Journal articles on the topic 'Symbolic resource'

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1

Johnson, Diane Elizabeth. "Transactions in Symbolic Resources: A Resource Dependence Model of Congressional Deliberation." Sociological Perspectives 38, no. 2 (June 1995): 151–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1389288.

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A modification of Stephen Toulmin's (1984) “field-specific reasoning” is applied to the text of deliberations in the United States Congress surrounding the foreign corrupt practices case 1975–1977. Findings suggest that Congress has developed an institutionalized mode of deliberation focused on developing argumentation capable of bringing limited sets of highly general and cathected goals (warrants) into equilibrium. The coalition-building capacity of symbolic resources is traced to their “embeddedness” in overlapping networks of issues, existing legislation, governmental organs, congressional committees, legislative careers, and mobilized (or mobilizable) constituencies. The analysis is used to formulate a resource dependence model of exchange in symbolic resources.
2

Zittoun, Tania. "Difficult secularity: Talmud as symbolic resource." Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 8, no. 2 (September 16, 2006): 59–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/ocps.v8i2.2092.

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Religious systems are organised semiotic structures providing people with values and rules, identities, regularity, and meaning. Consequently, a person moving out of a religious system might be exposed to meaning-ruptures. The paper presents the situation of young people who have been in Yeshiva, a rabbinic high-school, and who have to join secular university life. It analyses the changes to which they are exposed. On the bases of this case study, the paper examines the following questions: can the religious symbolic system internalised by a person in a religious sphere of experience be mobilised as a symbolic resource once the person moves to a secular environment? If yes, how do religious symbolic resources facilitate the transition to a secular life? And if not, what other symbolic and social resources might facilitate such transitions?
3

Fülöp, Endre, and Norbert Pataki. "A DSL for Resource Checking Using Finite State Automaton-Driven Symbolic Execution." Open Computer Science 11, no. 1 (December 17, 2020): 107–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/comp-2020-0120.

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AbstractStatic analysis is an essential way to find code smells and bugs. It checks the source code without execution and no test cases are required, therefore its cost is lower than testing. Moreover, static analysis can help in software engineering comprehensively, since static analysis can be used for the validation of code conventions, for measuring software complexity and for executing code refactorings as well. Symbolic execution is a static analysis method where the variables (e.g. input data) are interpreted with symbolic values. Clang Static Analyzer is a powerful symbolic execution engine based on the Clang compiler infrastructure that can be used with C, C++ and Objective-C. Validation of resources’ usage (e.g. files, memory) requires finite state automata (FSA) for modeling the state of resource (e.g. locked or acquired resource). In this paper, we argue for an approach in which automata are in-use during symbolic execution. The generic automaton can be customized for different resources. We present our domain-specific language to define automata in terms of syntactic and semantic rules. We have developed a tool for this approach which parses the automaton and generates Clang Static Analyzer checker that can be used in the symbolic execution engine. We show an example automaton in our domain-specific language and the usage of generated checker.
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Zborovsky, Garold E., and Varvara S. Katashinskikh. "Symbolic Resource of the Research and Pedagogical Community of Universities." Izvestia Ural Federal University Journal Series 1. Issues in Education, Science and Culture 29, no. 2 (2023): 205–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.15826/izv1.2023.29.2.039.

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Scientific and pedagogical stuff (SPS) are considered in the article as, on the one hand, one of the basic social communities of the university, on the other — as a scientific and professional community and scientific and educational community. SPS are characterized by the presence of a number of resources, of which one of the least studied is a symbolic resource. The article gives an interpretation of the symbolic resourcefulness of the SPS, shows its role and significance in the development of the entire resourcefulness of this social community. The purpose of the article is to analyze the symbolic resourcing of the SPS as a phenomenon of higher education. The symbolic resourcefulness of the SPS is the subject of scientific research in the proposed article.
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Oleksenko, Roman, Yevheni Bortnykov, Eduard Kryvolapov, Vlada Bilohur, Eduard Kliuienko, and Liudmyla Radchenko. "Metaphysical Portrait of Melitopol in the Symbolic Circle "Honey -Milk -Water"(The Problem of Symbolic Resources in Tourist Activities)." Revista de la Universidad del Zulia 14, no. 40 (May 4, 2023): 205–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.46925//rdluz.40.11.

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The purposeof the proposed research is to create a metaphysical portrait sketch of Melitopol in the symbolic circle "honey -milk -water" in the context of attracting symbolic resources problem in tourism.In an intensive way, and following thestrengtheningof homo viator phenomenon in the global world, research in the touristic field and philosophy of tourism are increasingly turning their attention to the "internal resource", including in this concept, in addition to natural and cultural-historical, also symbolic resource. The work uses such methods as dialectical and metaphysical, the principle of comprehensiveness of research, the general logical method, and other methods of scientific research. Tourist legend as an applied direction can become an effective marketing mechanism, as a result of which it is possible, using a symbolic resources variety and tools, to create humanitarian and social development perspectives, agreed and identified through analysis of mythological structures and conceptual shells for harmonious and effective development of these territories. In this aspect, tourism as oneof the mass culture branches will produce tourist flows directed to previously elaboratedterritorial brands.
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Mazur, Karolina. "Symbolic action and organizational resources acquisition and exploitation." Management 23, no. 2 (December 1, 2019): 32–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/manment-2019-0017.

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Summary The article aims to analyze the current literature (conceptual and research articles) in the field of relations between the symbolic activities of the organization and the ability to acquire resources and their efficient exploitation, and an attempt to build a conceptual model on this basis. This goal was achieved by applying a systematic literature review. The analysis was based on literature, both conceptual and research. Types of resources purchased by stakeholders were indicated. The study presents a conceptual model describing the role of symbolic activities in the process of resource acquisition and management. The concept of symbolic obligations was presented as a consequence of actions taken by organizations.
7

Galang, Maria Carmen, and Gerald R. Ferris. "Human Resource Department Power and Influence Through Symbolic Action." Human Relations 50, no. 11 (November 1997): 1403–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/001872679705001104.

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Meuli, Giulia, Mathias Soeken, Martin Roetteler, and Thomas Häner. "Enabling accuracy-aware Quantum compilers using symbolic resource estimation." Proceedings of the ACM on Programming Languages 4, OOPSLA (November 13, 2020): 1–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3428198.

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Nataliia, Lukianova, and Fell Elena. "Internet of Things as a Symbolic Resource of Power." Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 166 (January 2015): 521–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2014.12.565.

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Cezanne, Cécile, and Laurence Saglietto. "Human Capital-Intensive Firms and Symbolic Value Creation." Timisoara Journal of Economics and Business 7, no. 1 (June 1, 2014): 70–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/tjeb-2014-0004.

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AbstractThe aim of this paper is to study the process of symbolic value creation of human capital-intensive firms. Human capital is a critical resource for firms’ activities. Nevertheless, this dimension is often obscured by industrial economists. In the light of critical resource theory, we analyze how taking into account the inalienable and inimitable nature of specific human capital entails a reconsideration of the role and boundaries of the firm. We show that the firm seeks to coordinate the specialization of its key partners within the frame of its economic boundaries to ensure the long-term optimization of its potential of value. Therefore, the value of the firm depends on all the resources that the firm coordinates. Then we focus on the way HCIF can create different values. We suggest that the firm builds its competitive advantage on different forms of values, in particular the symbolic value incorporated in human capital. Finally, on the basis of these considerations, we identify the wealth included in the critical resources of the firm and to bring to light the process of symbolic value creation associated with it. We suggest that the firm is the value creating entity and the customer both recognizes and derives the value created from whatever it is that the firm provides. We propose a definition of this value and a schema of its creation process based on management works attempts. We conclude by proposing paths of research that could fruitfully be explored to further develop this new subject.
11

Feng, Zongxin. "Metonymy as a semiotic resource in fictional narrative." Chinese Semiotic Studies 18, no. 3 (August 1, 2022): 475–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/css-2022-2076.

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Abstract This article argues that metonymy provides “cognitive roundabouts” that semiotically create more meaning in fictional narrative against the popular views that metonymy provides “referential shorthand” and “communicative shortcuts.” In the light of Lakoff and Johnson’s observation on the relationship between symbolic metonymy and the comprehension of religious and cultural concepts, it explores the semiotic potentialities of metonymy in constructing fictional reality with special reference to O. Henry’s short story “The Cop and the Anthem.” It concludes that artistic deployment of metonymic devices comically exploits and explicitizes various conceptual associations and logical relations between the source and the target and requires greater cognitive effort from the reader; in defamiliarizing the fictional representation, the narrative text produces more symbolic meanings and ultimately refamiliarizes the reader with aspects of actual-world reality that are otherwise hardly perceivable.
12

Fowler, Don D. "Uses of the Past: Archaeology in the Service of the State." American Antiquity 52, no. 2 (April 1987): 229–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/281778.

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Nation states, or partisans thereof, control and allocate symbolic resources as one means of legitimizing power and authority, and in pursuit of their perceived nationalistic goals and ideologies. A major symbolic resource is the past. In this paper I review three cases in which the past and, in particular, relevant archaeological resources were "used" for such purposes, and I refer to several other well-known instances. The three cases discussed are Mexico from ca. A.D. 900 to the present, Britain from ca. A.D. 1500 to the present, and the People’s Republic of China since 1949. The implications of such uses in relation to archaeological theories and interpretations are discussed.
13

Chen, Jie. "Research on the Design of Graphic Public Welfare Posters based on Semiology." BCP Social Sciences & Humanities 16 (March 26, 2022): 397–403. http://dx.doi.org/10.54691/bcpssh.v16i.494.

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The theory of semiology as basis, first, the denotative meaning of the signifier and the signified generation in the vision of the graphic public welfare posters of natural resource protection were demonstrated and analyzed, as well as the connotative meaning of the ideological level in the dual characteristics, then the symbolic analysis, induction, deconstruction and construction were carried out in accordance with the division of binary composition, dual characteristics and different representation modes of symbolic graphics, and applied them to the actual creative process. In the design process, the extraction and transformation of different types of symbolic elements, such as color, graphics, and materials, isomorphism, symbolism and other creative expression were combined to carry out graphic poster design around the theme of "water resources conservation".
14

Tsoi, Ho Fung, Adrian Alan Pol, Vladimir Loncar, Ekaterina Govorkova, Miles Cranmer, Sridhara Dasu, Peter Elmer, Philip Harris, Isobel Ojalvo, and Maurizio Pierini. "Symbolic Regression on FPGAs for Fast Machine Learning Inference." EPJ Web of Conferences 295 (2024): 09036. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/202429509036.

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The high-energy physics community is investigating the potential of deploying machine-learning-based solutions on Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) to enhance physics sensitivity while still meeting data processing time constraints. In this contribution, we introduce a novel end-to-end procedure that utilizes a machine learning technique called symbolic regression (SR). It searches the equation space to discover algebraic relations approximating a dataset. We use PySR (a software to uncover these expressions based on an evolutionary algorithm) and extend the functionality of hls4ml (a package for machine learning inference in FPGAs) to support PySR-generated expressions for resource-constrained production environments. Deep learning models often optimize the top metric by pinning the network size because the vast hyperparameter space prevents an extensive search for neural architecture. Conversely, SR selects a set of models on the Pareto front, which allows for optimizing the performance-resource trade-off directly. By embedding symbolic forms, our implementation can dramatically reduce the computational resources needed to perform critical tasks. We validate our method on a physics benchmark: the multiclass classification of jets produced in simulated proton-proton collisions at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. We show that our approach can approximate a 3-layer neural network using an inference model that achieves up to a 13-fold decrease in execution time, down to 5 ns, while still preserving more than 90% approximation accuracy.
15

Gorin, Dmitry G. "Public History in the Urban Space: Symbolic Resource of the Past and Cultural Capital." Общество: философия, история, культура, no. 12 (December 20, 2023): 326–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.24158/fik.2023.12.44.

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The article considers the role of public history in the development of modern city’s cultural capital. Public history is defined in terms of the peculiarities of its tools, which contribute to the involvement of the symbolic resource of the past in current cultural communications and the accumulation of cultural capital of urban local communi-ties. Cultural capital is understood not only in the context of assessing the city’s cultural resources, but also their involvement in the production of public goods and flows of communications and services. The development of cultural capital is described in the context of three interrelated aspects of urban space: practical, imaginary and lived. The necessity to actualize the symbolic resource of the past and its use in improving the quality of urban environment is caused by the increased competition of modern cities for the most active and qualified resi-dents.
16

Grigorichev, Konstantin, and Iuliia Koreshkova. "‘Chinese’ or ‘Local’?" Inner Asia 24, no. 1 (April 12, 2022): 31–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22105018-02302016.

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Abstract The article discusses the appearance of complex relations around the production and supply chains of agricultural products of ‘Chinese’ greenhouses in the Siberian suburbs. The authors attempt to analyse the contradictory relations as an assemblage in Manuel DeLanda’s theoretical optics. Attempt to explain how the market manipulation of vegetable identification (‘Chinese’/‘local’) conceals a complex social assemblage with a multiplicity of identities, which, through the practices of translation, allows the assemblage to be combined. The study demonstrates how ‘Chinese’ actors engage material resources, through assemblages with local residents and the authorities, which allows them to acquire a symbolic resource of ‘locality’ and get involved in the situation of ‘local capitalism’. For local residents, this is an opportunity to integrate into capitalist relations through the sale of the symbolic resource ‘locality’. Such a sale of ‘locality’ is only possible if there are stable perceptions of ‘Chineseness’, in the maintenance of which the local population are engaged.
17

Morasso, Sara Greco, and Tania Zittoun. "The trajectory of food as a symbolic resource for international migrants." Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 15, no. 1 (January 11, 2014): 28–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/ocps.v15i1.15828.

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This paper explores the trajectories of food and how culinary practices evolve over time in relation to a migrant’s experience. Our focus is on international mothers adjusting to life in London. We identify a connection between eating practices and evolving identities. In line with a stream of research in cultural psychology, we consider food as a symbolic resource mobilized by migrants to provide some material support to their processes of adaptation to a new country. In this respect, we introduce the notion of malleable symbolic resource in order to highlight the ductility of food in relation to an individual’s evolving personal culture. On this basis, we propose to describe ductile trajectories of food in relation to three important steps: where food and eating practices come from; with whom food is consumed and for what goal it is chosen.
18

Khokholova, Irena, Natalia Danilova, Alyona Tomaska, and Kyunney Pestereva. "Memorial narratives and symbolic images as a resource for the development of Northern urban space." SHS Web of Conferences 112 (2021): 00043. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/202111200043.

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The article is devoted to the identification of symbolic markers and perception of the cognitive model of the space of the northern cities of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia). The definition of “northern cities” is constructed based on the results of a study to identify various aspects of identity (national, territorial, ethnocultural) and is used by the authors when defining all cities of Yakutia. The main tools for constructing and regulating the cognitive map of a city are city monuments associated with historical memory and acting as components of state policy and a nation-building tool. The main research methods were historical and cognitive analysis and the method of questionnaire survey. The novelty of the article is a cross-cultural study of the perception of urban monuments as symbolic markers of urban space. The authors observe a difference in the perception of the symbolism of urban space between generational groups. It is concluded that each city, depending on its geographical and economic location, local characteristics, and national identity, has its own specific set of symbolic markers in the cognitive map of the city. The findings will contribute to the systematic study of the value attitudes of residents of modern Russian cities. Multilevel models of symbolic images associated with both national and territorial identities are being built.
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Škrlj, Blaž, Matej Martinc, Nada Lavrač, and Senja Pollak. "autoBOT: evolving neuro-symbolic representations for explainable low resource text classification." Machine Learning 110, no. 5 (April 14, 2021): 989–1028. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10994-021-05968-x.

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AbstractLearning from texts has been widely adopted throughout industry and science. While state-of-the-art neural language models have shown very promising results for text classification, they are expensive to (pre-)train, require large amounts of data and tuning of hundreds of millions or more parameters. This paper explores how automatically evolved text representations can serve as a basis for explainable, low-resource branch of models with competitive performance that are subject to automated hyperparameter tuning. We present autoBOT (automatic Bags-Of-Tokens), an autoML approach suitable for low resource learning scenarios, where both the hardware and the amount of data required for training are limited. The proposed approach consists of an evolutionary algorithm that jointly optimizes various sparse representations of a given text (including word, subword, POS tag, keyword-based, knowledge graph-based and relational features) and two types of document embeddings (non-sparse representations). The key idea of autoBOT is that, instead of evolving at the learner level, evolution is conducted at the representation level. The proposed method offers competitive classification performance on fourteen real-world classification tasks when compared against a competitive autoML approach that evolves ensemble models, as well as state-of-the-art neural language models such as BERT and RoBERTa. Moreover, the approach is explainable, as the importance of the parts of the input space is part of the final solution yielded by the proposed optimization procedure, offering potential for meta-transfer learning.
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Zavadska, O. R. "Inauguration speeches of Ukrainian presidents as a symbolic resource of power." Politicus, no. 3 (2020): 109–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.24195/2414-9616.2020-3.17.

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Zajac, Edward J., and James D. Westphal. "THE SYMBOLIC MANAGEMENT OF CEO COMPENSATION: AGENCY VS. HUMAN RESOURCE JUSTIFICATIONS." Academy of Management Proceedings 1994, no. 1 (August 1994): 228–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.5465/ambpp.1994.10344727.

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Potseluev, Sergei. "Social forgetfulness as a symbolic resource of national mobilization (conceptual aspect)." Political Science (RU), no. 2 (2020): 42–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.31249/poln/2020.02.02.

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Gaglio, Sal vatore, Giuseppe Lo Re, Gloria Martorella, and Daniele Peri. "High-level Programming and Symbolic Reasoning on IoT Resource Constrained Devices." EAI Endorsed Transactions on Cognitive Communications 1, no. 2 (May 28, 2015): e6. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/cogcom.1.2.e6.

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Berthier, Nicolas, Hervé Marchand, and Éric Rutten. "Symbolic Limited Lookahead Control for Best-effort Dynamic Computing Resource Management." IFAC-PapersOnLine 51, no. 7 (2018): 112–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ifacol.2018.06.288.

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Amsler, Sarah S. "Promising Futures? Education as a Symbolic Resource of Hope in Kyrgyzstan." Europe-Asia Studies 61, no. 7 (August 25, 2009): 1189–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09668130903068723.

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Mundiarti, Vanida, Sartika Kale, Irul Khotijah, and Engelbertus Nggalu Bali. "Pendidikan dan Latihan: Merancang Kegiatan Menyenangkan untuk Mengembangkan Kemampuan Berpikir Simbolik Bagi Anak Usia Dini." Kelimutu Journal of Community Service 3, no. 1 (May 31, 2023): 80–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.35508/kjcs.v3i1.11343.

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The training activities carried out are solutions to the problems found, especially in designing activities that can stimulate symbolic thinking skills for early childhood. The training activities were carried out in two sessions, the first session was the provision of material by resource persons and the second session was the practice of compiling activities to stimulate children's symbolic thinking skills. The final results of the activity show that there is an additional teacher's understanding of children's symbolic thinking abilities, and the teacher's skills in designing fun activities to provide stimulation in an effort to improve children's symbolic thinking skills.
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Fleming-May, Rachel A., and Kimberly Douglass. "Framing Librarianship in the Academy: An Analysis Using Bolman and Deal’s Model of Organizations." College & Research Libraries 75, no. 3 (May 1, 2014): 389–415. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/crl13-432.

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Since the earliest days of the profession, academic librarians have attempted to reconcile their status within the academy. This project takes a new approach to this effort by using Lee Bolman and Terrence Deal’s “Four Frames” model to analyze the issues. To more closely examine the dynamics, tensions, and implications associated with librarians’ professional status within the academy, we discuss the role of the academic librarian in the context of each of Bolman and Deal’s frames: Structural, Human Resource, Political, and Symbolic. In this discussion, we demonstrate that librarians are positioned to address human resource (as defined by Bolman and Deal), political, and symbolic factors contributing to their status within the academy. Also, while we establish that the relationship between library faculty and disciplinary faculty plays a role in library faculty status, we conclude that library faculty status is constructed by a number of forces. We further conclude that many of the political and symbolic conditions experienced by librarians are rooted in structural and human resource factors controlled by upper-level administration in both libraries and the universities.
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Gherardi, Silvia. "A symbolic approach to competence development." Human Resource Development International 2, no. 4 (December 1999): 313–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13678869900000036.

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Restu, Arnold, Rindu Rika Gamayuni, and Yuliansyah Yuliansyah. "Adopting an enterprise resource planning system in village government." Journal of Governance and Accountability Studies 4, no. 1 (March 26, 2024): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.35912/jgas.v4i1.1906.

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Purpose: The obligation of the Village Government to realize accountability and transparency of rural funds "forced" the village to use the ERP system. This study investigates the characteristics of technologies, individuals, and organizations that influence user decisions to adopt systems that will impact their performance. Research methodology: The technology acceptance model (TAM) was used to understand the factors that influence the adoption of the system and its impact on user performance. Data obtained from 72 users spread in Lampung Province. Results: The results showed that the compatibility of the system significantly influence the perceived usefulness. Facilitating conditions has a significant effect on perceived ease of use. Perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use has positive effect on symbolic adoption. Symbolic adoption significantly affects the user’s performance positively. Implementation: The implementation of this study involves a mixed-methods approach, including a survey and interviews with users and stakeholders, as well as a case study analysis of successful ERP implementations in village governments. Contribution: The contribution of this research is the identification of factors that contribute to successful ERP implementation in village governments, which can inform future adoption decisions and improve user performance.
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Krippendorff, Klaus, and Michael F. Eleey. "Monitoring a group's symbolic environment." Public Relations Review 12, no. 1 (March 1986): 13–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0363-8111(86)80038-8.

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Stein, Arlene. "Whose Memories? Whose Victimhood? Contests for the Holocaust Frame in Recent Social Movement Discourse." Sociological Perspectives 41, no. 3 (September 1998): 519–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1389562.

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Fifty years after the end of World War II, the Holocaust is being utilized as a symbolic resource by US social movements. This article investigates social movement “framing” processes, looking at the use of Holocaust rhetoric and imagery by social movement organizations and actors. I explore how competing movements, the lesbian/gay movement and the Christian right, battle over the same symbolic territory, and how the Holocaust frame is deployed by each. Two forms of symbolic appropriation in relation to the Holocaust are documented: metaphor creation and revisionism.
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Zborovsky, Garold, and Polina Ambarova. "Scientific and Pedagogical Community of Russia Universities as an Object of Resource Mobilisation." Vestnik instituta sotziologii 14, no. 4 (December 25, 2023): 271–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.19181/vis.2023.14.4.15.

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The article is devoted to a theoretical understanding of the phenomenon of mobilisational management of the resources of the scientific and pedagogical community (SPC) of Russian universities. The focus was placed on the concepts of NPS resource capacity and its mobilisation as one of the models of university management. The purpose of the article is to reveal the potential of theories of resource mobilisation, social community, resource concepts in the conceptualisation of the notion of mobilisation of NPS resource сapacity. The authors consider the main ideas and theses of theories developed in branches of sociological knowledge other than the sociology of higher education, and adapt them to the context of university management of the NPS. The authors´ interpretation of the concept of NPS as a social community and socio-professional community has been updated in the light of resource concepts. The content of the concept of NPS resource capacity is discussed as a set of opportunities into which a given university community converts the means and methods of its professional activities, as well as the associated properties inherent in scientific and pedagogical workers as a socio-professional community. One of the main results of the article is related to the substantiation of the approach to the classification of NPS resources. It is proposed to identify and take into account in university management practices the following five blocks of resources - socio-demographic (quantitative, age, gender resources); scientific research (research, publication, temporal resources); pedagogical (educational and pedagogical resources, advanced scientific and pedagogical qualifications, mentoring); resources for interaction between scientific and pedagogical workers (RPWs) and scientific teams (communication, resource of scientific schools and teams); moral-symbolic (symbolic and moral-ideological resources). Mobilisational university management is considered as a strategy for managing research and development staff, which involves concentrating the resources and efforts of academic staff on strategic directions and tasks of university development. As prerequisites for such a management approach, it is substantiated to take into account and update the processes of self-organisation of the NPS as a complex and highly professional community, to restore understanding, trust, and solidarity between it and the administrative and managerial corps of universities. The question is raised about the actors in the mobilisation of NPS resources, who must have a deep knowledge of the sources, features and patterns of functioning of the resources of the academic community. In conclusion, the article discusses the issue of demand in university management for a scientifically based approach to mobilisation management of NPS resources and the readiness of the administrative and managerial apparatus to use it.
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Harrington, Susan, Samantha Warren, and Charlotte Rayner. "Human Resource Management practitioners’ responses to workplace bullying: Cycles of symbolic violence." Organization 22, no. 3 (December 29, 2013): 368–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1350508413516175.

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Alsop, Rachel, and Jenny Hockey. "Women's Reproductive Lives as a Symbolic Resource in Central and Eastern Europe." European Journal of Women's Studies 8, no. 4 (November 2001): 454–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/135050680100800404.

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Singh, Nandita. "Indigenous Water Management Systems: Interpreting Symbolic Dimensions in Common Property Resource Regimes." Society & Natural Resources 19, no. 4 (April 2006): 357–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08941920500519297.

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36

Sallaz, Jeffrey J. "Service Labor and Symbolic Power." Work and Occupations 37, no. 3 (August 2010): 295–319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0730888410373076.

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The subfield that is the sociology of service labor continues to generate vibrant internal dialogue. It was the author’s original intent to push forward the frontier of theory within this field, by performing an ethnography of service work in a non-American context (that of post-apartheid South Africa). Once in the field, however, he found himself moving backward as he was forced to problematize basic assumptions concerning the very category of service. In brief, the author discovered that managers in a competitive tourism industry refused to label their employees’ interactive labor as “service,” whereas workers themselves actively advocated for such a designation. To document the interplay between material and symbolic politics of production, the author turned to the work of Pierre Bourdieu—especially his theory of political representation and the accompanying concept of nomination struggles.
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Titov, V. V. "Images of the soviet Past as a Resource for the Formation of National-state Identity of Russians." Humanities and Social Sciences. Bulletin of the Financial University 10, no. 3 (November 2, 2020): 20–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.26794/2226-7867-2020-10-3-20-24.

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In the framework of the presented study, the author analyses the question of the role of images of the Soviet past in the formation of the national-state identity of Russians. The purpose of the study is to identify problems and perspectives for the transformation of the national-state identity of citizens of the Russian Federation by forming the image of the past as the main element of collective social memory. The methodological base of the research combines the features of descriptive political-cultural analysis and systematization of published big data of sociological surveys. The author concluded that attempts to destroy the heroic component of the Soviet symbolic heritage and replace it with a narrative associated with the pre-revolutionary period lead to the erosion of the value-symbolic foundations of group favouritism in Russian society, which causes resistance from carriers of Soviet and Russian identity. The synthesis of the symbolic heritage of the Soviet and pre-revolutionary erases based on the recognition of universal values, and historical continuity in the development of the Russian state seems to be the most reasonable option for using images of the past to strengthen the national-state identity of Russians.
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Tanaylova, V. A. "The “medals not to be proud of...”: memory of the Caucasian war in social media." Etnograficheskoe obozrenie, no. 1 (February 15, 2023): 67–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s0869541523010050.

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The article examines the memory of the Caucasian War in the space of social media (VKontakte, Telegram, etc.) and the possibilities of its use as a symbolic resource in the process of radicalisation of local Caucasian societies. The total number of subscribers to the communities, channels, and pages studied is around 300,000 people. The conceptual basis of the paper is the relational approach to the concept of radicalisation. In addition, I consider memory as one of the symbolic resources that determine the process of radicalisation of a particular community, and refer to researchers such as L.-E. Cederman, J. Goodwin, and M. Sageman. The article examines not just the memory of the Caucasian War represented in the field of social media, but the several national images of the Caucasian War that have emerged in this field.
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Baumann, Megan Dwyer. "Prácticas materiales de cuidado de la agrobiodiversidad como marco simbólico para la gobernanza ambiental en el sur de Tolima, Colombia." Estudios Críticos del Desarrollo 11, no. 21 (November 24, 2021): 101–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.35533/ecd.1121.mdb.

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The literature on agrobiodiversity examines in a broad way the interactions between plants and humans in farming biomes, and often includes the study of the governance of seeds as a genetic resource. This article turns its attention to agrobiodiversity as a mesh of manageable genetic resources in order to examine how the characteristics of agrobiodiversity symbolize a vision of future environmental governance. First reviewing the existing perspectives in political ecology on environmental governance and feminist ethics of care, the results of this study reveal that the established practices of «total care» of agrobiodiversity, in particular the exchange of seeds, vegetable gardens and kitchens, have become a symbolic framework for environmental governance in which Access to land, food and community cohesion are guaranteed and protected.
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Bereznyakov, D. V., and S. V. Kozlov. "The Soviet Legacy as Institutional and Symbolic Resource for Post-Soviet State-Building." Discourse-P 18, no. 4 (2021): 46–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.17506/18179568_2021_18_4_46.

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41

Fei, Zhennan, Spyros Reveliotis, and Knut Åkesson. "A Symbolic Approach for Maximally Permissive Deadlock Avoidance in Complex Resource Allocation Systems." IFAC Proceedings Volumes 47, no. 2 (2014): 362–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.3182/20140514-3-fr-4046.00021.

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42

S. Trigger, David. "Contesting Ideologies of Natural Resource Development in British Columbia, Canada." Culture 16, no. 1 (November 30, 2021): 55–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1084103ar.

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The ideological struggle between pro-development sentiments and environmentalist challenges to them is a complex mix of consciously articulated beliefs and commonsense assumptions about what land isfor and how it should be managed. The paper presents an ethnographic approach to documenting expressions of this intellectual contest in contemporary British Columbia. I address the question of how pro-development and pro-wilderness views seek to establish moral authority, focusing on both the symbolic importance of key themes about forestry and mining in Canadian history and the cooption of alleged aboriginal ethics concerning land use.
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Anderson, Pauline, and Chris Warhurst. "Newly professionalised physiotherapists: symbolic or substantive change?" Employee Relations: The International Journal 42, no. 2 (November 29, 2019): 300–314. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/er-10-2018-0271.

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Purpose There is renewed interest in the professions as a range of occupations pursue professionalisation projects. The purpose of this paper is turn analysis to an important omission in current research – the skills deployed in the work of these professions. Such research is necessary because skills determine the formal classification of occupations as a profession. Design/methodology/approach Drawing on qualitative research, this paper explores the deployment of skills in work of one newly professionalised occupation in the UK’s National Health Service – physiotherapists. Findings The findings point to a disconnect between how this occupation has become a profession (the skills to get the job, and related political manoeuvring by representative bodies) and the mixed outcomes for their skills deployment (the skills to do the job) in work as a profession. Originality/value The paper provides missing empirical understanding of change for this new profession, and new conceptualisation of that change as both symbolic and substantive, with a “double hybridity” around occupational control and skill deployment for physiotherapists as a profession.
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Kamariah and Nanda Saputra. "Symbolic Meaning in Traditional Badudus Pangantin Banjar." LingLit Journal Scientific Journal for Linguistics and Literature 1, no. 1 (December 23, 2020): 40–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.33258/linglit.v1i1.350.

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This research examines the cultural symbols used in the badudus pangantin Banjar custom. The approach used is a cultural semiotics approach. namely studies that emphasize the symbols of a culture. The method used is descriptive analysis method. The primary data source was obtained from four resource persons in the Peat District, aged 60-75 years. Data collection techniques are in the form of (1) observation, (2) interviews, (3) recording, (4) recording. The data analysis technique used is descriptive qualitative. The results of this study show that the symbolic meanings of the Banjar bridal shower custom are as follows: a. symbol of baras longitude, banana, spray three times, tapih, mayang, banyu prayer, candle, carmin, bamantra oil, white porridge, black porridge and pupur with the meaning of a blessed life bride, b. palm symbol, starting with the right, and kambang malati, meaning good behavior. c. symbol of baras lakatan, habang sugar and hintalu with the meaning of living together.
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ASMUSSEN, TINA. "SPIRITED METALS AND THE OECONOMY OF RESOURCES IN EARLY MODERN EUROPEAN MINING." Earth Sciences History 39, no. 2 (November 12, 2020): 371–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/1944-6187-39.2.371.

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ABSTRACT This article examines the perception and valuation of mineral resources in sixteenth and seventeenth-century European mining regions. It aims to critically review the utilitarian and anthropocentric view of mining and mineral resource production, circulation and consumption that is shaped by a long tradition of economic history and history of technology. To understand human relation to the underground and its resources only in terms of innovation and rationalization means to ignore the many different layers by which resource landscapes affected the miner’s perception of nature and mineral matter. The literary, material and visual culture of sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century central European mining sites proves to be fruitful ground for historicizing the interplay between manual labor, mechanical arts, natural resources and religion in mining landscapes. This paper aims to connect the material and immaterial or the physical and symbolic dimensions of human-nature entanglement in early modern mining and suggests a way to locate human and geological agency within the context of a divine oeconomy.
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Shu, Qiao. "Research on the Symbolic Meaning of White Cranes — A Case Study of Fly with the Crane." Journal of Research in Social Science and Humanities 3, no. 4 (April 2024): 61–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.56397/jrssh.2024.04.11.

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Fly with the Crane is a feature film directed by Chinese filmmaker Li Ruijun in 2012, adapted from the short story of the same name by Su Tong. Set against a family backdrop, the film explores the emotional conflicts and collisions of life philosophies between the elderly and their family members when facing life and death decisions. Cranes play a significant symbolic role in the film, reflecting the characters’ inner emotions and their different understandings of life, death, and destiny. From the crane pattern on the coffin to the real white cranes in the film, and to the crane in the heart of the protagonist, five types of white cranes present different layers of symbolic meanings, enriching the depth and connotation of the film. At the same time, the film also reflects the current reality of scarce land resources, conflicts in resource allocation, and changes in people’s consciousness, indicating that the “crane culture” may gradually disappear.
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Alzahrani, Ahmed, Imran Mahmud, Ramayah Thurasamy, Osama Alfarraj, and Ayed Alwadain. "End users' resistance behaviour paradigm in pre-deployment stage of ERP systems: evidence from Bangladeshi manufacturing industry." Business Process Management Journal 27, no. 5 (May 3, 2021): 1496–521. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/bpmj-08-2019-0350.

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PurposeThis study proposes a research model to identify the relevant constructs of employee resistance and symbolic adoption in pre-implementation stage of enterprise resource planning systems in manufacturing industries, drawing suitable support from the existing body of literature. The proposed model is a combination of the status quo bias theory and absorptive capacity theory to measure employee resistance that negatively lead to symbolic adoption of a user.Design/methodology/approachThis research used a self-administered questionnaire to survey 221 participants from five organizations in the manufacturing industry, all working towards deploying enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems.FindingsThe results show that factors contributing to status quo bias and absorptive capacity impact end-user grumbling. Furthermore, end-user grumbling affects symbolic adoption substantially.Practical implicationsThis study provides researchers, practitioners and ERP vendors a broader overview of employees' resistance and motivation for using newly deployed systems.Originality/valueIn the past two decades, both practitioners and academicians are investigating the technical and non-technical features that assist end-users to adopt the system. Information system theories center on the post-deployment stage, with rare attempts to identify users' resistance and mental willingness to accept technology in the pre-adoption phase, which is very crucial for the success of ERP.
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Trotter, LaTonya. "“Church Is Important to Our Clients”: Autonomy, Community, and Religious Expression within a Long-term Care Organization." Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 49, no. 5 (June 4, 2020): 638–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0891241620922882.

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Autonomy and selfhood are primary concerns for scholars of long-term care. Previous work has shown how organizational routines threaten client autonomy and disrupt access to the material and symbolic resources that ground the biography of the self. In this article, I examine how a group of African-American older adults within an adult day service center ameliorated these threats through religious expression. In most health care settings, religion is delivered as an individual, clinical resource. At this site, religion and recreation became intertwined such that religion became a participatory resource that affirmed client membership to a community beyond the walls of the organization. However, as an institutionally provided resource, religion was delivered through work routines that constrained which versions of community to which clients could belong. I conclude by considering the implications for the expanding universe of long-term care organizations tasked with the maintenance of the body as well as the continuity of the self.
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Schultz, Majken. "Transitions between Symbolic Domains in Organizations." Organization Studies 12, no. 4 (October 1991): 489–506. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/017084069101200402.

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Different work settings in a governmental organization are socially defined as symbolic domains. Each domain represents distinct ways of framing and inter preting talk and action. Members of the organization must be able to keep all symbolic domains in mind and switch back and forth between them, as they cross different work settings. The paper claims that rites of transition facilitate switches between symbolic domains directing the entry to and the exit from symbolic domains. The social definitions of symbolic domains and the transitions between them are analyzed on the basis of a study of the interaction between a group of managers and the political minister.
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Türünz, Ali. "Music as a Resource for Drawing Symbolic Boundaries within the Turkish Diaspora in Germany." Sociální studia / Social Studies 13, no. 4 (September 1, 2016): 81–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/soc2016-4-81.

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