1 resultado para Post-occupancy management
em Adam Mickiewicz University Repository
Filtro por publicador
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- Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual da Universidade de São Paulo (BDPI/USP) (2)
- Bioline International (2)
- BORIS: Bern Open Repository and Information System - Berna - Suiça (32)
- Brock University, Canada (4)
- Cambridge University Engineering Department Publications Database (2)
- CentAUR: Central Archive University of Reading - UK (41)
- Centro Hospitalar do Porto (1)
- Cochin University of Science & Technology (CUSAT), India (1)
- Coffee Science - Universidade Federal de Lavras (1)
- Comissão Econômica para a América Latina e o Caribe (CEPAL) (1)
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- Corvinus Research Archive - The institutional repository for the Corvinus University of Budapest (11)
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- Repositório digital da Fundação Getúlio Vargas - FGV (2)
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- Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte (UFRN) (12)
- Universitat de Girona, Spain (3)
- Universitätsbibliothek Kassel, Universität Kassel, Germany (1)
- Université de Montréal (2)
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- Université Laval Mémoires et thèses électroniques (1)
- University of Michigan (25)
- University of Queensland eSpace - Australia (25)
- University of Southampton, United Kingdom (1)
- University of Washington (5)
- WestminsterResearch - UK (3)
- Worcester Research and Publications - Worcester Research and Publications - UK (1)
Resumo:
„We are paying a high price for the increasingly unequivocal equation drawn between knowledge and science and ordinary market product. The ideal of perfectly unrestrained cognition, the true mother of science, is threatened by the mass drive towards practical use and application of knowledge, a looming departure into nothingness. Politicians and managers of scientific life are guilty of considerable contribution in corrupting respectable university structures, and thus undermining culture of science and scholarly ethics. (…). Acquisition of funds, sponsorship, media presence, popularisation or even striving for commercial gain are recognised by politicians and scientific consultants, but most of all they are accepted by the university management as objectives worthy of effort, not to say the foremost goals of science. University rectors are nowadays interested primarily in the amounts of acquired moneys. The outcomes of research thus financed is subject to virtually no control, nor does it arouse any interest, unless it turns out to be fit to be announced in the media as a sensation, thereby serving the ‘prestige’ of the university”.