897 resultados para participant roles
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Vols. for issued as U.S. Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare. DHEW publication no. (HRA).
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Cover title.
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Agenda item #5a from September 8, 1993, board meeting minutes.
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Revised by Sandra Schmulbach and Sally Yahnke Walker with the help of the gifted education consultants from the Regioal Offices of Education and Intermediate Service Centers.
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"This publication is one in a series of four prepared to report ICoVE's Recognition Program."--Page ii.
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"September 6, 1984."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"March 1983."
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"September 1992."
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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-04
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Life cycle models have become important in explaining the changing size structure of firms based on the carrying capacity of regions or industries. In particular, the population ecology model predicts stages of growth, maturity and eventually decline in the number of firms in an industry. There has been criticism of such models because of their focus on external variables as pre-determinants of the potential for enterprise development. This paper attempts to reconcile the external focus of the population ecology model with relevant internal management factors in enterprise development. A survey was conducted of Australian services exporters, and the results not only confirm the existence of four separate life cycle stages in the population ecology model, but also identify the external and internal variables that are strategically relevant at each of the stages. The findings provide potentially useful information in a range of contexts including the design of small business assistance as well a providing “guide posts” to entrepreneurs engaged in enterprise development.