997 resultados para Relational power
Resumo:
Networks are having a profound impact on the way society is organised at the local, national and international level. Networks are not ‘business as usual’. The defining feature of networks and a key indicator for their success is the strength and quality of the interactions between members. This relational power of networks provides the mechanism to bring together previously dispersed and even competitive entities into a collective venture. Such an operating context demands the ability to work in a more horizontal, relational manner. In addition a social infrastructure must be formed that will support and encourage efforts to become more collaborative. This paper seeks to understand how network members come to know about working in networks, how they work on their relationships and create new meanings about the nature of their linked work. In doing so, it proposes that learning, language and leadership, herein defined as the ‘3Ls’ represent critical mediating aspects for networks.
Resumo:
Collaborative networks have come to form a large part of the public sector’s strategy to address ongoing and often complex social problems. The relational power of networks, with its emphasis on trust, reciprocity and mutuality provides the mechanism to integrate previously dispersed and even competitive entities into a collective venture(Agranoff 2003; Agranoff and McGuire 2003; Mandell 1994; Mandell and Harrington 1999). It is argued that the refocusing of a single body of effort to a collective contributes to reducing duplication and overlap of services, maximizes increasingly scarce resources and contributes to solving intractable or 'wicked’problems (Clarke and Stewart 1997). Given the current proliferation of collaborative networks and the fact that they are likely to continue for some time, concerns with the management and leadership of such arrangements for optimal outcomes are increasingly relevant. This is especially important for public sector managers who are used to working in a top-down, hierarchical manner. While the management of networks (Agranoff and McGuire 2001, 2003), including collaborative or complex networks (Kickert et al. 1997; Koppenjan and Klijn 2004), has been the subject of considerable attention, there has been much less explicit discussion on leadership approaches in this context. It is argued in this chapter that the traditional use of the terms ‘leader’ or ‘leadership’ does not apply to collaborative networks. There are no ‘followers’ in collaborative networks or supervisor-subordinate relations. Instead there are equal, horizontal relationships that are focused on delivering systems change. In this way the emergent organizational forms such as collaborative networks challenge older models of leadership. However despite the questionable relevance of old leadership styles to the contemporary work environment, no clear alternative has come along to take its place.
Resumo:
Esta investigación tiene como eje fundamental el estudio de las relaciones actuales sino-rusas y, más particularmente, a la organización de cooperación de Shanghái (en adelante OCS) como un punto de convergencia de intereses Chinos y Rusos en la región de Asía central. Dicha dinámica supone, por un lado, la posibilidad de un proceso de colaboración y de desarrollo conjunto en la región. Pero por otro lado supone un conflicto de intereses ya que tanto China como Rusia buscan expandir su órbita de influencia en el espacio post-sovietico ya señalado. Por lo dicho este estudio intenta acercarse a la comprensión de la dinámica de la OCS en los últimos años. Para ello se aproxima a la temática, partir de dos miradas: La primera podría catalogarse como una mirada que enfatiza cuestiones de carácter acontecimental y cuyo interés reside en comprender los cambios acaecidos en la OCS en los últimos años, un análisis de los acuerdos hacia dentro y fuera del grupo, los marcos e instituciones que componen a la OCS, las distintas instancias de contacto entre los gobiernos ruso y chino, etc. La segunda mirada, a sabiendas de la expansión de las economías asiáticas en los últimos años, profundiza lo expresado anteriormente y lo enmarca en una concepción más amplia que parte del presupuesto teórico de que nos encontramos actualmente en una transición del centro de poder global (Wallerstein, 2006) desde Estados Unidos y Europa Occidental hacia las potencias emergentes asiáticas como la República popular de China, Rusia, India y el continente asiático en general. Dicha mirada funcionara como una guía y un presupuesto para pensar la cuestión desde una óptica de largo plazo
Resumo:
Esta investigación tiene como eje fundamental el estudio de las relaciones actuales sino-rusas y, más particularmente, a la organización de cooperación de Shanghái (en adelante OCS) como un punto de convergencia de intereses Chinos y Rusos en la región de Asía central. Dicha dinámica supone, por un lado, la posibilidad de un proceso de colaboración y de desarrollo conjunto en la región. Pero por otro lado supone un conflicto de intereses ya que tanto China como Rusia buscan expandir su órbita de influencia en el espacio post-sovietico ya señalado. Por lo dicho este estudio intenta acercarse a la comprensión de la dinámica de la OCS en los últimos años. Para ello se aproxima a la temática, partir de dos miradas: La primera podría catalogarse como una mirada que enfatiza cuestiones de carácter acontecimental y cuyo interés reside en comprender los cambios acaecidos en la OCS en los últimos años, un análisis de los acuerdos hacia dentro y fuera del grupo, los marcos e instituciones que componen a la OCS, las distintas instancias de contacto entre los gobiernos ruso y chino, etc. La segunda mirada, a sabiendas de la expansión de las economías asiáticas en los últimos años, profundiza lo expresado anteriormente y lo enmarca en una concepción más amplia que parte del presupuesto teórico de que nos encontramos actualmente en una transición del centro de poder global (Wallerstein, 2006) desde Estados Unidos y Europa Occidental hacia las potencias emergentes asiáticas como la República popular de China, Rusia, India y el continente asiático en general. Dicha mirada funcionara como una guía y un presupuesto para pensar la cuestión desde una óptica de largo plazo
Resumo:
Esta investigación tiene como eje fundamental el estudio de las relaciones actuales sino-rusas y, más particularmente, a la organización de cooperación de Shanghái (en adelante OCS) como un punto de convergencia de intereses Chinos y Rusos en la región de Asía central. Dicha dinámica supone, por un lado, la posibilidad de un proceso de colaboración y de desarrollo conjunto en la región. Pero por otro lado supone un conflicto de intereses ya que tanto China como Rusia buscan expandir su órbita de influencia en el espacio post-sovietico ya señalado. Por lo dicho este estudio intenta acercarse a la comprensión de la dinámica de la OCS en los últimos años. Para ello se aproxima a la temática, partir de dos miradas: La primera podría catalogarse como una mirada que enfatiza cuestiones de carácter acontecimental y cuyo interés reside en comprender los cambios acaecidos en la OCS en los últimos años, un análisis de los acuerdos hacia dentro y fuera del grupo, los marcos e instituciones que componen a la OCS, las distintas instancias de contacto entre los gobiernos ruso y chino, etc. La segunda mirada, a sabiendas de la expansión de las economías asiáticas en los últimos años, profundiza lo expresado anteriormente y lo enmarca en una concepción más amplia que parte del presupuesto teórico de que nos encontramos actualmente en una transición del centro de poder global (Wallerstein, 2006) desde Estados Unidos y Europa Occidental hacia las potencias emergentes asiáticas como la República popular de China, Rusia, India y el continente asiático en general. Dicha mirada funcionara como una guía y un presupuesto para pensar la cuestión desde una óptica de largo plazo
Resumo:
The marginalization of popular culture in radical scholarship on Palestine and Israel is symptomatic of the conceptual limits that still define much Middle East studies scholarship: namely, the prevailing logic of the nation-state on the one hand and the analytic tools of classical Marxist historiography and political economy on the other. This essay offers a polemic about the form that alternative scholarly projects might take through recourse to questions of popular culture. The authors argue that close allention to the ways that popular culture "articulates" with broader political, social, and economic processes can expand scholarly understandings of the terrain of power in Palestine and Israel, and hence the possible arenas and modalities of struggle. © 2004 by the Institute for Palestine Studies. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
Despite its importance in the development of competitive advantage, attempts to unify diverse classifications of business-to-business relational exchange have been largely unsuccessful. We used 18 semi-structured, in-depth interviews with managers from a wide range of industries to explain the business-to-business relational exchange construct. Analysis of the data revealed that business-to-business relational exchange comprises five key dimensions. These are communication, compatibility, commitment, trust and power symmetry. The research highlights the importance of personal interaction in business relationships and provided additional insights into the importance of affective commitment. In addition we reveal a number of negative consequences of affective commitment, which have been previously unexplored. A new conceptual model of business-to-business relational exchange is presented, which synthesises these findings and directs future research.
Resumo:
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to gain a better understanding of the types of relationships that exist along the supply chain and the capabilities that are needed to manage them effectively. ---------- Design/methodology/approach: This is exploratory research as there has been little empirical research into this area. Quantitative data were gathered by using a self-administered questionnaire, using the Australian road freight industry as the context. There were 132 usable responses. Inferential and descriptive analysis, including factor analysis, confirmatory factor and regression analysis was used to examine the predictive power of relational factors in inter-firm relationships. ---------- Findings: Three factors were identified as having significant influence on relationships: sharing, power and interdependency. “Sharing” is the willingness of the organisation to share resources with other members of the supply chain. “Power” relates to exercising control based on experience, knowledge and position in the supply chain. “Interdependency” is the relative levels of dependency along the supply chain. ---------- Research limitations/implications: The research only looks at the Australian road freight industry; a wider sample including other industries would help to strengthen the generalisability of the findings. ---------- Practical implications: When these factors are correlated to the types of relationship, arm's length, cooperation, collaboration and alliances, managerial implications can be identified. The more road freight businesses place importance on power, the less they will cooperate. The greater the importance of sharing and interdependency, the greater is the likelihood of arm's length relationships. ---------- Originality/value: This paper makes a contribution by describing empirical work conducted in an under-researched but important area – supply chain relationships in the Australian road freight industry.
Resumo:
Place matters to literacy because the meanings of our language and actions are always materially and socially placed in the world (Scollon & Scollon, 2003). We cannot interpret signs, whether an icon, symbol, gesture, word, or action, without taking into account their associations with other meanings and objects in places. This chapter maps an emergent strand of literacy research that foregrounds place and space as constitutive, rather than a backdrop for the real action. Space and place are seen as relational and dynamic, not as fixed and unchanging. Space and place are socially produced, and hence, can be contested, re-imagined and re-made. In bringing space and place into the frame of literacy studies we see a subtle shift – a rebalancing of the semiotic with the materiality of lived, embodied, and situated experience. ...
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The openness and compassion implicit in the social transaction of recent philosophies of cosmopolitanism is reflected in the aims of the body of interpersonal, process-driven artworks commonly referred to as relational art. In attempting to bring art into life, specifically as a point of intervention in the lives of its spectators, the affective power required to realize the communal and participatory aims of many of these artworks is central. Relational art practices invite the individualising distinctiveness of the spectator yet ultimately seek the collective affect of the artwork’s formulated community. Like cosmopolitanism, this is a felt community where the obligatory affective investment is imagined as open and empathic built on mutual exchange and generosity. They suggest that it doesn’t matter so much what we feel about art but what and how we feel through art. The artworld’s public spheres have become increasingly affective worlds, where the artwork’s coerced and managed human relations are conceived as interstices for a more open exchange with art and each other. With reference to Sydney Biennale’s recent All My Relations exhibition, this paper will interrogate how worldly feelings are made material by the requisite emotional and aesthetic labour of feeling for and with others in relational art.
Resumo:
This paper focuses on Australian development firms in the console and mobile games industry in order to understand how small firms in a geographically remote and marginal position in the global industry are able to relate to global firms and capture revenue share. This paper shows that, while technological change in the games industry has resulted in the emergence of new industry segments based on transactional rather than relational forms of economic coordination, in which we might therefore expect less asymmetrical power relations, lead firms retain a position of power in the global games entertainment industry relative to remote developers. This has been possible because lead firms in the emerging mobile devices market have developed and sustained bottlenecks in their segment of the industry through platform competition and the development of an intensely competitive ecosystem of developers. Our research shows the critical role of platform competition and bottlenecks in influencing power asymmetries within global markets.
Resumo:
The power of projects has been demonstrated by the growth in their use across an increasing range of industries and workplaces in recent years. Not only has the number of people involved in project management increased, but the qualifications and backgrounds of those people have also broadened, with engineering no longer being the only path to project management (PM). Predicting the career trajectories in Project Management has become more important for both organisations employing project managers and project managers building career portfolios. Our research involved interviewing more than 75 project officers and project managers across a range of industries to explore their career journey. We used Wittgenstein’s family resemblance theory is to analyse the information from the transcripts to identify the extent to which the roles of participants fit with the commonly accepted definition of project management. Findings demonstrate diversity of project manager backgrounds and experiences and relational competencies across these backgrounds that form and shape PM careers.
Resumo:
Despite its importance in the development of competitive advantage, attempts to unify diverse classifications of business-to-business relational exchange (B2B RE) have been largely unsuccessful. We used 18 semi-structured, in-depth interviews with managers from a range of industries to explore the B2B RE construct. Analysis of the data revealed that B2B RE comprises five key dimensions. These are communication, understanding, commitment, trust and power symmetry. The research identifies the importance of personal interaction in business relationships and provides additional insights into the importance of affective commitment. In addition we uncover a number of negative consequences of affective commitment, which have been previously unexplored. This research contributes to the domain of B2B research by synthesising and advancing knowledge in this area to provide a new conceptual framework of B2B RE and directions for future research.