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The chapters in this collection address a variety of concerns in
organizational theory, ranging from the evolution of organizations
and cross-cultural analyses of managerial behavior to the
micro-sociology of knowledge brokering within organizations and the
etiology of organizational messes. Swaminathan, examines resource
partitioning theory, an important theoretical perspective in
population ecology. The next three chapters, broadly construed,
address issues of organizational innovation, learning, and
adaptation in complex environments. The next contribution, by John
Carroll, Jenny Rudolph, and Sachi Hatakenaka examines how
high-hazard organizations learn from experience. As with all
organizations, high-hazard organizations such as nuclear power
plants and chemical plants attempt to learn from experience in
order to improve performance and, of course, to avoid catastrophic
failure. Unlike many other kinds of organizations, however, failure
to learn from prior experience-especially with respect to learning
effectively from errors and mishaps-can prove extremely costly and
even fatal. Hence, these organizations must balance between
learning and control, and must do so under conditions of
considerable oversight and scrutiny. provocative analysis of the
role disorganization plays in organizational life. The two
following chapters in this volume provide important overviews of
theory and research on classic phenomena within organizational
theory, followed by original theoretical syntheses. Robert Baron's
chapter then undertakes a fresh and useful examination of the
burgeoning literature on entrepreneurship and the two final
chapters in the volume examine essential issues related to our
understanding of organizations and the cultural environments in
which they are embedded.
This book expounds an analytical method that focuses on paradoxes -
a method originally associated with deconstructive philosophy, but
bearing little resemblance to the interpretive techniques that have
come to be designated as 'deconstruction' in literary studies. The
book then applies its paradox-focused method as it undertakes a
sustained investigation of Thomas Hobbe's political philosophy.
Hobbes's theory of the advent and purpose of government turns out
to reveal the impossibility of the very developments which it
portrays as indispensable.
This volume celebrates the first quarter century of publishing
Research in Organizational Behavior. From its inception, Research
in Organizational Behavior has striven to provide important
theoretical integrations of major literatures in the organizational
sciences, as well as timely examination and provocative analyses of
pressing organizational issues and problems.
In keeping with this tradition, the current volume offers an
eclectic mix of scholarly articles that address a variety of
important questions in organizational theory and do so from a
diverse range of disciplinary perspectives and theoretical
orientations. A number of the chapters also directly engage
contemporary events and dilemmas of considerable importance.
This book expounds an analytical method that focuses on paradoxes -
a method originally associated with deconstructive philosophy, but
bearing little resemblance to the interpretive techniques that have
come to be designated as 'deconstruction' in literary studies. The
book then applies its paradox-focused method as it undertakes a
sustained investigation of Thomas Hobbe's political philosophy.
Hobbes's theory of the advent and purpose of government turns out
to reveal the impossibility of the very developments which it
portrays as indispensable.
Following their book "Racism and Mental Health", the authors here re-examine the intersections of racism and mental health, adding sexism as another divisive issue that profoundly affects mental health. The book aims to offer fresh perspectives on contemporary controversial issues, including: interracial adoptions, teenage motherhood, gender bias in mental health diagnosis and therapy, prisons used as substitutes for hospitals, homeless families, and increasing violence in the home and on the streets.
In this wide-ranging investigation of many prominent issues in
contemporary legal, political, and moral philosophy, Matthew Kramer
combines penetrating critiques with original theorising as he
examines the writings of numerous major theorists (including Ronald
Dworkin, H.L.A. Hart, Alan Gewirth, Ronald Coase and Richard
Posner). Among the many topics covered by Kramer's essays are the
relative merits of legal positivism and natural-law theory, the
appropriate understanding of justice, the role of consequences in
moral decision-making, and the ultimate foundations of moral
judgements.
H.L.A. Hart is among the most important philosophers of the
twentieth century, with an especially great influence on the
philosophy of law. His 1961 book The Concept of Law has become an
enduring classic of legal philosophy, and has also left a
significant imprint on moral and political philosophy. In this
volume, leading contemporary legal and political philosopher
Matthew H. Kramer provides a crystal-clear analysis of Hart's
contributions to our understanding of the nature of law. He
elucidates and scrutinizes every major aspect of Hart's
jurisprudential thinking, ranging from his general methodology to
his defense of legal positivism. He shows how Hart's achievement in
The Concept of Law, despite the evolution of debates in subsequent
decades, remains central to contemporary legal philosophy because
it lends itself to being reinterpreted in light of new concerns and
interests. Kramer therefore pays particular attention to the
strength of Hart's insights in the context of present-day disputes
among philosophers over the reality of normative entities and
properties and over the semantics of normative statements. This
book is an invaluable guide to Hart's thought for students and
scholars of legal philosophy and jurisprudence, as well as moral
and political philosophy.
With the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) under construction and due to
come online in 2007, it is appropriate to engage in a focused
review on LHC phenomenology. At a time when most of the
experimental effort is centered on detector construction and
software development, it is vitally important to direct the
experimental community and, in particular, new researchers on the
physics phenomena expected from the LHC. Large Hadron Collider
Phenomenology covers the capabilities of LHC, from searches for the
Higgs boson and physics beyond the standard model to detailed
studies of quantum chromodynamics, the B-physics sectors, and the
properties of hadronic matter at high energy density as realized in
heavy-ion collisions. Written by experienced researchers and
experimentalists, this reference examines the basic properties and
potentials of the machine, detectors, and software required for
physics analyses. The book starts with a basic introduction to the
standard model and its applications to the phenomena observed at
high energy collisions. Later chapters describe the key
technological challenges facing the construction of the LHC
machine, the operating detectors of the LHC, and the vast computing
grid needed to analyze the data. In the final sections, the
contributors discuss the quark-gluon plasma (QGP), explore
questions and predictions for the LHC program, and examine the
physics opportunities of the LHC using information from the forward
region. By surveying the difficult challenges of the LHC
development while also assessing the novel processes that the LHC
will perform, Large Hadron Collider Phenomenology aids less
seasoned physicists as well as existing researchers in discovering
the numerous possibilities of the LHC.
As a heart attack survivor, you know that you must do everything
within your power to prevent yourself from having another heart
attack. The reason is simple; as a heart attack survivor, you are
at greater risk of suffering another heart attack, one that could
end your life. A Woman's Guide to Heart Attack Recovery provides
heart attack survivors with a multi-faceted approach to preventing
subsequent heart attacks. First, you need to empower yourself, and
the way to do that is to learn as much as you can about your heart,
the heart attack treatments you may have undergone, and, if you've
only recently had your heart attack, the key steps to recuperation.
You also need to know what to do in an emergency in case you
experience another heart attack. Many chapters in this book - such
as the ones on high blood pressure, diabetes, weight control, diet
and exercise - are filled with information on how to achieve these
specific goals. A heart attack can be a life-affirming wake-up call
and many women find their life afterward to be better than it was
before. Many of you will find it to be the impetus you need to make
changes towards living a healthier life. A Women's Guide to Heart
Attack Recovery is devoted to helping you do just that.
This book, in honor of David Messick, is about social decisions and
the role cooperation plays in social life. Noted contributors who
worked with Dave over the years will discuss their work in social
judgment, decision making and ethics which was so important to
Dave. The book offers a unique and valuable contribution to the
fields of social psychology and organizational behavior. Ethical
decision making, a central focus of this volume, is highly relevant
to current scholarship and research in both disciplines. The volume
will be suitable for graduate level courses in organizational
behavior, social psychology, business ethics, and sociology.
Organizational trust is a subject which has over the past decade
become of increasing importance to organizational theory and
research. This book examines what trust is, how it is developed and
maintained, its underpinnings, manifestations, and its fragility,
through a presentation and discussion of key readings.
This volume is a readily accessible compilation of current,
original research in the area of power and influence in
organizations. Power and Influence in Organizations offers a rich
exploration of emerging trends and new perspectives. Contributors
include leading scholars in organizational behavior and theory and
major contemporary intellectual pioneers in research on power and
influence, including Samuel B. Bacharach, Robert Cialdini, Edward
J. Lawler, and Jeffrey Pfeffer. Each contributor provides insight
into his or her own research, an overview of general trends, and
thoughts about the direction of future research. Topics examined
include manipulation of employee perceptions and values; the links
between power and accountability; sharing power; the effects of
gender on power and influence; illusions of influence; and
impression management. Advanced students and scholars in
organizational behavior, social influence, power and politics,
conflict management, and institutional politics will find Power and
Influence in Organizations stimulating and a useful roadmap to
present and future research.
With the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) under construction and due to
come online in 2007, it is appropriate to engage in a focused
review on LHC phenomenology. At a time when most of the
experimental effort is centered on detector construction and
software development, it is vitally important to direct the
experimental community and, in particular, new researchers on the
physics phenomena expected from the LHC. Large Hadron Collider
Phenomenology covers the capabilities of LHC, from searches for the
Higgs boson and physics beyond the standard model to detailed
studies of quantum chromodynamics, the B-physics sectors, and the
properties of hadronic matter at high energy density as realized in
heavy-ion collisions.
Written by experienced researchers and experimentalists, this
reference examines the basic properties and potentials of the
machine, detectors, and software required for physics analyses. The
book starts with a basic introduction to the standard model and its
applications to the phenomena observed at high energy collisions.
Later chapters describe the key technological challenges facing the
construction of the LHC machine, the operating detectors of the
LHC, and the vast computing grid needed to analyze the data. In the
final sections, the contributors discuss the quark-gluon plasma
(QGP), explore questions and predictions for the LHC program, and
examine the physics opportunities of the LHC using information from
the forward region.
By surveying the difficult challenges of the LHC development while
also assessing the novel processes that the LHC will perform, Large
Hadron Collider Phenomenology aids less seasoned physicists as well
as existing researchers in discovering the numerous possibilities
of the LHC.
In this book, some of the world's leading scholars come together to
describe their thinking and research on the topic of the psychology
of leadership. Most of the chapters were originally presented as
papers at a research conference held in 2001 at the Kellogg School
of Management of Northwestern University. The contributions span
traditional social psychological areas, as well as organizational
theory; examining leadership as a psychological process and as
afforded by organizational constraints and opportunities. The
editors' goal was not to focus the chapters on a single approach to
the study and conceptualization of leadership but rather to display
the diversity of issues that surround the topic.
Leadership scholars have identified a host of approaches to the
study of leadership. What are the personal characteristics of
leaders? What is the nature of the relation between leaders and
followers? Why do we perceive some people to be better leaders than
others? What are the circumstances that evoke leadership qualities
in people? Can leadership be taught? And so on. The contributions
to this book examine these important questions and fall into three
categories: conceptions of leadership, factors that influence the
effectiveness of leadership, and the consequences and effects of
leadership on the leader. All in all, the chapters of this volume
display part of a broad spectrum of novel and important approaches
to the study of the psychology of leadership. We hope that they are
equally useful to those who are or would be leaders and to those
who study the topic. As recent events have served to remind us, it
is too important a topic to be ignored by psychologists.
Argentina boasts one of the most popular, diverse, and successful
film industries in Latin America. From early films about gauchos
and the tango to human rights dramas and groundbreaking
experimental documentaries, Argentina's cinematic output has
achieved both global influence and international acclaim.
A discriminating survey of the country's key films, "Directory of
World Cinema: Argentina" contains provocative essays and astute
reviews by scholars, critics, filmmakers, and film buffs. Chapters
spotlight, among other subjects, the Buenos Aires film festival and
the legacy of such iconic directors as Maria Luisa Bemberg and
Pablo Trapero. Film reviews examine a cross-section of Argentine
cinema, providing critical analysis of everything from contemporary
blockbusters to hidden gems. Featuring full-color stills,
interviews, references, and trivia, this book is an invaluable
resource for readers interested in the fascinating world of
Argentine film.
Radio pulsars are rapidly rotating highly magnetized neutron stars.
Studies of these fascinating objects have provided applications in
solid-state physics, general relativity, galactic astronomy,
astrometry, planetary physics and even cosmology. Most of these
applications and much of what we know about neutron stars are
derived from single-dish radio observations using state-of-the-art
receivers and data acquisition systems. This comprehensive 2004
book is a unique resource that brings together the key
observational techniques, background information and a review of
results, including the discovery of a double pulsar system. Useful
software tools are provided which can be used to analyse example
data, made available on a related website. This work will be of
great value not only to graduate students but also to researchers
wishing to carry out and interpret a wide variety of radio pulsar
observations.
In this book, some of the world's leading scholars come together to
describe their thinking and research on the topic of the psychology
of leadership. Most of the chapters were originally presented as
papers at a research conference held in 2001 at the Kellogg School
of Management of Northwestern University. The contributions span
traditional social psychological areas, as well as organizational
theory; examining leadership as a psychological process and as
afforded by organizational constraints and opportunities. The
editors' goal was not to focus the chapters on a single approach to
the study and conceptualization of leadership but rather to display
the diversity of issues that surround the topic.
Leadership scholars have identified a host of approaches to the
study of leadership. What are the personal characteristics of
leaders? What is the nature of the relation between leaders and
followers? Why do we perceive some people to be better leaders than
others? What are the circumstances that evoke leadership qualities
in people? Can leadership be taught? And so on. The contributions
to this book examine these important questions and fall into three
categories: conceptions of leadership, factors that influence the
effectiveness of leadership, and the consequences and effects of
leadership on the leader. All in all, the chapters of this volume
display part of a broad spectrum of novel and important approaches
to the study of the psychology of leadership. We hope that they are
equally useful to those who are or would be leaders and to those
who study the topic. As recent events have served to remind us, it
is too important a topic to be ignored by psychologists.
Leading theoreticians and researchers present current thinking
about the role played by group memberships in people's sense of who
they are and what they are worth. The chapters build on the
assumption, developed out of social identity theory, that people
create a social self that both defines them and shapes their
attitudes and behaviors. The authors address new developments in
the theoretical frameworks through which we understand the social
self, recent research on the nature of the social self, and recent
findings about the influence of social context upon the development
and maintenance of the social self.
This volume continues the exploration of contemporary Argentine
cinema that began in the first book. It provides a close analysis
of exciting new directors, including Marco Berger and Matias
Pineiro, transnational stars like Ricardo Darin, and trends such as
films made in the provinces. Contributors cover several of the
country's Oscar submissions, including Benjamin Avila's Clandestine
Childhood, Lucia Puenzo's The German Doctor and Damian Szifron's
Wild Tales, which became a surprise global hit. Focusing primarily
on films being made since 2000, the book offers a rich mix of
reviews, essays, analyses and film stills, which together make it
an invaluable companion to one of the most popular, diverse and
successful film industries in Latin America.
Over the past decade, research and theory on heroism and heroic
leadership has greatly expanded, providing new insights on heroic
behavior. The Handbook of Heroism and Heroic Leadership brings
together new scholarship in this burgeoning field to build an
important foundation for further multidisciplinary developments. In
its three parts, "Origins of Heroism," "Types of Heroism," and
"Processes of Heroism," distinguished social scientists and
researchers explore topics such as morality, resilience, courage,
empathy, meaning, altruism, spirituality, and transformation. This
handbook provides a much-needed consolidation and synthesis for
heroism and heroic leadership scholars and graduate students.
In this wide-ranging investigation of many prominent issues in
contemporary legal and political philosophy, eight distinguished
philosophers and legal theorists (including Matthew Kramer, Hillel
Steiner, Antony Duff, Sandra Marshall, Wilfrid Waluchow, and
Nicholas Bamforth) tackle issues such as the rights of animals and
foetuses, the relationship between law and politics, the
requirements of justice, the demands of practical rationality, the
role of public-policy considerations in legal reasoning, the
fundamental characteristics of legal and moral entitlements, the
appropriateness of compensation as a means of rectifying mishaps
and misdeeds, the extent of individuals' responsibility for the
consequences of their choices, and the culpability of failed
attempts to commit crimes. Together, the eight principal essays in
Rights, Wrongs, and Responsibilities shed philosophical light on
public law, criminal law, and most areas of private law as they
explore the bearings of the three key concepts in the volume's
title.
The economy of the 21st century in the OECD countries and in China,
is characterized by a new phenomenon: the structural surplus of
private savings in relation to private investment. This is true
even in a situation of prosperity and very low interest rates. On
the one hand, this excess saving is due to people's increasing
inclination to save in light of rising life expectancy, driven by
the desire to have sufficient assets in old age. On the other hand,
the demand for capital is not increasing to the same extent, so
that investment is not keeping pace with the rising desire to save.
The resulting gap between the private desire for wealth and private
investment can only be closed by increasing public debt. This open
access book offers a new, capital-theoretical perspective on the
macroeconomic relationship between desired wealth and investment,
and it presents new empirical data on private wealth and its
composition in the OECD plus China area. The authors argue that a
free economic and social order can only be stabilized if the wealth
aspirations of individuals are met under conditions of price
stability. This is not possible without substantial net public
debt. A new way of thinking about the economy as a whole is
required. By way of an in-depth theoretical and empirical analysis,
the book demonstrates this new way of thinking and describes the
current challenges facing economic policy. It will appeal to
economists and students of economics who are interested in
macroeconomic theory and its economic policy implications. An
impressive, and convincing theoretical dive into the fundamentals
behind secular stagnation, with very strong implications for actual
debt policy. Public debt may be needed to improve welfare. -
Olivier Blanchard, Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for
International Economics and Professor of Economics Emeritus at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Chief Economist at the
International Monetary Fund from 2008 to 2015. Saving and
Investment in the Twenty-First Century gives a wholly new
perspective on macroeconomics. (...) Weiz sacker and Kramer
describe a simple, practical solution to the underemployment that
has plagued Southern Europe for more than a decade. - George
Akerlof, Nobel Laureate in Economics, 2001. Professor at the
McCourt School of Public Policy at Georgetown University and
Professor of Economics Emeritus at the University of California,
Berkeley. This is a profound and original contribution that can
help us to understand and act on the great issues of our times. -
Nicholas Stern, Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and
the Environment at the London School of Economics. Author of the
Stern Review Report on the Economics of Climate Change. Chief
Economist at the World Bank from 2000 to 2003.
Signal Transduction now in paperback, is a text reference on
cellular signalling processes. Starting with the basics, it
explains how cells respond to external cues (hormones, cytokines,
neurotransmitters, adhesion molecules, extracellular matrix, etc),
and shows how these inputs are integrated and co-ordinated. The
first half of the book provides the conceptual framework,
explaining the formation and action of second messengers,
particulary cyclic nucleotides and calcium, and the mediation of
signal pathways by GTP-binding proteins. The remaining chapters
deal with the formation of complex signalling cascades employed by
cytokines and adhesion molecules, starting at the membrane and
ending in the nucleus, there to regulate gene transcription. In
this context, growth is an important potential outcome and this has
relevance to the cellular transformations that underlie cancer. The
book ends with a description at the molecular level of how
signalling proteins interact with their environment and with each
other through their structural domains. Each main topic is
introduced with a historical essay, detailing the sources key
observations and experiments that set the scence for recent and
current work.
* Coherent, precise text providing insight in depth to a subject
that is central to cell biology and fundamental to many areas of
biomedicine
* Conceptual colour artwork assists with the comprehension of key
topics
* Extensive referencing provides an invaluable link to the core and
historical literature
* Margin notes highlighting milestones in the evolution of our
understanding of signalling mechanisms
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