934 resultados para Gemeinnützige Organisation
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L'analyse de réseau ne transforme pas nos objets d'étude, elle transforme le regard que le chercheur porte sur ceux-ci. Organisée en réseau, l'information devient relationnelle. Elle rend possible en puissance la création d'une nouvelle connaissance, à l'image d'une encyclopédie dont les liens entre les notices tissent une toile dont on peut analyser les caractéristiques structurelles ou d'un répertoire d'archives qui voit sa hiérarchie bouleversée par un index qui recompose le réseau d'échange d'information à l'intérieur d'un groupe de personnes. Sur la base de deux exemples d'outils de gestion, conservation et valorisation de la connaissance, l'encyclopédie en ligne Wikipédia et les archives de la coopération intellectuelle de la Société des Nations, cet article questionne le rapport entre le chercheur et son objet compris dans sa globalité.
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L'Europe centrale fait à la fois figure d'interface et de plateforme sur le continent européen dans des jeux politiques et économiques. L'adhésion à l'Union européenne est porteuse d'espoir en termes de développement de territoires encore marqués par près de 50 ans de régime socialiste. L'intégration de ces territoires à la mondialisation a été insufflée avant tout par des acteurs économiques privés, les firmes multinationales, dès le milieu des années 1990. Par leurs capacités d'investissements et leurs organisations en réseaux à l'échelle mondiale, ces firmes multinationales participent majoritairement à ce processus d'intégration qui repose donc avant tout sur des raisons opportunistes et rationnelles. Les firmes multinationales ont positionné ces territoires dans les activités les plus profitables à l'organisation de leur « chaîne globale de valeur » mondiale. On peut dès lors s'interroger sur l'ampleur et les formes d'intégrations à la mondialisation qu'apportent ces implantations d'entreprises multinationales en particulier pour les villes d'Europe centrale. Dans une approche d'analyse empirique multi-niveaux, la thèse replace les villes d'Europe centrale dans la compétition mondiale des firmes multinationales du secteur automobile qui a particulièrement participé à l'intégration de ces territoires dans des stratégies industrielles mondiales. A un niveau micro, nous analysons les stratégies des firmes automobiles par leurs réseaux d'organisation financière dans une approche à la fois gestionnaire et quantitative. A un niveau méso/macro, nous positionnons les villes d'Europe centrale dans les systèmes de villes européen et mondiaux, selon le rôle attribué dans les chaînes globales de valeur. À chaque étape de cette recherche, l'analyse prend en compte différentes échelles spatiales (urbaine, régionale, nationale, continentale) et plusieurs niveaux d'analyse (micro : les réseaux individuels d'entreprises, méso : les liens intra-urbains, macro : les attractivités interurbaines) afin de souligner les interactions multi échelles qui intègrent chaque espace considéré. Cela nous permet d'évaluer en particulier la place des relations de l'ex-UE15 avec l'Europe centrale dans le contexte des réseaux mondiaux. Les formes transnationales des réseaux des entreprises multinationales, se déployant dans un système de lieux identifiés (métropoles ou villes) sont replacées dans les logiques internationales d'accords bilatéraux, de réglementations régionales et de politiques d'attraction (comme fiscales) ou de soutien au développement (aides nationales ou européennes). L'approche empirique multi échelles, articule les différentes dimensions des stratégies de localisation des entreprises déployées dans leur approche du développement et de la stabilisation de leur chaine globale de valeur, avec les positions relatives des territoires et villes à différents niveaux d'intégration. Ainsi la thèse offre une vision originale de l'articulation des développements locaux des territoires face aux stratégies globales des entreprises.
Financement et mode d'organisation des hôpitaux suisses : revue du recueil législatif de 1991 à 2009
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Le financement des établissements de soins a connu dans le courant de l'année 2007 d'importants changements législatifs. De l'introduction de la tarification à l'activité sur la base des diagnostic-related groups (DRG) à la mise en concurrence directe des hôpitaux, qu'ils appartiennent au secteur public ou au secteur privé, de l'ingérence de la Confédération dans la planification hospitalière (jusque là domaine réservé des Cantons) à la mise au premier plan des critères de qualité dans l'évaluation des établissements hospitaliers, les exemples ne manquent pas pour illustrer le changement conceptuel auquel nous assistons. L'auteur de ces lignes, privilégiant l'approche historique à l'approche normative, s'est demandé quels étaient les prémices de ce changement législatif et s'est confronté aux différents textes qui ont émaillé les débats de ces vingt dernières années, qu'ils émanent du pouvoir exécutif (messages aux chambres fédérales, ordonnances d'application) ou du pouvoir législatif (textes de loi) afin d'en dégager la cohérence politique. Ce mémoire suit donc une ligne strictement chronologique. Il s'inspire des différents travaux parlementaires. A la lecture de ces textes, il apparaît que, pour les parlementaires, la question du financement des hôpitaux n'est qu'une partie, parfois essentielle, parfois accessoire, selon les époques et l'amplitude du champ d'application du document législatif, du financement des soins par l'assurance-maladie. Les grands principes qui régissent l'assurance-maladie s'appliquent donc nécessairement au financement des hôpitaux. Pour cette raison, il est apparu judicieux à l'auteur de ces lignes de ne pas séparer les deux problèmes et de se plonger dans un premier temps dans les débats qui ont eu cours lors de l'adoption de la nouvelle loi sur l'assurance-maladie (LAMaI) en 1994. [Auteur, p. 5]
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Illicit drug analyses usually focus on the identification and quantitation of questioned material to support the judicial process. In parallel, more and more laboratories develop physical and chemical profiling methods in a forensic intelligence perspective. The analysis of large databases resulting from this approach enables not only to draw tactical and operational intelligence, but may also contribute to the strategic overview of drugs markets. In Western Switzerland, the chemical analysis of illicit drug seizures is centralised in a laboratory hosted by the University of Lausanne. For over 8 years, this laboratory has analysed 5875 cocaine and 2728 heroin specimens, coming from respectively 1138 and 614 seizures operated by police and border guards or customs. Chemical (major and minor alkaloids, purity, cutting agents, chemical class), physical (packaging and appearance) as well as circumstantial (criminal case number, mass of drug seized, date and place of seizure) information are collated in a dedicated database for each specimen. The study capitalises on this extended database and defines several indicators to characterise the structure of drugs markets, to follow-up on their evolution and to compare cocaine and heroin markets. Relational, spatial, temporal and quantitative analyses of data reveal the emergence and importance of distribution networks. They enable to evaluate the cross-jurisdictional character of drug trafficking and the observation time of drug batches, as well as the quantity of drugs entering the market every year. Results highlight the stable nature of drugs markets over the years despite the very dynamic flows of distribution and consumption. This research work illustrates how the systematic analysis of forensic data may elicit knowledge on criminal activities at a strategic level. In combination with information from other sources, such knowledge can help to devise intelligence-based preventive and repressive measures and to discuss the impact of countermeasures.
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Myriapods (e.g., centipedes and millipedes) display a simple homonomous body plan relative to other arthropods. All members of the class are terrestrial, but they attained terrestriality independently of insects. Myriapoda is the only arthropod class not represented by a sequenced genome. We present an analysis of the genome of the centipede Strigamia maritima. It retains a compact genome that has undergone less gene loss and shuffling than previously sequenced arthropods, and many orthologues of genes conserved from the bilaterian ancestor that have been lost in insects. Our analysis locates many genes in conserved macro-synteny contexts, and many small-scale examples of gene clustering. We describe several examples where S. maritima shows different solutions from insects to similar problems. The insect olfactory receptor gene family is absent from S. maritima, and olfaction in air is likely effected by expansion of other receptor gene families. For some genes S. maritima has evolved paralogues to generate coding sequence diversity, where insects use alternate splicing. This is most striking for the Dscam gene, which in Drosophila generates more than 100,000 alternate splice forms, but in S. maritima is encoded by over 100 paralogues. We see an intriguing linkage between the absence of any known photosensory proteins in a blind organism and the additional absence of canonical circadian clock genes. The phylogenetic position of myriapods allows us to identify where in arthropod phylogeny several particular molecular mechanisms and traits emerged. For example, we conclude that juvenile hormone signalling evolved with the emergence of the exoskeleton in the arthropods and that RR-1 containing cuticle proteins evolved in the lineage leading to Mandibulata. We also identify when various gene expansions and losses occurred. The genome of S. maritima offers us a unique glimpse into the ancestral arthropod genome, while also displaying many adaptations to its specific life history.
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Artikkelit
Knowledge Sharing between Generations in an Organisation - Retention of the Old or Building the New?
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The study explores knowledge transfer between retiring employees and their successors in expert work. My aim is to ascertain whether there is knowledge development or building new knowledge related to this organisational knowledge transfer between generations; in other words, is the transfer of knowledge from experienced, retiring employees to their successors merely retention of the existing organisational knowledge by distributing it from one individual to another or does this transfer lead to building new and meaningful organisational knowledge. I call knowledge transfer between generations and the possibly related knowledge building in this study knowledge sharing between generations. The study examines the organisation and knowledge management from a knowledge-based and constructionist view. From this standpoint, I see knowledge transfer as an interactive process, and the exploration is based on how the people involved in this process understand and experience the phenomenon studied. The research method is organisational ethnography. I conducted the analysis of data using thematic analysis and the articulation method, which has not been used before in organisational knowledge studies. The primary empirical data consists of theme interviews with twelve employees involved in knowledge transfer in the organisation being studied and five follow-up theme interviews. Six of the interviewees are expert duty employees due to retire shortly, and six are their successors. All those participating in the follow-up interviews are successors of those soon to retire from their expert responsibilities. The organisation in the study is a medium-sized Finnish firm, which designs and manufactures electrical equipment and systems for the global market. The results of the study show that expert work-related knowledge transfer between generations can mean knowledge building which produces new, meaningful knowledge for the organisation. This knowledge is distributed in the organisation to all those that find it useful in increasing the efficiency and competitiveness of the whole organisation. The transfer and building of knowledge together create an act of knowledge sharing between generations where the building of knowledge presupposes transfer. Knowledge sharing proceeds between the expert and the novice through eight phases. During the phases of knowledge transfer the expert guides the novice to absorb the knowledge to be transferred. With the expert’s help the novice gradually comes to understand the knowledge and in the end he or she is capable of using it in his or her work. During the phases of knowledge building the expert helps the novice to further develop the knowledge being transferred so that it becomes new, useful knowledge for the organisation. After that the novice takes the built knowledge to use in his or her work. Based on the results of the study, knowledge sharing between generations takes place in interaction and ends when knowledge is taken to use. The results I obtained in the interviews by the articulation method show that knowledge sharing between generations is shaped by the novices’ conceptions of their own work goals, knowledge needs and duties. These are not only based on the official definition of the work, but also how the novices find their work or how they prioritise the given objectives and responsibilities. The study shows that the novices see their work primarily as maintenance or development. Those primarily involved in maintenance duties do not necessarily need knowledge defined as transferred between generations. Therefore, they do not necessarily transfer knowledge with their assigned experts, even though this can happen in favourable circumstances. They do not build knowledge because their view of their work goals and duties does not require the building of new knowledge. Those primarily involved in development duties, however, do need knowledge available from their assigned experts. Therefore, regardless of circumstances they transfer knowledge with their assigned experts and also build knowledge because their work goals and duties create a basis for building new knowledge. The literature on knowledge transfer between generations has focused on describing either the knowledge being transferred or the means by which it is transferred. Based on the results of this study, however, knowledge sharing between generations, that is, transfer and building is determined by how the novice considers his or her own knowledge needs and work practices. This is why studies on knowledge sharing between generations and its implementation should be based not only on the knowledge content and how it is shared, but also on the context of the work in which the novice interprets and shares knowledge. The existing literature has not considered the possibility that knowledge transfer between generations may mean building knowledge. The results of this study, however, show that this is possible. In knowledge building, the expert’s existing organisational knowledge is combined with the new knowledge that the novice brings to the organisation. In their interaction this combination of the expert’s “old” and the novice’s “new” knowledge becomes new, meaningful organisational knowledge. Previous studies show that knowledge development between the members of an organisation is the prerequisite for organisational renewal which in turn is essential for improved competitiveness. Against this background, knowledge building enables organisational renewal and thus enhances competitiveness. Hence, when knowledge transfer between generations is followed by knowledge building, the organisation kills two birds with one stone. In knowledge transfer the organisation retains the existing knowledge and thus maintains its competitiveness. In knowledge building the organisation developsnew knowledge and thus improves its competitiveness.
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The study examines the signalling of text organisation in research articles (RA) in French. The work concentrates on a particular type of organisation provided by text sequences, i.e. structures organising text to items of which at least some are signalled by markers of addition or order: First… 0… The third point… In addition… / Premièrement… 0… Le troisième point… De plus… By indicating the way the text is organised, these structures guide the reader in the reading process so that he doesn’t need to interpret the text structure himself. The aim of the work is to study factors affecting the marking of text sequences. Why is their structure sometimes signalled explicitly by markers such as secondly, whereas in other places such markers are not used? The corpus is manually XML-annotated and consists of 90 RAs (~800 000 words) in French from the fields of linguistics, education and history. The analysis highlights several factors affecting the marking of text sequences. First, exact markers (such as fist ) seem to be more frequent in sequences where all the items are explicitly signalled by a marker, whereas additive markers (such as moreover) are used in sequences with both explicitly signalled and unmarked items. The marking of explicitly signalled sequences seems thus to be precise and even repetitive, whereas the signalling of sequences with unmarked items is altogether more vague. Second, the marking of text sequences seems to depend on the length of the text. The longer the text segment, the more vague the marking. Additive markers and unmarked items are more frequent in longer sequences possibly covering several pages, whereas shorter sequences are often signalled explicitly by exact markers. Also the marker types vary according to the sequence length. Anaphoric expressions, such as first, are fairly close to their referents and are used in short sequences, connectors, such as secondly, are frequently used in sequences of intermediate length, whereas the longest sequences are often signalled by constructions composed of an ordinal and a noun acting as a subject of the sentence: The first item is… Finally, the marking of text organisation depends also on the discipline the RA belongs to. In linguistics, the marking is fairly frequent and precise; exact markers such as second are the most used, and structures with unmarked items are less common. Similarly, the marking is fairly frequent in education. In this field, however, it is also less precise than in linguistics, with frequent unmarked items and additive markers. History, on the other hand, is characterised by less frequent marking. In addition, when used, the marking in this field is also less precise and less explicit.
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One of the aims of the study was to clarify the reliability and validity of the Job Diagnostic Survey (JDS) and the Eigenzustand (EZ) method as measures of the objective characteristics of work and short-term mental work load in the Finnish data. The reliability and validity were examined taking into consideration the theoretical backgrounds of the methods and the reliability of the measurements. The methods were used for finding out the preconditions for organisational development based on self-improvement and clarifying the impacts of working environment (organisational functioning and job characteristics) on a worker’s mental state and health. The influences were examined on a general level - regardless of individual personal or specific contextual factors. One aim was also to clarify how cognitions and emotions are intertwined and how they influence a person’s perception of the working environment. The data consisted of 15 blue-collar organisations in the public sector. The organisations were divided in target and comparison groups depending on the research frames. The data was collected by questionnaires by post. The exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses (Lisrel) were used as the main statistical methods in examining the structures of the methods and impacts between the variables. It was shown that it is possible for organisations to develop their working conditions themselves on specific preconditions. The advance of the development processes could be shown by the amount of the development activity as well as by the changes of the mental well-being (ability to act) and sick absenteeism of the personnel. It was found that the JDS and the EZ methods were reliable and valid measures in the Finnish data. It was shown that, in addition to the objective working environment (organisational functioning and job characteristics), also such a personal factor as selfesteem influences a person’s perception of mental work load. However, the influence did not seem to be direct. The importance of job satisfaction as a general indicator of perceived working conditions was emphasised. Emotional and cognitive factors were found to be functionally intertwined constituting a common factor. Organisational functioning and the characteristics of work had connections with a person’s health measured by sick absenteeism.
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12 x 20 cm