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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
131

Organizing markets: The structuring of neoliberalism in the U.S. airline industry

Avent-Holt, Dustin Robert 01 January 2012 (has links)
This dissertation examines the emergence of neoliberalism through an historical analysis of the evolution of the U.S airline industry. In 1938 the basic economic activities of U.S. airlines were placed under the regulatory oversight and control of the Civil Aeronautics Board. This institution of “regulated competition” persisted largely unquestioned until the economic crisis of the 1970s. Out of this crisis the Airline Deregulation Act was passed in 1978, eliminating most of these economic controls. Based on analysis of Congressional hearings, a key industry trade press ( Air Transport World), the general business press, and financial and labor market data on the airline industry I explain the stable reproduction of “regulated competition” from 1938–1973, the mobilization against regulated competition that began in 1973 that led to the reorganization of the industry in 1978, and the transformation of the market for air travel in the 1980s following the 1978 Airline Deregulation Act. Through analyzing this case of the transition from state interventionism to neoliberalism I make three interrelated historical and theoretical arguments. First, as an historical object neoliberalism is a contextual and often incoherent political project that to fully understand requires fine-grained analyses of the social spaces in which neoliberalism is inserted and adapted. Second, neoliberal deregulations such as occurred in the airline industry do not translate into a simple self-regulating market. Instead, what we observe in this case is that market actors rebuild institutions and reorganize social relations in order to protect themselves from market competition. Finally, at a theoretical level I argue that while analytically distinct networks and institutions are mutually constitutive of markets and interact with each other in the evolution of a market. This case demonstrates the back and forth dynamics of actors building social relations to transform institutions that then transform existing social relations that is the hallmark of market dynamics. Thus, at a theoretical level I draw out the importance of understanding the relationship between networks and institutions in understanding the evolution of markets as social fields, while at a historical level I argue that focusing on concrete cases of neoliberalism will help us understand the multiplex politics behind producing a neoliberal political economy and the unexpected consequences of it.
132

TWO META-ANALYTIC STUDIES TO UNDERSTAND CREATIVITY AND INNOVATION OF HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM ORGANIZATIONS AND EMPLOYEES

Lim, Sang Gon, 0000-0002-3536-6614 08 1900 (has links)
Despite the proliferation of innovation research in hospitality and tourism management literature, a salient research gap exists in systematically synthesizing previous research findings. This dissertation highlights the critical research gap and presents the holistic nomological networks of multilevel innovation in hospitality and tourism organizations through quantitative meta-analytic procedures. This dissertation synthesizes innovation research published before January 2023 and investigates various predictors of innovation at an employee (Study 1) and organizational (Study 2) level. In doing so, Studies 1 and 2 examine crucial moderators that provide an integrative understanding of how the investigated associations are contextually influenced. These findings contribute to building and developing theories in the literature and offer specialized managerial implications for practitioners to promote multilevel innovation processes in hospitality and tourism organizations. / Tourism and Sport
133

The power(less) of ratification: holding the state responsible for human rights respect in Indonesia

Prasetyo, Hendro January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
134

Knowledge-Based Performance Management Framework

Datta, Roshni January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
135

Investigating the Role of Identification in Team Sport Organizations

Swanson, Steven D. January 2014 (has links)
The concept of identifying with an organizational entity has been widely researched in the mainstream management literature, with organizational identification now positioned as a key construct in organizational research (Edwards, 2005; Riketta, 2005). While identification has also been highly researched in the sport management literature, it has been done almost exclusively from the perspective of the consumer. This research stream has focused primarily on the construct of team identification, and the extent to which fans identify with their respective sports teams (e.g., Wann & Branscombe, 1993). However, it is of note that there has been little identification research undertaken with regard to sports employees, and no previous study has addressed the concept of sport team identification in the workplace. A general proposition of the current study is that employees working for team sport organizations may also be fans of their affiliated sports teams. More specifically, employees in this setting may simultaneously identify with both their overall employing organization and its affiliated sports team, which in turn may have implications with regard to important workplace attitudes. The purpose of the study was to establish team identification as a distinct construct from organizational identification, and assess its role for employees working in the professional team sport environment. As part of this process, a conceptual model was developed which situated these focal constructs in a multiple target framework of identification in the context of sport. A hypothesized research model was then developed which proposed both organizational and team-focused antecedents for the identification constructs, which in turn independently predicted the following attitudinal outcomes: affective commitment, job satisfaction, job involvement, work motivation, and job engagement. This dissertation employed a mixed method design and used an online survey for business operations employees in the five largest professional sports leagues in North America (N = 1,189). In addition, semi-structured interviews were conducted with ten employees who had also taken the survey. The first phase of the quantitative analysis addressed the discriminant validity of organizational and team identification, and strong support for this proposition was demonstrated through a variety of statistical assessments. The second phase addressed the relationships in the hypothesized research model by utilizing structural equation modeling. Support for all of the proposed relationships was demonstrated with two exceptions, where prestige was not found to have a significant effect on either identification construct. The findings of this study contribute to the literature by introducing the concept of a sports team as an additional target of identification in the organizational context. In addition, while sport organizations and their affiliated teams are often referred to interchangeably, the current study distinguished team identification as a distinct construct from organizational identification for employees working in professional sport. This study therefore provides empirical support for Todd and Kent's (2009) proposition that the sport industry contains areas of distinction in relation to employee psychology, where individuals in this setting have dual targets of identification which exist simultaneously and independently predict key attitudinal outcomes. / Tourism and Sport
136

Please Tell Me What to Do: Exploring the effects of operating procedures on occupational stress and performance outcomes in temporary organizations

Williamson, David Christopher Francisco January 2018 (has links)
Music festivals have become big business, bringing in $8.79B in global revenue in 2017, and continuing to grow with projected 2022 revenues of $13.7B. However, these events still function mostly as “temporary organizations,” with employees coming together for the distinct period of time that the event takes place in and fulfilling the tasks that need to be accomplished for the production to be successful. The process of festival production can be stressful, requiring the implementation of operating procedures and other guidelines to ensure that employees produce an optimal guest experience. Through a grounded theory study of managers and employees at three different music festivals and an historic case study, this work seeks to understand how operating procedures impact workers in temporary organizations. The results reveal a relationship between operating procedures and employee stress as well as guest experiences that suggest the more an organization is able to communicate procedures the less likely employees are to suffer stress. In addition, analysis unveiled the presence of “compensation anxiety” among festival employees as an occupational stressor not traditionally considered in the occupational stress or temporary organization literatures. / Business Administration/Human Resource Management
137

The Interplay of Emotionally Salient Developmental Experiences, Career Stages, and the Ideal Self:an Index Development and Survey Analysis

Dhar, Udayan 23 May 2022 (has links)
No description available.
138

Anatomy of a radical change

Nguyễn, Huy Quý. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
139

Sustaining engagement in social purpose organizations: An institutional perspective on positive organizational practices

Nilsson, Warren O January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
140

Rethinking Organizational Leader Identity Development: A Social Network and Ethnographic Approach

Lemler, Russell Paul January 2013 (has links)
I propose a nuanced theoretical approach to understanding leader identity development in organizations. Past identity work has ignored or tangentially addressed phases of development that I term `leader identity stagnation' and `leader identity destruction'. Analysis of survey and network data examining West Point cadets' identities and friendship, leadership, and trust networks adds insight into the leader identity development process. Ethnographic research of the institution offers further understanding and helps confirm the new theoretical model of the phases of leader identity development. A concluding chapter examines the application of new social networking technologies and mixed-media interaction to enhance organizational leader identity construction. A gap exists in management literature pertaining to the creation and use of social network technologies for this purpose.

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