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Value Capture through Public-Private Collaboration : an exploratory case study of a South African mining firmRamcharan-Kotze, Chantal January 2018 (has links)
The study explored how private firms and their constituents capture value through Public-Private Collaboration (PPC) in South Africa. Partnerships are touted as key enablers of firm innovation and value creation in an increasingly complex global context. Yet, very few studies have provided the evidence base of value creation and capture beyond the ‘feel good’ process considering integrated value for firms. Nor is there clarity on how value can be planned for, operationalised and measured for improved management practice. This study progressed knowledge on practice and evaluation of PPC processes for firms by going beyond traditional linear models that have been found to be deficient in complex contexts.
A qualitative case study was explored in the mining sector to provide richer and deeper insights into PPC processes from a firm perspective in its collaboration with government entities. The study provided the evidence base and indicators of value creation and capture for a private firm through a PPC process, exposed generalised assumptions, disaggregated value dimensions, and foregrounded a foundational multi-dimensional model and partnership value framework.
The study contributed an integrated strategic value lens and the choices made in aggregation and disaggregation of value constructs in diverse contexts. It demonstrated new combinations of constructs whereby PPC processes created sources of competitive, collaborative and societal advantage for firms through mediated pathways. Contextualised concepts and data gathering of use value, exchange value and transformative value offered the evidence called for on value capture through PPC processes. It revealed the need to disaggregate value dimensions such as intellectual, relational and political value from social value. The role of PPC processes in Balancing Accountability between public and private sectors was suggested as a concept in progressing the field of cross-sector governance.
A multi-dimensional model is presented reflecting the iterative and evolving nature of PPC processes and the interaction between value creation and value capture. An extended value indicator framework aims to aid in operationalising the assessment of PPC processes. The study promotes PPC processes as a mechanism to operationalise concepts such as Creating Shared Value (CSV) and respond to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). / Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2018. / Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS) / PhD / Unrestricted
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Community Partnerships for LPN-BSN Career MobilityMerriman, Carolyn S., Ramsey, P., Blowers, S., Webb, M. 01 June 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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“Community Partnerships for LPN-BSN Career Mobility”Webb, Melessia D. 01 July 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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“Community Partnerships for LPN-BSN Career Mobility”Webb, Melessia D. 01 June 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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Community Partnerships for an LPN to BSN Career Mobility Project.Ramsey, Priscilla, Merriman, Carolyn S., Blowers, Sally, Grooms, Janelle, Sullivan, Karen 01 January 2004 (has links)
Based on a 6-year, learn and earn curriculum, the authors report on a year-old project that assists licensed practical nurses (LPNs) to obtain a baccalaureate degree in nursing (BSN). Partnerships with 4 area healthcare agencies employing LPNs were developed to support students with full or partial tuition reimbursement and work schedules to accommodate classes. Key university staff in the offices of admissions, financial aid, adult programs and services, and nursing advisement are assigned to this student group to provide individualized assistance. The authors discuss unique components of the project including regularly scheduled role transition seminars, faculty mentors, BSN and nurse practitioner clinical mentors, and clinical experiences in nurse-managed clinics.
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Procurement of a Third party logistics company : A possible benchmarking methodVirta, Damon January 2012 (has links)
In an effort to reduce waste in construction projects, hence promoting value creation, the focus on the construction logistics becomes increasingly important, especially with increasing complexity of the project. This is in order to coordinate and effectively plan the routines and deliveries that occur regularly at the construction site. In an effort of becoming more efficient regarding this matter and to reduce the amount of waste, procurement of a third party logistics company that conducts all necessary logistical activities has become more and more recognized. The purpose of the master thesis is to analyze the procurement of a third party logistics company (3PL) and how it has been handled during a project life cycle and how to optimize this type of solution as a partnership and as a benchmarking method. Finally client perception and satisfaction of the executed work is analyzed, all of which are summarized in the research questions stated below: • How has the collaboration with the procured third party logistics company (3PL) been conducted during the project life cycle? • How is it possible to develop and optimize the collaboration with a 3PL in order to achieve better results in the future as a partnership and a benchmarking method? • What is the client perception and satisfaction of the executed work by the third party logistics company? The theoretical chapter will serve as a foundation of the thesis where the relevant concepts are described complemented with a comparative case study of two projects with relevance to the stated questions. The case study consists of documents and interviews with key participants. The result will show a holistic profitability with additional suggestions to further develop this type of collaboration as a benchmarking method, what is the next reasonable step of further optimization regarding 3PL procurement and what generalizations can be made.
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Leading together/learning together: shared leadership and professional learningRobertson, Kerry 19 October 2020 (has links)
Teacher education programs have long grappled with the disconnects between campus and classroom in the preparation of teacher candidates. Both are important sites of learning for teacher candidates, and yet the design of conventional teacher education programs leaves little room for teacher candidates to explore theory and practice simultaneously in ways that recognize the multifaceted nature of learning how to teach. In addition, teacher educators are faced with the complex demands of being responsive to the needs of teacher candidates while at the same time challenging assumptions and beliefs in order to ensure new teachers are responsive to the diverse needs of their students. Teacher educators, too, need to make their own dilemmas and tensions of practice observable both to teacher candidates and to one another as they consider and interrogate their beliefs and assumptions about teaching.
This study explores Link2Practice, a partnership between the University of Victoria and SD 62 (Sooke) which was organized to provide a campus and classroom experience for Elementary Post-Degree Program students from the beginning of their program. A group of participants involved as teacher educators in Link2Practice engaged in a self-study with the purpose of examining how sharing leadership in teacher education provided the participants the opportunity to engage in conversations about the partnership, and how our professional learning, understandings of teacher education, and understandings of ourselves as teacher educators were informed through the research. / Graduate
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Elevating Outdoor Recreation Together: Opportunities for Collaboration Between State Offices of Outdoor Recreation and Federal Land Management AgenciesSausser, Brooke A. 01 May 2019 (has links)
Outdoor recreation is a robust pillar of local, state, and national economies as well as a critical component of residents’ quality of life. Recognition of the economic power of the outdoor industry, fused with the growing desire for greater outdoor recreation opportunities, has inspired more than 11 states to establish state offices of outdoor recreation. The organizational structure and mission of each office is tailored to each state, varying from temporary task forces, councils, and commissions to more permanent offices or advisory positions. These offices, though embedded within various sectors of state government, often coordinate across or blend the functions of economic development, tourism, and land management, ultimately providing innovative opportunities for collaboration. While the state offices universally seek to develop the outdoor recreation economy, that economy fundamentally relies on access to natural landscapes, the vast majority of which are managed by the federal land management agencies in the Department of Interior and the Department of Agriculture.
The purpose of this study is to explore how these state offices have evolved and now operate, including their formation, goals and programs, internal organization and resources, and external partnerships. Through comprehensive interviews with each office’s leadership, our research provides a baseline understanding of the role of these new offices and addresses their partnerships at the local, state, and federal levels. I discuss challenges each office has faced, best practices, and recommendations for future collaboration. The findings of this research will better inform the National Park Service and other federal land management agencies on opportunities to support shared recreation and conservation goals. Together, the newly created state offices of outdoor recreation and the stewards of their public lands can promote and enhance the economic, social, and environmental benefits of outdoor recreation.
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An ethnographic study of a community-business partnership in Triomf, GautengMathews, Corin Dessan 13 November 2006 (has links)
Faculty of Humanities
School of Education
0107191f
deirdre.mathews@phzer.com / Over the last decade, communities and corporates have been encouraged to
initiate partnerships with one another as part of a Corporate Social
Responsibility (CSR) initiative in South Africa. Historically, community-business
partners have experienced tensions in their working relationships, and sought
ways in which they could deal with these tensions to create a beneficial
community-business partnership. The purpose of this study has been to gain
insights into a particular community-business partnership in Triomph, namely,
the Trevor Huddleston Memorial Centre, and Landelahni Recruitment Services
partnership. In this qualitative ethnographic study I explore three central
questions related to community-business partnerships: What is the nature of a
community-business partnership? What factors promote and inhibit a
community-business partnership? What kinds of adult learning happen within a
community-business partnership?
This study presents a case study for adult educators who are interested in
community-business partnerships. An ethnography was used to gain insight into
the partnership. Data have been collected from documents, interviews, and
observations within the context of the Trevor Huddleston Memorial Centre and
Landelahni Recruitment Services.
Results reveal that the nature of the community–business partnership was
characterised as a mutually beneficial cooperative relationship. This beneficial
relationship was influenced by the following: the socio-economic context
particular to this partnership, a formal Corporate Social Responsibility
agreement, which emphased development and empowerment, and finally the
role of financial contributions by Corporates. The factors that promoted the
partnership were an awareness by both partners of power and how power plays
out, the community organisation’s ability to understand their circumstances
and negotiate and make decisions, and the partner’s ability to assist one
another, while accessing each others networks through trust and reciprocal
assistance based on shared norms and values. A factor that inhibited the
partnership was the assumption that the partner with the most resources was
the most powerful. Another factor that inhibited the partnership was when
partners’ emphased social capital as being more important than other forms of
capital in the partnership. There were two forms of adult learning present in
the partnership, namely, nonformal learning which aims at empowering people
in both organisations, as well as incidental learning that occurred through
interaction with each other at an unconscious level. Both these forms of
learning were not isolated from the influence of power.
This study concludes by recommending certain principles, to guide a
community-business partnership. Recommendations relate to:
• The nature of an ideal partnership
• Enhancing factors that promote a partnership
• Mitigating factors that inhibit a partnership
• Achieving the benefit from nonformal and incidental learning
within community-business partnerships
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Librarians as Connectors: Applying Information Skills to Facilitate Research PartnershipsWoodward, Nakia J., Wallace, Rick L., Loyd, Kelly, Wallace, Elizabeth A, Walden, Rachel R. 24 October 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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