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Organisation partisane et exercice du pouvoir dans la Russie de Poutine : les paradoxes de la fabrication de Russie Unie (2001-2012) / Partisan organization and exercise of power in Putin's Russia : the paradoxes of the fabric of United Russia (2001-2012)Fauconnier, Clémentine 22 January 2015 (has links)
Cette thèse vise à interroger les enjeux et les modalités de la construction d’une majorité politique en Russie à partir des années 2000, après une décennie marquée par la faiblesse de l’exécutif central et l’éclatement de l’offre politique. Créé en 2001 pour soutenir Vladimir Poutine, la situation du parti politique Russie unie dans le paysage politique peut sembler paradoxale. Dominant à tous les échelons du pouvoir depuis 2003, il demeure néanmoins un instrument entre les mains des dirigeants de l’exécutif, sans réelle autonomie ou influence. Fort officiellement de 2 millions d’adhérents, Russie unie est peu ancré dans la société russe et compte très peu de militants. L’analyse de la tension créée entre la dynamique d’institutionnalisation du parti et, en même temps, son maintien sous le contrôle de l’Etat se présente comme un point d’entrée privilégié pour envisager, dans une perspective comparative, la production des mécanismes d’assujettissement d’une partie du personnel politique russe. Cela implique de s’intéresser à la mise en place et aux modalités concrètes de fonctionnement de Russie unie, d’observer les pratiques des acteurs engagés dans ces activités et de s’interroger sur les significations qu’ils leur donnent. Cette démarche suggère alors de montrer comment l’étude de ce processus spécifique de fabrication partisane est susceptible de nourrir une réflexion plus générale et comparative sur la façon dont les dynamiques de différenciation ou de rapprochement entre les partis et l’Etat contribuent à produire différentes formes d’investissements politiques. Pour cela l’étude des partis en tant qu’institution ainsi que de la sociologie historique comparative permet de montrer les tensions créées par le processus de différenciation sous contrôle de Russie unie et la façon dont celui-ci accompagne la mise en place de nouveaux mécanismes de domination. / This thesis aims to examine the issues and modalities of building a political majority in Russia from the 2000s, after a decade marked by the weakness of the Central Executive and party system fragmentation. Created in 2001 to support Vladimir Putin, the situation of the political party United Russia in the political landscape may seem paradoxical. Dominant at all levels of power since 2003, it still remains a tool in the hands of leaders of the Executive, without any real autonomy or influence. United Russia, including officially 2 million members, is not rooted in Russian society and has very few militants. The analysis of the tension between the dynamics of the party’s institutionalization and, at the same time, its maintaining under control of the State appears as a privileged entry point for analyzing, in a comparative perspective, the production of mechanisms of subjections of Russian elected officials. This implies to study the establishment of United Russia and its concrete functioning, the practices of the actors involved in these activities and the meaning they give to these practices. Thus this approach suggests to show how the study of this specific process of party construction is likely to feed a more general and comparative reflection on how the dynamics of differentiation or reconciliation between parties and the State contribute to produce various forms of political investments. For this purpose, studying the party as an institution as well as the comparative historical sociology can show the tensions created by the process of differentiation under the control of United Russia and also how it supports the establishment of new domination mechanisms.
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[en] COMPETITIVE INTELLIGENCE IN BRAZILIAN ORGANIZATIONS: A CASE STUDY IN THE OIL INDUSTRY / [pt] INTELIGÊNCIA COMPETITIVA EM ORGANIZAÇÕES BRASILEIRAS: UM CASO NA INDUSTRIA DE PETRÓLEONIVEA MARIA PEREIRA DA SILVA 27 July 2007 (has links)
[pt] A nova ordem econômica estabeleceu às empresas um novo
patamar de
competitividade, pelo qual elas estão obrigadas a
acompanharem,
sistematicamente, o sistema competitivo em que atuam, a
fim de refinar seus
processos de tomada de decisão e planejamento, reduzir
riscos, incertezas,
ameaças e aproveitar oportunidades. Um conceito cada vez
mais utilizado com
essa finalidade tem sido o de Inteligência Competitiva, um
conjunto de ações e
recursos que permite às empresas acumularem, em curto
espaço de tempo, o
máximo entendimento sobre a rapidez das mudanças do
ambiente, gerando maior
segurança ao executivo na hora de tomar uma decisão ou
definir a estratégia mais
adequada. Trata-se de um conceito ainda em evolução, pouco
explorado pela
Academia, mas que vem despertando cada vez mais interesse
por parte das
empresas. No sentido de entender como e por que uma
empresa implanta unidades
de Inteligência, conduziu-se um estudo de caso em uma
empresa petrolífera, onde
executivos envolvidos na implantação de tais unidades
foram entrevistados para
apontar aspectos e desafios, tais como: motivação para a
Inteligência; posição
hierárquica; foco; interface com outros processos;
produtos de Inteligência;
mobilização dos recursos humanos e outros. Na empresa, há
várias unidades de
Inteligência implantadas, a maioria localizada ao nível
estratégico, com foco para
questões estratégicas de longo prazo. Na prática, estão
mais voltadas para o curto
prazo, e não estão totalmente integradas aos outros
processos, em parte, pela
cultura, em parte, por reestruturações e mudanças na
liderança, questões que têm
influenciado de maneira distinta a continuidade dessas
unidades na empresa. / [en] The new economic order established to enterprises a new
level of
competitiveness that obliges them to monitor
systematically their competitive
system in order to improve their decision making and
planning processes, to
minimize risks, uncertainties, threats and to get
opportunities. A new such a way
to do this is using the Competitive Intelligence process.
Competitive Intelligence
is said to be a tool of actions and resources that enables
executives to understand,
in a short period of time, how fast competitive
environment changes. By using this
tool, executives are safe to make better decisions and
establish the most adequate
strategy. It is a new and increasing subject, both for
enterprises and Academy. In
many aspects, its theorical base line is not well
developed yet. In order to improve
the understanding about how and why an enterprise
establishes Competitive
Intelligence Units, a case study was conducted in an oil
and gas company.
Executives in charge of these units were interviewed to
explain some of the
Competitive Intelligence challenges such as: reasons for
Competitive Intelligence;
structural position, focus and interface with other
processes; Intelligence products;
human resources support. There are Intelligence Units
established in all of the
company business units. Almost all are positioned at the
higher level of decision
structure with focus on long term questions. However,
practice shows these units
are more focused on short term and are not totally
integrated to other processes
because of culture and changes in structure and
leadership, which influences
intelligence unit survival differently.
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