998 resultados para 1108
Resumo:
Purpose - To consider a more visual approach to property law teaching practices. This will be achieved by exploring the existence of ‘visual learners’ as a student body, evaluating the use of more visual teaching techniques in academic practice, recognising the historic dominance of text in legal education, and examining the potential for heightening visual teaching practices in the teaching of property law. Design/methodology/approach – The paper reviews and analyses some of the available literature on visual pedagogy, and visual approaches to legal education, but also introduces an amount of academic practitioner analysis. Findings – This paper evidences that, rather than focusing on the categorisation of ‘visual learner’, the modern academic practitioner should employ the customary use of more visual stimuli; consequently becoming a more ‘visual teacher’. This paper demonstrates that these practices, if performed effectively, can impact upon the information literacy of the whole student body: It also proffers a number of suggestions as to how this could be achieved within property law teaching practices. Practical implications – The paper will provide support for early-career academic practitioners, who are entering a teaching profession in a period of accelerated and continual change, by presenting an overview of pedagogic practices in the area. It will also provide a stimulus for those currently teaching on property law modules and support their transition to a more visual form of teaching practice. Originality/value – This paper provides a comprehensive overview of visual pedagogy in legal education, and specifically within that of property law, which has not been conducted elsewhere.
Resumo:
Purpose – The aim of the paper is to identify the board attributes that significantly increase firm risk. The study aims to find if board size, percentage of non-executive directors, women on the board, a powerful CEO, equity ownership amongst executive board directors and institutional investor ownership, are associated with firm risk. This is the first study that examines which board attributes increase firm risk using a UK based sample. Design/methodology/approach – This empirical study collected secondary data from Bloomberg and Morningstar databases. The data sample is an unbalanced panel of 260 companies’ secondary data on FTSE 350 index in the UK, from 2005 to 2010. The data was statistically analysed using STATA. Findings – The study establishes the board attributes that were significantly related to firm risk. The results show that a board which can increase firm risk is one that is small in size,has high equity ownership amongst executive board directors and has high institutional investor ownership. Research limitations/implications – The governance culture and regulatory system in the UK is different from other countries. Since the data is a UK based sample, the results can lack generalisability. Practical implications – The results are useful for investors who invest in large firms, to have the knowledge about the board attributes that can increase firm risk. Regulators can also use the results to strengthen regulatory guidelines. Originality/value – This study fills the gap in knowledge in UK governance literature on the board attributes that can increase firm risk.
Resumo:
Purpose This paper aims to propose the global nation product equity model (GNPE) to measure global consumers’ equity of a product that a country produces, especially a nation’s cultural products (i.e. culducts). The model also examines the significant difference of GNPE depending on a cultural diffusion level. GNPE model proposes that depending on the level of people’s recognition/acceptance/preference of a culture from another country (i.e. cultural diffusion level), the equity of a product from that country could be different in different countries. As variables that affect GNPE, global nation product equity in general, global nation product equity of a product category and nation cultural equity are included in the model. Design/methodology/approach To test the model, this study developed Hallyu (Korean cultural diffusion)-related Korean culducts and measured global consumers’ equity for the Korean culducts. In all, 351 surveys were collected from China, France, England and the USA. Findings The results show the significantly different equities and relationships among equities depending on the level of Hallyu diffusion in each country. Therefore, Korea is suggested to focus on different equities in different countries. Originality/value This research proposed a new model that extends the previous brand equity models to non-branded products (i.e. cultural products). This model proposed new variables that affect equity of a product mentioned above and suggests different equities to improve in different countries depending on their level of cultural diffusion. Also, this cross-cultural study suggests a direction of culduct design, distribution and promotion strategies in the global market.
Resumo:
Purpose – The purpose of this viewpoint paper is to argue that gossip is a neglected aspect of organizational communication and knowledge, and an under-used management resource. Design/methodology/approach – The paper challenges mainstream managerial assumptions that gossip is trivial or tainted talk which should be discouraged in the workplace. Instead, gossip is re-framed at an organizational level of analysis, which provides the opportunity for relational knowledge about systemic failure and poor practice in healthcare to surface. Findings – Rather than simply viewing gossip as an individual behaviour and interpersonal process, it is claimed that organizational gossip is also a valuable early warning indicator of risk and failure in healthcare systems. There is potentially significant value in re-framing gossip as an aspect of organizational communication and knowledge. If attended to (rather than neglected or silenced) gossip can provide fresh insights into professional practice, decision-making and relational leadership. Originality/value – This paper offers a provocative challenge to mainstream health organization and management thinking about gossip in the workplace. It offers new ways of thinking to promote patient safety, and prevent the scandals that have plagued healthcare organizations in recent years.
Resumo:
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to propose a generic model of Integrated Management System of Quality, Environment and Safety (IMS-QES) that can be adapted and progressively to assimilate various Management Systems, of which highlights: ISO 9001 for Quality; ISO 14001 for Environment; OHSAS 18001 for Occupational Health and Safety. Design/methodology/approach – The model was designed in the real environment of a Portuguese Organization and 160 employees were surveyed. The rate response was equal to 86 percent. The conceived model was implemented in a first phase for the integration of Quality, Environment and Safety Management Systems. Findings – Among the main findings of the survey the paper highlights: the elimination of conflicts between individual systems with resources optimization; creation of added value to the business by eliminating several types of wastes; the integrated management of sustainability components in a global market; the improvement of partnerships with suppliers of goods and services; reducing the number of internal and external audits. Originality/value – This case study is one of the first Portuguese empirical researches about IMS-QES and the paper believes that it can be useful in the creation of a Portuguese guideline for integration, namely the Quality Management Systems; Environmental Management Systems and Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems among others.
Resumo:
Purpose – The aim of this article is to present some results from research undertaken into the information behaviour of European Documentation Centre (EDC) users. It will reflect on the practices of a group of 234 users of 55 EDCs covering 21 Member States of the European Union (EU), used to access European information. Design/methodology/approach – In order to collect the data presented here, five questionnaires were sent to users in all the EDCs in Finland, Ireland, Hungary and Portugal. In the remaining EU countries, five questionnaires were sent to two EDCs chosen at random. The questionnaires were sent by post, following telephone contact with the EDC managers. Findings – Factors determining access to information on the European Union and the frequency of this access are identified. The information providers most commonly used to access European information and the information sources considered the most reliable by respondents will also be analysed. Another area of analysis concerns the factors cited by respondents as facilitating access to information on Europe or, conversely, making it more difficult to access. Parallel to this, the aspects of accessing information on EU that are valued most by users will also be assessed. Research limitations/implications – Questionnaires had to be used, as the intention was to cover a very extensive geographical area. However, in opting for closed questions, it is acknowledged that standard responses have been obtained with no scope for capturing the individual circumstances of each respondent, thus making a qualitative approach difficult. Practical implications – The results provide an overall picture of certain aspects of the information behaviour of EDC users. They may serve as a starting point for planning training sessions designed to develop the skills required to search, access, evaluate and apply European information within an academic context. From a broader perspective, they also constitute factors which the European Commission should take into consideration when formulating its information and communication policy. Originality/value – This is the first piece of academic research into the EDCs and their users, which aimed to cover all Members State of the EU.
Pruebas preliminares sobre toxicidad aguda del cobre en la Concha de Abanico (Argopecten purpuratus)
Resumo:
Se realizaron siete bioensayos estáticos con la Concha de Abanico (Argopecten purpuratus) con concentraciones de cobre que variaron de 0.007 a 0.74 ppm. El agua de mar de donde provinieron los individuos usados en el experimento tenía concentraciones de cobre entre 0.005-0.007 ppm. La bioacumulación inicial en los animales varó de 1.69 a 6.50 ppm. Como resultado preliminar se determinó que 0.13 ppm es la concentración letal media (LC 50) en 96 horas.
Resumo:
Purpose To show that differences in the extent to which firms engage in unrelated diversification can be attributed to differences in ownership structure. Methodology/approach We draw on longitudinal data and use a panel analysis specification to test our hypotheses. Findings We find that unrelated diversification destroys value; pressure-sensitive Anglo-American owners in a firm’s equity reduce unrelated diversification, whereas pressure-resistant domestic owners increase unrelated diversification; the greater the firm’s free cash flow, the greater the negative effect of pressure-sensitive Anglo-American owners on unrelated diversification. Research limitations/implications We contribute to corporate governance and strategy research by bringing in owners’ institutional origin as a shaper of owner preferences in particular with regards to unrelated diversification. Future research may expand our investigation to more than one home institutional context, and theorize on institutional origin effects beyond the dichotomy between Anglo-American and non-Anglo-American (not oriented toward shareholder value maximization) owners. Practical implications Policy makers, financial analysts, owners, and managers may want to reflect about the implications of ownership structure, as well as promoting or joining corporations with particular ownership configurations. Social implications A shareholder value-destroying strategy, such as unrelated diversification has adverse consequences for society at large, in terms of opportunity costs, that is, resources could be allocated to value-creating activities instead. Promoting an ownership configuration that creates value should contribute to social welfare. Originality/value Owners may not be exclusively driven by shareholder value maximization, but can be influenced by normative beliefs (biases) stemming from the institutional context they originate from.
Resumo:
1887/03/28 (Numéro 1108).
Resumo:
Contient : Lettre d'Oihénart à A. Duchesne ; Diplôme de Charles le Simple pour le monastère d'Aurillac ; Notes généalogiques sur diverses familles de l'Anjou ; Extrait d'une description de la Gaule ; Extraits des archives de Saint-Laud d'Angers ; Évêques d'Angers, des origines à 1587 ; Extraits du cartulaire de Saint-Julien d'Angers ; Donation à Marmoutier de l'église Saint-Malo de Dinant ; Concile de Limoges ; Chartes de Maillezais ; Extraits du bullaire de Cluny ; Chartes relatives au prieuré de la Fougereuse ; Fondation du monastère de Saint-Jean d'Orbestier ; Extraits du cartulaire de Boisgrolland ; Fondation de l'abbaye de Jars ; Chartes de Guillaume et Savari de Mauléon ; Charte de Geoffroi, duc d'Aquitaine, pour Saint-Hilaire de Poitiers ; Privilège de Louis VII pour les églises de la province de Bordeaux (1137 ; Luchaire, Actes de Louis VII, n° 1) ; Privilèges de la Chaise-Dieu ; Chartes de Montierneuf de Poitiers ; Charte de Guillaume VII, duc d'Aquitaine, pour Sainte-Croix de Bordeaux ; Chartes de Saint-Hilaire de Poitiers ; Chartes de l'église de Mirebeau ; Charte de Guillaume V, duc d'Aquitaine, pour la Trinité de Vendôme ; Pièces et notes relatives à La Rochelle ; Extraits du cartulaire de Saint-Melaine de Vitré ; Diplôme de Charlemagne pour Saint-Cybar d'Angoulême ; Fondation de Sainte-Croix de Loudun
Resumo:
Contient : a Acte, en latin, du roi CHARLES VIII. Le roi y anoblit Éloi Gigaud et sa postérité. Éloi Gigaud est dit demeurer « in parrochia de Mehers, prope Castriam, in provincia Bituriae ». Plessis lez Tours, mai 1489 ; b Note concernant la famille Nicolay, de 1440 à 1588, où l'on examine à quelle date la qualité de noble à été donnée à Jean Nicolay, père du premier Nicolay qui fut « premier president aux comptes à Paris ». On a joint à cette note la copie de trois actes, en latin, des années 1452, 1469, 1522. Jean Nicolay figure dans les deux premiers, et son fils, le premier président, dans le troisième ; c Acte par lequel le roi LOUIS XIV déclare légitimés ses enfants naturels Louis-Auguste, duc du Maine, Louis-César, comte du Vexin, Louise-Françoise de Nantes. St-Germain-en-Laye, décembre 1673 ; d Le « lieu de Mouchy le Vieil », donné à « Jean, bastard de Tyen, bailly de Senlis, au mois de juin 1422 » ; e « Me Jean Bruslard,... ordonné avocat... du roy en la prevosté de Chastillon sur Marne, par lettres du roy du 28 fevrier 1423 » ; f La famille de Jeanne d'Arc. 1429 et 1473 ; g Un mandement du roi Louis XI « au seigneur de La Roche-Guyon », pour « laisser passer 60 tonneaux de vin », envoyés par ledit roi au roi d'Angleterre, Henri VI. Paris, 16 nov. 1470