarly chastised the photoromance industry without necessarily serving the cause of women’s emancipation. Blaming photoromances for the degeneration of Catholic values, for the debasement of working-class culture and for the degradation of consumerist society, all films serve the same purpose of maintaining a patriarchal society’s status quo, of diverging attention from ‘higher’ cultural products and their exploitation of women’s bodies and of minimizing the important role that female fans played in the success of a global market.
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Maini, Nidhi. "Dressed Up and On the Go: Women Cyclists in Modern Japan." China Report 56, no. 2 (April 29, 2020): 259–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0009445520916878.

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Ranking alongside the top bicycling nations of the world, Japan today boasts of a deeply engrained cycling culture. While the technological prowess of Japan’s bicycle industry is well known, there exists no scholarly study investigating the socio-cultural impact of cycling in Japan, specifically its role in emancipation of women. How the modern women of Japan scaled barriers to mobility riding their way to modernity in an oppressive male-dominated society is not yet known. The objective of this paper is to examine women cyclists in Japan in the context of modernisation. On the one hand, viewing bicycles helps examine the Japanese economy from the perspective of ordinary women as active consumers (as against their passive image) whose demand for bicycles was certainly an essential ingredient for the growth of bicycle industry. On the other hand, it serves to question the predominant view of consumption stagnation in interwar Japan. Most importantly, as countries around the world continue to make laudable efforts to encourage women cyclists, a leaf can be drawn by policymakers from the history of forgotten cycling heroines of Japan to accelerate women’s socio-economic empowerment.
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Baranov, Nikolai N. "German Women, Industrial Society, and the Great War: On the Changing Gender Roles." Izvestia of the Ural federal university. Series 2. Humanities and Arts 24, no. 4 (2022): 25–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.15826/izv2.2022.24.4.062.

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This article attempts to study the process of gender roles transformation of German women under the influence of World War I. Gender history as a social history of the sexes has significant heuristic potential which is why the author uses it as a methodological basis of the research. The recent years have seen an increased interest in war history, the front, and the rear from the gender point of view among researchers. The gender perspective — precisely because it has long remained outside the mainstream — has challenged and fundamentally changed the contemporary historiography of German history. Gender studies demonstrate that debates about war and peace are always also discussions of the gendered social order, or the ideas of “masculinity” and “femininity” at a certain time. For a long time, in historiography, the opinion prevailed that World War I was a decisive factor in the emancipation of women in Germany in the twentieth century. However, studies of the last two decades have convincingly shown that this thesis needs to be corrected at least. The increase in the share of female labour in German industry during the war years corresponded to the pre-war trend and did not exceed it in quantitative terms. Women’s labour in the industry was the lot of the lower classes. Measures of social support of the state for the families of military personnel, on the one hand, contributed to women’s financial independence, and, on the other hand, increased their dependence on it, formed dependents. The inability of the German authorities during the war years to provide for the basic life needs of the population led to widespread illegal activities (larceny, illegal markets) and protests, which together with the military defeat, became one of the main reasons for the November Revolution.
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Yarmak, Y. "Historical retrospective: Jewish women of Belarus in the development of dental tourism (second half of the 19 – early 20th cent.)." Актуальные проблемы международных отношений и глобального развития, no. 8 (December 18, 2020): 147–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.33581/2311-9470-2020-8-147-159.

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The article based on archival documents will consider such a direction in the tourism industry as medical tourism. Dentists were pioneers in this area in Belarus, but the history of this industry is much older than one might think. In the late 19th and early 20th cent. Jewish Pale of Settlement passed through the territory of Belarus. Belarusian provinces, which constituted a significant part of the Jewish population in that period entered a period of dramatic changes. The modernization process resulted in the appearance of women in public spheres. Since the second half of the 19th cent., after the development of the regulatory framework, it becomes possible to obtain the specialty of a dentist. Archival documents from the National Historical Archive of Belarus (NHAB) in Grodno and Minsk show that the dental industry was very attractive to Jewish women. Druskeniki was a special place for the Jewish population. Women Jewish dental offices were in great demand not only among the Jewish population, but also among Christians. This activity gave women the opportunity to have their own income, and, therefore, freed them from patriarchal dependence, destroying gender stereotypes imposed by society. The process of emancipation of the female Jewish population began. The end result of these processes was the formation at the turn of the 19th – early 20th cent. a new type of independent woman
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Moraes, Cecília Arlene, Elisabet Aguirre, and Keiko Carolina Moraes Sasaki. "Academic Strategy in the Administration Course on Solid Waste Reuse." Connection Scientific Journal 3, no. 2 (August 28, 2020): 1–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.51146/csj.v3i2.27.

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The expectations of students in the digital era of the Business Administration course and the concern with the preservation of the environment demand new performances from professors. The complexity of the problem provokes strong reflection on the teachers’ role. This study proposes the re-thinking of sustainable pedagogical practices anchored on a vast theoretical referential, articulated with the active teaching-learning methodology based on problems and projects. It describes the strategy of this method in an experience carried out in a higher education public institution, with the creation of a fictitious enterprise “PuffPet University Industry” by students, with the reuse of pet (plastic soda) bottles, in puff. Student-managers from the university industry formed an innovative ecosystem, learned to learn, to live together, and to integrate people using management technologies, sharing the knowledge of this production. This space of circular creation and academic production was achieved by the support of faculty members in the process of observation and listening to students’ desires, in the mediation of the learning process, which requires the appreciation of the subjects, their autonomy and respect for the environment. It encouraged students to play a leading role in their history, in the stake of emancipation, by becoming transformative entrepreneurial professionals in society, as environmental agents responsible for their actions.
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Pinheiro Queluz, Marilda Lopes, and Gilson Leandro Queluz. "Muralismo libertário: comunicação e educação emancipadora." REVISTA INTERSABERES 12, no. 25 (May 22, 2017): 26. http://dx.doi.org/10.22169/intersaberes.v12i25.611.

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RESUMO Este trabalho pretende, através do exemplo do muralismo libertário latino-americano, problematizar as relações entre educação e emancipação. É nossa compreensão que as práticas de ação direta pertinentes ao muralismo libertário, são processos constituintes de uma comunicação igualitária em franca antítese e resistência a um modo de comunicação autoritário característico da sociedade capitalista e de sua indústria cultural. Analisaremos algumas obras dos coletivos muralistas anarquistas contemporâneos nas cidades latino-americanas, demonstrando sua orientação temática, suas estratégias de produção e representação imagética, e sua concepção explícita de uma formação cultural ampliada. Consideramos que o muralismo libertário, ao se apropriar do espaço urbano como meio de comunicação, ao ressignificar nos muros os demarcadores das desigualdades sociais, procura constituir uma cultura da resistência, materializando os fundamentos de um modo de comunicação igualitário. Palavras-chave: Muralismo Latino-americano. Muralismo Libertário. Educação e Emancipação. ABSTRACT The following paper aims to problematize the relationship between education and emancipation through the example of Latin American libertarian muralism. It is the authors’ understanding that the practices concerning the libertarian muralism belong to an egalitarian communication, which is openly against an authoritarian communication peculiar to the capitalist society and its culture industry. The authors will analyze some studies of the contemporary anarchist collective muralists in Latin American cities, demonstrating their thematic orientation, their strategies of image production and representation, and their explicit conception of a broad cultural formation. In addition, the authors consider that libertarian muralism, by using urban space as a means of communication, and re-defining the main aspects of social inequalities, seeks to establish a culture of resistance, materializing the foundations of an egalitarian way of communication. Keywords: Latin American Muralism. Libertarian Muralism. Education and Emancipation.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Society for the Emancipation of Industry"

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Jezierski, Rachael A. "The Glasgow Emancipation Society and the American Anti-Slavery Movement." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 2011. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/2641/.

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This study reinterprets the history of the Glasgow Emancipation Society and its relationship to the American anti-slavery movement in the nineteenth century. It examines the role of economics, religion and reform, from Colonial times up to the US Civil War, in order to determine its influence on abolition locally and nationally. This thesis emphasizes the reformist tendencies of the Glasgow abolitionists and how this dynamic significantly influenced their adherence to the original American Anti-Slavery Society and William Lloyd Garrison. It questions the infallibility of the evangelical response to anti-slavery in Scotland, demonstrating how Scottish-American ecclesiastical ties, and the preservation of Protestant unity, often conflicted with abolitionist efforts in Glasgow. It also focuses on the true leaders of GES, persons often ignored in historical accounts concerning Scottish anti-slavery, which explains the motivation and rational behind the society’s zealous attitude and proactive policies. It argues that similar social, political and religious imperatives that affected the American movement likewise mirrored events in Scotland influencing Glaswegian anti-slavery. Lastly, it resurrects the legacy of the Glasgow Emancipation Society from its provincial role, showing it was, in fact, a leader in the British campaign against American slavery.
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Draper, Nicholas Anthony. "Possessing Slaves : Ownership, Compensation and Metropolitan British Society at the Time of Emancipation." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2008. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.504581.

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This thesis analyses the ownership of the enslaved in the West Indies and Caribbean by British absentees on the eve of Emancipation, and explores the often contradictory representations of these metropolitan slave-owners in a society increasingly hostile to slavery, with particular focus on the compensation paid to slave-owners under the 1833 Abolition Act. It traces the debates about compensation in the context of both the conflict over slavery and the wider discussions of what constituted 'property'. Drawing on the records of the Slave Compensation Commission, and examining the largest 5000 awards claim-by-Claim, it seeks to provide a comprehensive analysis of who in Britain owned slaves and who, in addition to the owners themselves, benefited from the �£20 million compensation paid by the state, By analysing claims across Britain's West Indian and Caribbean colonies, the thesis highlights the role of modem capitalist investors, in addition to the traditional merchantconsignees for Jamaica who dominate much of the historiography. While confirming the important role of metropolitan merchants, it also identifies a distinctive rentier group of gentry slave-owners in Britain, who managed and transmitted 'slave-property' across genders and generations through the mechanisms traditionally utilised in the management of British landed property. These mercantile and rentier groups of large-scale slave-owners were disproportionately represented at both local and national level in political and social institutions, including Parliament where, the thesis argues, previous work has underestimated the number ofMPs linked to the slave economy, Finally, the thesis identifies numerous smaller-scale slave-owners in Britain (many of them women) and examines the language deployed and identities constructed by this group in pursuing their claims for slavecompensation, It concludes that slave-ownership was increasingly widespread but also increasingly 'thin' in Britain by the 1830s, and that many firms and families who received slave-compensation can still be found in Britain today.
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Price, David A. "Environmental choices : coal, industry, environment, and society." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.244902.

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Hardwick, P. "Economies of scale in the United Kingdom building society industry." Thesis, University of Southampton, 1988. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.383625.

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Schwarzkopf, Stefan. "Respectable persuaders : the advertising industry and British society, 1900 - 1939." Thesis, Birkbeck (University of London), 2008. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.503589.

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Burroughs, Benjamin Edward. "Streaming media: audience and industry shifts in a networked society." Diss., University of Iowa, 2015. https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1833.

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This dissertation examines streaming media both as a technological innovation and cultural practice that co-configures audience and industry. Strategies and tactics provide a theoretical framework for understanding streaming media. Streaming is theorized as a tactic; wherein audiences momentarily buck against the strategic logic of media conglomerates and copyright regimes. However, streaming, concomitantly, is an audience tactic and a strategic logic of an emergent streaming industry. This results in the blurring between first and third party and sanctioned and unsanctioned streaming. In this dissertation, I parse out what are the nascent streaming logics within this burgeoning industry and how they constitutively shape and re-shape audiences and traditional broadcasting logics. Five typologies of streaming serve as conceptual tools for deepening our understanding of streaming media and technology. The first is streaming as a recent technological advancement, divided into software and hardware categories. The second conceptual framework is a typology of streaming that divides streaming into first and third party sanctioned and unsanctioned streaming. The third is streaming as an emergent industry. The fourth is streaming as a discourse, and the final typology divides streaming based on geography as transnational streaming, national streaming, and diasporic streaming. All of these classifications lay the groundwork for the further conceptualization of this important and emergent socio-technical practice.
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Sabatini, Maria Claudia. "A SOCIETY OF YOUNG WOMEN. Opportunities of Place, Power and Reform in Saudi Arabia. Perché alle donne saudite non serve (più) un tutore. Proposta di Traduzione." Master's thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2018.

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The aim of this dissertation is to propose and analyse the translation from English into Italian of the introduction and the first two chapters of A Society of Young Women. Opportunities of Place, Power and Reform in Saudi Arabia, an essay by the French sociologist and anthropologist Amélie Le Renard. This book was born after a ten - month fieldwork in Riad and concentrates on the emancipation of women in Saudi Arabia and their access to public spaces in a strictly segregated country. Le Renard’s aim is to demonstrate that Saudi women do not need to be saved from their possessive husbands and fathers since they are acquiring more and more authonomy and rights. The dissertation is composed of four chapters. The first chapter presents an overview of the translation theory, of the translation of essays and of the essay-specific translation strategies, it also analyses the characteristics of the ethonographic essay and of the ethnographic method. The second chapter analyses the main themes of A Society of Young Women, its stylistic and lexical characteristics and presents an overview of Islam. The second part of this chapter describes Manal al-Sharif’s point of view on the condition of Saudi girls and offers the history of female emancipation in Saudi Arabia from the era of the oil boom. The third chapter contains the translation of the book. The fourth chapter presents a systematic comment to the translation with practical examples on culture-specific items, lexicon and syntax with reference to theoretical studies. In the appendix readers will find the three selected chapters of the source text
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Simper, Richard. "The structure of the UK building society industry : an econometric analysis." Thesis, University of Sheffield, 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.480610.

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Altieri, Antonio Luís de Quadros 1958. "A cultura do teatro de Augusto Boal : processos socioeducativos." [s.n.], 2012. http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/250992.

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Orientador: Maria da Glória Marcondes Gohn
Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Educação
Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-22T11:57:23Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Altieri_AntonioLuisdeQuadros_D.pdf: 6971443 bytes, checksum: 52fbf0c5a5f0e31653f8990e5a59d57a (MD5) Previous issue date: 2012
Resumo: Trata-se de tese sobre os processos artísticos socioeducativos criados e desenvolvidos por Augusto Boal e suas extensões ao Teatro do Oprimido. A pesquisa apresenta, inicialmente, a trajetória de vida de Boal, como forma de contextualizar sua produção. A seguir, aborda as características e propriedades do processo de construção da representação teatral brasileira que se deu com Boal no Teatro de Arena; e a ação intelectual artística socioeducativa resultante, caracterizando-se como uma nova cultura política. Foram realizadas pesquisas bibliográficas, biográficas e documentais; realizaram-se entrevistas narrativas a fim de compor a historia de vida de quatro Curingas - artista: praticante, estudioso e pesquisador do Método; especialista em processo de aprendizagem - e um estudo de caso no Ponto Educandário de Cultura, localizado na Zona Oeste do município de São Paulo, no Estado de São Paulo. A opção metodológica evidenciou as estruturas de sentimento que materializaram as diversas produções observadas e analisadas. A pesquisa de campo revela a existência de processos artísticos socioeducativos com aprendizagem e saberes não formais para a autonomia, para a desopressão e formação de sujeitos que se apropriaram das ferramentas da produção cultural em teatro. Dentre as principais conclusões destacam-se: entre os praticantes do teatro de Boal, quando atuando insertos na cultura política de um dado território e a par com os movimentos sociais existentes, encontram-se processos intencionais de educação não formal cidadã e para a liberdade. Isto significa a possibilidade destes praticantes passarem da condição de oprimidos para a de produtores de subjetividades e novas identidades, podendo se apropriar da produção cultural em benefício da própria emancipação. A perspectiva foi de que os formados nestes processos podem vir a ser sujeitos de mudanças importantes e significativas, entendida a condição de que não é a educação que muda o mundo: a educação muda as pessoas que mudam o mundo, se houver intenção e condições objetivas.
Abstract: This thesis is about the artistic, social-educational processes created and developed by Augusto Boal and their extensions to the ?Teatro do Oprimido?. At first, it is presented Boal's life trajectory in order to contextualize his production. Next, it is discussed not only the characteristics and properties of the construction of the Brazilian theater representation that happened with Boal in the ?Teatro de Arena?, but also the social educational artistic action resulting, characterized as a new political culture. There were bibliographic, biographic and documental searches; furthermore, narrative interviews for composing the life story of four Jokers - artist: practitioner, learner and researcher of the Method; specialist of the learning process - and a case studied at ?Ponto Educandário de Cultura?, located at the West side of São Paulo, Capital city. The methodological option showed the structures of the feeling that materialized the several productions observed and analyzed. Field research reveals the existence of artistic social educational processes with non-formal learning and knowledge for autonomy, against oppression and to form the subjects who have appropriated the tools of the cultural production in the theater. Amid the main conclusions stand out: among practitioners of Boal's theater ideas, acting as inserts in the political culture of a certain territory and knowing the existing social movements, there are intentional processes of non-formal education for citizenship and for freedom. That means, the possibility of those practitioners to overcome from the condition of oppressed to producers of subjectivity and new identities, being able to appropriate themselves the cultural production for benefit of their own emancipation. The perspective was that the ones formed on such processes could be the subjects of important and significant changes, understood and accepted the condition that it is not education that changes the world: education changes the persons who change the world if there is intention and objective conditions.
Doutorado
Politicas, Administração e Sistemas Educacionais
Doutor em Educação
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Bria, Rosemarie Dorothy. "How Jell-O molds society and how society molds Jell-O : a case study of an American food industry creation /." Access Digital Full Text version, 1991. http://pocketknowledge.tc.columbia.edu/home.php/bybib/1029871x.

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Thesis (Ed.D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University, 1991.
Typescript; issued also on microfilm. Sponsor: Joan Dye Gussow. Dissertation Committee: Isobel Contento. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 198-203).
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Books on the topic "Society for the Emancipation of Industry"

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Saunders, Gail. Bahamian society after emancipation. Kingston, Jamaica: Ian Randle, 1994.

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Talbot, Clare. Women's emancipation within post-World War I society. [Derby: Derbyshire College of Higher Education, 1987.

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Krahn, Harvey. Work, industry, & Canadian society. 8th ed. Toronto, ON: Thomson Nelson, 2006.

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Krahn, H. Work, industry & Canadian society. 4th ed. Scarborough, Ont: Thomson/Nelson, 2002.

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Krahn, H. Work, industry & Canadian society. 4th ed. Scarborough, Ont: Thomson Nelson Learning, 2002.

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Boléat, Mark. The building society industry. 2nd ed. London: Allen & Unwin, 1986.

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Bhowmik, Sharit. Industry, labour, and society. New Delhi: Orient Blackswan, 2012.

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S, Lowe Graham, and Hughes Karen D. 1960-, eds. Work, industry & Canadian society. 5th ed. Toronto, Ont: Thomson/Nelson, 2007.

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1955-, Beckles Hilary, and Shepherd Verene, eds. Caribbean freedom: Society and economy from emancipation to the present. Kingston, Jamaica: Randle, 1993.

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1946-, Eklof Ben, and Frank Stephen 1955-, eds. The World of the Russian peasant: Post-emancipation culture and society. Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Society for the Emancipation of Industry"

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Quintili, Paolo. "Arti, tecniche e mestieri in Diderot e nell’Encyclopédie." In Idee di lavoro e di ozio per la nostra civiltà, 561–70. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/979-12-215-0319-7.65.

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The Encyclopédie, ou Dictionnaire raisonné des sciences, des arts et des métiers (1751-1772) is the laboratory of experience of the new technical-rational values produced by the 18th century and the philosophie. Science and the mechanical 'arts', labor, invention, industry and trade; and, following on from these, freedom of conscience, tolerance, dialogue etc., in their controversial relations, give a representation of the conflicts of the newly-born bourgeois society. Exponents of the 'enlightened', learned and anticlerical nobility (Jaucourt, d'Holbach, Hélvetius); of the intellectual petty bourgeoisie (Diderot, Rousseau, Marmontel, Deleyre); of the 'liberal clergy' (the abbés De Prades, Yvon, Pestré and many others). Work and the representation (also figurative) of the productive operations of the mechanical arts are the central point, the main means through which the Enlightenment's enterprise of human emancipation is accomplished.
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Schobin, Janosch, and Philipp Staab. "It’s All in the Game: Emancipation in Digitalized Working Environments." In Digitalization in Industry, 111–31. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28258-5_5.

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Iordache, Octavian. "Industry and Society." In Roads to Higher Dimensional Polytopic Projects, 159–76. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-07980-1_8.

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Seibt, David, Simon Schaupp, and Uli Meyer. "Toward an Analytical Understanding of Domination and Emancipation in Digitalizing Industries." In Digitalization in Industry, 1–25. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28258-5_1.

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Spracklen, Karl. "The Sports Industry." In Exploring Sports and Society, 189–204. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-34160-0_14.

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Wenten, Klara-Aylin. "Controlling Labor in Makeathons: On the Recuperation of Emancipation in Industrial Labor Processes." In Digitalization in Industry, 153–77. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28258-5_7.

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Ruef, Martin. "Institutional Transformation and Uncertainty." In Between Slavery and Capitalism. Princeton University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691162775.003.0001.

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This introductory chapter provides an overview of the institutional transformation of the American South after the U.S. Civil War. Although the emancipation of former slaves and political upheavals of Radical Reconstruction are perhaps the most evident features of this institutional transformation, it touched upon almost every aspect of Southern society, ranging from urban life to class structure to the organizations that populated the region's agriculture and industry. The New South that resulted after Radical Reconstruction evidenced a more capitalist and market-driven society than its antebellum counterpart. Enduring uncertainty was a defining feature of this transition between precapitalist and capitalist institutions. The chapter then formulates a general theory regarding the evolution of uncertainty over the course of institutional transformation, and discusses the specific transitions toward capitalism that occurred in the economy of the U.S. South during the postbellum era.
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Kumar, Dinesh. "Unconscious Branding." In Promoting Consumer Engagement Through Emotional Branding and Sensory Marketing, 99–112. IGI Global, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-6684-5897-6.ch009.

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Advertisements are on billboards, on TV and in newspapers, and on mobile phones. However, very little thought is given to the opposite effect of advertising – the effect on the self-perception of people. This chapter discusses unconscious effects of advertising – the self-image formed by consumers by seeing repeated images in advertisements. Gender roles are reinforced when ads show people in different roles. In particular, it describes the effect on society when images of women are shown in domestic roles. Subconsciously, an image is formed in the minds of people that both men and women have specific gender roles to play in society. The chapter further discusses how advertisements need to be more sensitive towards subliminal messages received by society. The advertising industry needs to move a step ahead and assess the impact of their work before releasing it on an unsuspecting public. Since people tend to believe what they see, reinforcing traditional roles in advertising images prevents women's emancipation and limits girls in their quest to become independent.
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Halim, Sadeka. "Sociology of Minority Communities: Today and Tomorrow." In Society and Sociology in Bangladesh: A South Asian Perspective, 94–122. The University Press Limited (UPL), 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.59212/9789845064071_5.

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This chapter discusses Sociology of Minority and its challenges and future. If the disciplinary apparatus of Sociology is thought to be aimed at emancipation and welfare of human society, minority studies possess the amalgamation incorporating the essence of inclusive development, culture, justice, and inequality studies. In that context, the author of this chapter will provide an authoritative account of aims, goals, theoretical framework, and standards of how minority studies are taught in the Sociology department, for the first time in the history of Bangladesh, along with future directions of this course. The Constitution of Bangladesh is a testament for equality for its entire people regardless of religious, ethnic, and gender identity, but several events of past years seem to have violated that. Minority studies, as illustrated in this chapter, tries to engage the cause, nature, and direction of these events of rights violations. This chapter explores further the present status of minority studies in Sociology, highlighting how our teaching, research, and collaboration agendas could be improved in understanding minority communities’ experience of social exclusion, oppression, and marginalization and how these people could be mainstreamed in line with 2030 SDGs and other national goals. It also examines and provides a future direction for academic excellence and research potential on issues such as interactive relationship between globalization, international migration, diaspora, and remittance-earning middle class in Bangladesh. The chapters give clear suggestions and future directions in building and strengthening relationships with local and international development organizations, civil society organizations, and industry-university or university-university relationships for research and development at home and abroad.
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"Mass Society, I." In Jewish Emancipation, 234–49. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvdmx0kk.23.

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Conference papers on the topic "Society for the Emancipation of Industry"

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Parise, Giuseppe, Luigi Parise, and Francesco Di Paolo. "Virtual Society of IoT Robosats and Emancipation of Electrical Utilization." In 2019 AEIT International Annual Conference (AEIT). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23919/aeit.2019.8893313.

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Luts-Sootak, Marju, and Hesi Siimets-Gross. "Baltic Peasants after Emancipation – Free and Equal People or a New Social Estate in the Estate-Based Society?" In The 7th International Scientific Conference of the Faculty of Law of the University of Latvia. University of Latvia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.22364/iscflul.7.2.12.

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"Industry Applications Society." In Conference Record of 2007 Annual Pulp and Paper Industry Technical Conference. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/papcon.2007.4286270.

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"Industry Applications Society." In Conference Record of 2005 Annual Pulp and Paper Industry Technical Conference. IEEE, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/papcon.2005.1502038.

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"IEEE industry application society." In 2016 IEEE Industry Applications Society Annual Meeting. IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ias.2016.7731982.

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"IEEE industry application society." In 2017 IEEE Industry Applications Society Annual Meeting. IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ias.2017.8101892.

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"IEEE — Industry applications society." In 2010 IEEE Petroleum and Chemical Industry Technical Conference (PCIC 2010). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/pcic.2010.5666869.

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"IEEE Industry Applications Society." In Conference Record of the 2005 IEEE Industry Applications Conference Fortieth IAS Annual Meeting. IEEE, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ias.2005.1518769.

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"IEEE Industry Applications Society." In Conference Record of the 2004 IEEE Industry Applications Conference, 2004. 39th IAS Annual Meeting. IEEE, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ias.2004.1348486.

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"IEEE Industry Applications Society." In Conference Record of the 2006 IEEE Industry Applications Conference Forty-First IAS Annual Meeting. IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ias.2006.256575.

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Reports on the topic "Society for the Emancipation of Industry"

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Phinisee, Eri, Autumn Toney, and Melissa Flagg. AI and Industry: Postings and Media Portrayals. Center for Security and Emerging Technology, May 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.51593/20200059.

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Artificial intelligence is said to be transforming the global economy and society in what some dub the “fourth industrial revolution.” This data brief analyzes media representations of AI and the alignments, or misalignments, with job postings that include the AI-related skills needed to make AI a practical reality. This potential distortion is important as the U.S. Congress places an increasing emphasis on AI. If government funds are shifted away from other areas of science and technology, based partly on the representations that leaders and the public are exposed to in the media, it is important to understand how those representations align with real jobs across the country.
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de Haas, Wim, Rob Bugter, and Geert Woltjer. Supply chain sustainability in the marine contracting industry : a qualitative assessment based on the integral conceptual framework for a circular climate-neutral society. Wageningen: Wageningen Environmental Research, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18174/541246.

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Hille, Carsten, Daria Morcinczyk-Meier, Sarah Schneider, and Dana Mietzner. From InnoMix to University–Industry Collaboration: Fostering Exchange at Eye Level. Technische Hochschule Wildau, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.15771/innohub_1.

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In this paper, we address a specific tool—InnoMix—that is implemented to overcome the lack of university–industry interaction in a selected region facing structural change with its corresponding impact on the economy and society. InnoMix is facilitated and implemented by university-based transfer scouts who act as mediators and translators between the players of the regional innovation system. These transfer scouts are part of the Innovation Hub 13, in which the region’s partners and stakeholders, infrastructures and competencies are systematically networked with each other to set new impulses for knowledge and technology transfer. These new impulses are brought into the region through new transfer approaches ranging from people and tools to infrastructure. InnoMix can be considered to be a highly interactive tool to overcome the weak, direct interaction between researchers and potential corporate partners in the region to foster strong collaboration between academia and industry. InnoMix especially aims to strengthen interdisciplinary exchange to shed light on cross-disciplinary perspectives. For that reason, transfer scouts focusing on transfer activities related to the life sciences, digitalisation and lightweight construction are involved in the implementation of InnoMix. Based on 11 InnoMix running since 2019, we provide insights into the planning and preparation phase of InnoMix and the selection of relevant topics and requirements for matching participants. Furthermore, we clearly indicate which formats of InnoMix work best and in which way university–industry interactions could be curated after InnoMix is implemented.
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Tubb, Catherine, and Tony Seba. Rethinking Food and Agriculture 2020-2030: The Second Domestication of Plants and Animals, the Disruption of the Cow, and the Collapse of Industrial Livestock Farming. RethinkX, September 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.61322/ijip9096.

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By 2030, the number of cows in the U.S. will have fallen by 50% and the cattle farming industry will be all but bankrupt. All other livestock industries will suffer a similar fate, while the knock-on effects for crop farmers and businesses throughout the value chain will be severe. Rethinking Food and Agriculture shows how the modern food disruption, made possible by rapid advances in precision biology and an entirely new model of production we call Food-as-Software, will have profound implications not just for the industrial agriculture industry, but for the wider economy, society, and the environment.
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Carter, Bria, Brian Tinsley, Christina Luke Luna, Jhacole LeGrand-Dunn, and Zohal Shah. Understanding the Supports and Skills that Enable Successful Pathways for Black Learners and Workers into Non-Four-Year Degree Technology Careers: A Landscape Scan. Digital Promise, August 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.51388/20.500.12265/189.

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While diversity within the technology industry has been critical for developing robust and creative technology solutions, recruiting and retaining diverse tech talent in today’s society has been a challenge worldwide, especially for Black learners and workers. Subsequently, the technology field is left lacking in diversity of thought and perspective among technology industry practitioners and leaders. By examining peer-reviewed journal articles, statistical data from research reports, and website material from professional associations, this landscape scan synthesizes existing research and curates programs, services, and supports that effectively promote the success of Black learners and workers within technology career pathways.
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Moreno-Castro, C., and M. Crespo. IBERIFIER Reports: The Impact of Disinformation on the Media Industry in Spain and Portugal. Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Navarra, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.15581/026.001.

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Disinformation, the deliberate spread of false or misleading information, has become an increasingly pressing issue in today’s society. The media industry, which plays a critical role in providing reliable and accurate information to the public, has been significantly impacted by the rise of disinformation. This IBERIFIER Report provides an analysis of the effects of disinformation on the media industry and the challenges it poses for journalists, media organizations, and the public. It highlights the erosion of public trust in the media, the need for journalists to verify information more rigorously, and the creation of a market for sensationalist and biased news. The researchers from IBERIFIER surveyed the Spanish and Portuguese population to analyze their response to disinformation and misinformation, their trust in media outlets, and their perception of media verification procedures. Data shows that both countries had high trust in health institutions, and both achieved high rates of complete vaccination among all population groups, especially the elderly and most vulnerable. Respondents from both countries trusted researchers, scientists, and experts the most, followed by journalists and doctors. However, respondents in Spain were skeptical about media paywalls and whether they prevented the dissemination of fake news. In Portugal, respondents showed a higher concern for disinformation in politics than among family members, colleagues, or friends. The survey analysis in Spain showed that gender influenced the loss of trust in media outlets that publish fake news, while the degree of trust in the media depended on the political party they voted for in the last elections. Media editors in both countries confirmed the importance of verification procedures, although there were differences in their approach. The report also suggests several solutions to combat disinformation, such as investing in media literacy programs, regulating online sources of disinformation, and promoting transparency and accuracy in reporting. By reading the report, policymakers, media organizations, and the general public can gain a better understanding of the effects of disinformation on the media industry in Spain and Portugal and the steps that can be taken to address this growing problem.
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East, Sidonie. Is Transparency Enough? An Examination of the Effect of the Extractive Industry Initiative (EITI) on Accountability, Corruption and Trust in Zambia. Institute of Development Studies, April 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ictd.2024.020.

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Extractive industry governance is a hot topic in both academic research and the public arena. The area that has been most heavily studied in the academic field is the resource curse, which documents the negative effects of dependence on resource-rents in resource-rich developing countries. The political strand of this literature argues that a strong dependence on resource-rents negatively impacts three governance outcomes: accountability, corruption and trust. Scholars argue that these governance issues can be improved if transparency is increased, which inspired the creation of the Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative (EITI). The EITI is a transnational non-governmental organisation launched in 2002, with the aim of improving accountability, corruption and trust in the extractive industry by increasing transparency in the sector. In order to be EITI-compliant, countries must make key documents and data from their extractive industry publicly available and form a multi-stakeholder group with members of civil society organisations (CSOs), extractive industry and government representatives to oversee reporting. Summary of ICTD Working Paper 175.
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Young, Ron, ed. APO Knowledge Management Facilitators Guide. Asian Productivity Organization, May 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.61145/qhqt9093.

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The new second edition of the APO Knowledge Management Facilitators’ Guide (KMFG) reflects the updated APO KM Framework, ISO 30301 Knowledge Management Standard, and Industry 4.0 smart technology adoption. The five revised modules show how to navigate the transition to a digital society, manage change and knowledge, and remain agile, sustainable, and productive. The updated 42-item KM Assessment Tool in the KMFG Appendix is invaluable for KM consultants serving public- and private-sector clients in different socioeconomic settings.
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Davies, Sarah, Esther Hodges, Yohana Kibe, Laura Le Ray, and Julius Batemba. Impact Evaluation of Regional Influencing Work in Horn, East and Central Africa: A case study of the Rights in Crisis and Extractive Industries initiatives. Oxfam GB, November 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2022.9905.

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Oxfam’s Horn, East and Central Africa (HECA) Regional Platform was established in 2016. Among the platform’s far-reaching portfolio are two influencing initiatives – the Rights in Crisis network and Extractive Industries programme. Despite their ambitious scope and the challenging context, this report confirms that Oxfam has contributed effectively to change at all levels. These changes include increased refugee participation in advocacy initiatives and strengthened civil society engagement on issues involving the extractives industry. Find out more by reading the full report now.
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Colburn, Ben, Fiona Macpherson, Derek Brown, Laura Fearnley, Calum Hodgson, and Neil McDonnell. Policy and Practice Recommendations for Augmented and Mixed Reality. University of Glasgow, March 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.36399/gla.pubs.326686.

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This policy report arises from the research project Augmented Reality: Ethics, Perception, Metaphysics, conducted at the University of Glasgow’s Centre for the Study of Perceptual Experience between November 2021 and November 2023. It was funded by a grant from the Royal Society of Edinburgh. The project brought together experts in various academic fields, with partners from industry and regulatory bodies, to explore the nature of augmented and mixed reality technology, the theories underpinning them, and the ethical and legal questions prompted by new technology in this domain.
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