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The New Policy Direction : A qualitative content analysis of United Kingdom’s motivations for being the first western country to join The Asian Infrastructure Investment BankEdholm, Simon January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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A Microeconomic Model Of Healthcare Systems: From Theoretical To PracticalHelligso, Jesse 01 January 2007 (has links)
This thesis is a microeconomic market analysis of healthcare systems. Different countries use various forms for financing and providing healthcare, and the effects of market forces on the quality, access and economic efficiency of these divergent healthcare markets is the primary subject. The purpose of this thesis is to describe the forces working in the healthcare market. Free-market healthcare systems allow medical providers to become price-setters. Price-setting by medical providers creates an economically inefficient system which decreases public access to healthcare but creates a high quality system. Single-payer systems make government the price-setter which creates a system in which medical providers are price-takers. Government price-setting guarantees access but quality and economic efficiency vary drastically between countries. Universal single-payer systems tend to set prices higher than the theoretically necessary price which creates a high quality, economically inefficient system. Socialized single-payer systems tend to set prices lower than the theoretically necessary price which creates government savings, wait-lists and poorer quality. The quality, economic efficiency, and equity of the healthcare system are determined by the form of the market used in the country. Ultimately, this market determines price. In a free-market system price is determined by providers of healthcare, in a socialized market price is determined by government, and in a universal healthcare system price is negotiated by both healthcare providers and government. Price negotiation in a universal system creates the greatest access to healthcare, and quality of healthcare. Socialized systems can be more economically efficient than a universal system, but quality and access can be limited. Price negotiation in a universal healthcare system fixes the problems of price negotiation inherent in the healthcare market.
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Great British IslamRashid, M. Ali, Finnigan, R., Baig, A. January 2005 (has links)
No / The trust in the relations between Islam and Great Britain has been strained since the attacks on the London public transport network. The attack was committed in the name of Islam. The documentary about Muslims in Great Britain describes the joint history since the 16th century, the arrival of the first Islamic immigrants. For the presenter, the British Muslim Anila Baig, tolerance between the cultures and the religious communities is the only way to a peaceful Great Britain. Unconventional and very entertaining.
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The dynamics of corporate diversification. A System Dynamics study of the effectiveness of diversification as a corporate growth strategy for leading firm in the U. K. Cement Industry.Moslehshirazi, Ali Naghi January 1979 (has links)
This thesis describes and discusses the application of System
Dynamics methodology as a basis for formulating diversification strategy
and control policies of the largest diversifying cement company in the
'United Kingdom. The problems of the industry such as stagnant growth,
cyclic and seasonal variations in cement demand, and overcapacity are
described.
The formulation of a SD model of the situation which captures these
problems together with its equations system are presented. The model also
simulates the planning and control processes for the selection,
initiation and completion of both expansion and diversification investment
projects. It is argued and demonstrated that the fact that these processes
consist of feedback loops should and could be utilized for understanding
these processes, advancing complementary theoretical concepts, and
designing and formulating more 'effective systems and decision rules.
An intensive analysis of the model in SD frameworks further supports
these arguments. These analyses reveal the nature of the system's dynamic
properties and its likely developments, the dynamic and situational nature
of diversification effectiveness, and the importance of several
diversification decision factors. These analyses also show how complex
the formulation of a thorough and effective diversification strategy may
become together with the ways and means of dealing with these complexities..
It is concluded that the thrust of an effective diversification lies with
the broadening of the conventional theoretical concepts and analysis to
include the dynamic characteristics of the system. It is also concluded
and shown that System Dynamics methodology can provide a strong
analytical basis for achieving these ends.
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The Text and Context of Malediction: A Study of Antisemitic and Heterosexist Hate Violence.Asquith, Nicole 12 1900 (has links)
no / Research into the contours of hate crime has gone through several ebbs and flows over the last twenty years. At times, acts of horrific brutality have brought the issue of hate violence into the public imagination; sometimes leading to legislative changes, education programs and the funding of community organisations to manage the harms caused by this unique form of violence.
The Stephen Lawrence murder in the UK in April 1993, and the Matthew Shepherd murder in the USA in October 1998 both led to major policing and legislative changes, including the introduction of penalty-enhancement measures, which were thought to more adequately ameliorate the additional harms generated from targeted violence, and to create the conditions for good citizenship in diverse societies. However, this legislative and policing transformation of hate crime regulation is not universal, even in Western democratic states. The Australian Federal government has not responded in comparable ways; preferring instead to abrogate much of its responsibilities under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination and International Convention on Civil and Political Rights to state governments¿particularly, in relation to gay men and lesbians¿ social citizenship rights. In relation to hate violence, contemporary Australian research has begun to address the inconsistent application of law, public policy and policing practice. However, the issue of `hate speech¿ has remained largely uninterrogated. Equally, research has tended to focus on the unique characteristics of specific forms of hate violence, rather than assess the conditions of exclusion shared by disparate groups. This book remedies both of these deficiencies by providing a critical analysis of the role of hate speech in hate violence, and offering a comparative investigation of antisemitic and heterosexist violence.
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Pakistani Diaspora in the UK and USASamad, A. Yunas January 2012 (has links)
Yes
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Global Politics and (Trans)National Arts: Staging the “War on Terror” in New York, London, and CairoPotter, George E. 23 September 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Devolution and Disengagement in the United Kingdom: A Study on the Effects of Devolution on Union-Wide Engagement in PoliticsScheckelhoff, Hannah January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Work, parenting and gender: the care-work negotiations of three couple relationships in the UKYarwood, G.A., Locke, Abigail 08 April 2015 (has links)
Yes / Changes globally mean that there are now record numbers of mothers in paid employment and a reported prevalence of involved fathering. This poses challenges to mothers and fathers as they negotiate care-work practices within their relationships. Focusing on interviews with three heterosexual couples (taken from a wider UK qualitative project on working parents), the paper considers care-work negotiations of three couples, against a backdrop of debates about intensive mothering and involved fathering. It aims to consider different configurations of work and care within three different couple relationships. We found that power within the relationships was negotiated along differential axis of gender and working status (full or part time paid work) . We present qualitatively rich insights into these negotiations. Framed by a critical discursive psychological approach, we call on other researchers to think critically about dominant discourses and practices of working, caring and parenting, pointedly how couples situated around the world operationalise these discourses in talking about themselves as worker and carers.
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The UK's Search for an Incapacitating ('Non-Lethal') Chemical Agent in the 1960sDando, Malcolm January 2006 (has links)
Yes
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