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Reglering av användningen av webbrobotar : En kvalitativ studie om synen på webbrobotar / Regulation of the use of web robots : A qualitative study of different views on web robotsRöör, Mika January 2008 (has links)
<p>Regulation of web bots is an analysis of the interest and a collection of discussions about the phenomena web bots. The section that contains the result from the interviews brings up the question about ethical and legal actions and the opposite to those. How the regulation could work is also discussed in the section with the results from the interviews. The discussions were produced by people whose background in one case or another can relate to the phenomena web bots. In that way this study was limited to few, but more profound interviews which would enable analyses of web bots existence. Sources that have been used are earlier research like scientific theses, articles from web places and books that brings up and discuss the technique. The result shows us that the interest of regulation exist with the persons who got interviewed. The view on the phenomena has been that web bots are considered to be tools in an information society. One form of regulation which is pointed out in the result section is informed consent. It implies that users will be informed and give their consent on whether they want to interact with web bots on the specific site the user visits.</p>
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ETHICAL ISSUE : A PROBLEM IN NIGERIA INSURANCE COMPANIESAkinbola, Oluwakemi Ejide, Tsowa, Isaac Likali January 2010 (has links)
The study aimed to investigate and critically analyze claims management, an ethical issue in insurance companies in Nigeria, to find out if these insurance companies recognize it to be an ethical issue and also to find out how they handle insured’s claims. A qualitative research method was used in carrying out this study; data was sourced through interviews and by secondary data using literatures from books, journals, articles, and electronic websites. The researchers used purposive sampling to select some top insurance companies in Nigeria; in these insurance companies basically personnel working in the claims department were interviewed, also sales agents from two of these insurance companies were interviewed. Data was sourced from two insurance broking firms in Nigeria by interviewing their top personnel, and also some of the insuring public with and without insurance policies was interviewed. The analytical strategy adopted in this research work was to rely on theoretical propositions. This study made use of Jones (1991) moral intensity model. Based on the analysis of data collected during the interview, the study revealed that insurance personnel in claims administration who take decision on insured’ claims in Nigeria recognize that there is a moral dilemma in their act and they discharge this responsibility professionally and ethically sticking to the rules of the business. Also the characteristics that constitute moral intensity model; proximity, social context, probability of effect, concentration of effect and magnitude of consequence offered by Jones (1991) influence the moral decision making process and moral behavior of claims personnel in Nigeria insurance companies. But due to some challenges faced by these personnel in discharging their duty and some lapses from their side and the insured’s there have always been complaint on claims. However they acknowledge that no one is perfect therefore they are open to getting feedbacks from their clients on the way they feel about their claims which they look into and make necessary amendments where needed. This study concluded with proposition for future researchers to look into how the challenges encountered by personnel managing insured’s’ claims in insurance companies in Nigeria can be dealt with and to find out how insurance companies in Nigeria can gain the awareness of the insuring public and make them understand the terms and conditions of insurance service. / kemi987@yahoo.co.uk, +46760825772
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ETHICAL ISSUE : A PROBLEM IN NIGERIA INSURANCE COMPANIESAkinbola, Isaac Likali Tsowa &, Ejide, Oluwakemi January 2010 (has links)
The study aimed to investigate and critically analyze claims management, an ethical issue in insurance companies in Nigeria, to find out if these insurance companies recognize it to be an ethical issue and also to find out how they handle insured’s claims. A qualitative research method was used in carrying out this study; data was sourced through interviews and by secondary data using literatures from books, journals, articles, and electronic websites. The researchers used purposive sampling to select some top insurance companies in Nigeria; in these insurance companies basically personnel working in the claims department were interviewed, also sales agents from two of these insurance companies were interviewed. Data was sourced from two insurance broking firms in Nigeria by interviewing their top personnel, and also some of the insuring public with and without insurance policies was interviewed. The analytical strategy adopted in this research work was to rely on theoretical propositions. This study made use of Jones (1991) moral intensity model. Based on the analysis of data collected during the interview, the study revealed that insurance personnel in claims administration who take decision on insured’ claims in Nigeria recognize that there is a moral dilemma in their act and they discharge this responsibility professionally and ethically sticking to the rules of the business. Also the characteristics that constitute moral intensity model; proximity, social context, probability of effect, concentration of effect and magnitude of consequence offered by Jones (1991) influence the moral decision making process and moral behavior of claims personnel in Nigeria insurance companies. But due to some challenges faced by these personnel in discharging their duty and some lapses from their side and the insured’s there have always been complaint on claims. However they acknowledge that no one is perfect therefore they are open to getting feedbacks from their clients on the way they feel about their claims which they look into and make necessary amendments where needed. This study concluded with proposition for future researchers to look into how the challenges encountered by personnel managing insured’s’ claims in insurance companies in Nigeria can be dealt with and to find out how insurance companies in Nigeria can gain the awareness of the insuring public and make them understand the terms and conditions of insurance service.
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Writing a way home : Cherokee narratives of critical and ethical nationhoodRussell, Bryan Edward 24 June 2014 (has links)
Writing a Way Home examines ways that Cherokees in the latter half of the 20th century who have been marginalized through the privileging of state narratives have deployed literature as a way to challenge narratives of state domination and to imagine and work toward more critical, ethical Cherokee nationhood. I examine the ways that Robert K. Thomas and Natachee Scott Momaday used literature during the federal Termination and Relocation programs to imagine functioning tribal nations against the United States' assimilation narrative of the time. I further delve into how the Cherokee Nation's state narrative of the Cherokee Freedmen has denationalized Freedmen descendants and how, by using the WPA narratives of former Cherokee slaves and Tom Holm and Thomas' Peoplehood Matrix, we can re-narrate the Freedmen descendants into a more ethical Cherokee Nation. Finally, I close the study with an examination of Daniel Heath Justice's Way of Thorn and Thunder trilogy that uses storytelling to re-imagine a place of reverence for gay and queer-identified Cherokees at a time when the Cherokee Nation passed a ban on same-sex marriage, claiming that such relationships defied what the Cherokee state narrates as tribal tradition. I aim to show in this study the danger of uncritically accepting the state model for tribal nations and the importance of periodically challenging tribal nations when leaders behave unethically. Likewise, this study demonstrates the power of story to not only check the excesses of state sovereignty that marginalize people based on their history, politics, race and sexuality, but also the power to re-imagine a nation -- a home -- that welcomes all its relations. / text
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Essays on the political economy of clientelism and government performanceGatica Arreola, Leonardo Adalberto 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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The effects of group affiliation and expectation formation on judgment skepticism : implications for auditingGeisler, Charlene See, 1972- 02 August 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Computers, data banks and the preservation of privacyBergman, Kenneth Leland, 1949- January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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Dilemmas of practice in rehabilitation settings as experienced by physical therapistsCarpenter, Christine 05 1900 (has links)
Little research has explored the dilemmas of practice experienced by practitioners
working with rehabilitation clients who are assimilating disabilities, resulting from injury or
chronic conditions, into their lives. Consequently, there is limited literature to support
educational initiatives or clinicians' decision-making in these settings. Accordingly, this
qualitative study was designed to explore 'expert' physical therapists' perceptions of dilemmas
of practice in rehabilitation settings. Using an ethnographic design, multiple interviews were
conducted over a period of six months with each of ten participants. The researcher's theoretical
background and 'insider' role were thoroughly explicated. Interpretive analysis was grounded in
three overarching themes that emerged from the participants' accounts and compared with
relevant theoretical constructs and research in physical therapy and other health professions.
In the first theme the 'authority' of the concept of evidence-based practice as it is
currently promoted within physical therapy was questioned. A need was identified to develop
rigorous alternative sources of 'evidence' to support current practice that are more congruent
with the multifactorial and client-centred nature of rehabilitation service provision. A second
theme explored situations interpreted as causing moral distress in which the participants found
themselves prevented from acting effectively on behalf of the clients, as a result of admission
and discharge decisions and perceived misuse of rehabilitation resources within the organization
and health system. The third theme related to the advantages and disadvantages of being
involved with the interdisciplinary team. A lack of understanding of different professional
philosophies of practice was perceived as a contributing factor to conflict and
miscommunication.
These themes are related to issues of professional accountability and suggest that physical
therapy needs to develop a clearly articulated philosophy and conceptual models, including the
concept of client-centred practice, that would reflect practice, serve to guide research and
promote interdisciplinary collaboration. Alternative sources of 'best' evidence need to be
developed that more realistically reflect complex 'practice' knowledge. In addition, the
profession needs to commit to developing a comprehensive ethics curriculum offered in
education programs and through interdisciplinary learning opportunities, by which physical
therapists will be better prepared for the moral deliberations inherent in their professional role.
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The mind values meaning above knowledge : narrative and moral educationPousao-Lopes, Cecilia. January 1997 (has links)
The present study is designed to outline the approaches towards moral development and moral education over the past four decades, and to show how the findings of second-generation cognitive science compel a re-thinking of the role of narrative and narrative thinking in moral education. Examined also, are the psychological and philosophical assumptions that underpin and lend substantiation to these findings. Narrative, as an essential instrument for moral education, is now on the way to being rehabilitated, by virtue of the emerging trend to apply the narrative method of autobiographical mythology, or personal narrative to moral education. Through the increased implementation of this process, it is envisioned that the cognitive-developmental, rationalistic view of moral education will be supplanted by other cognitive models, with their implications for moral development and moral education, of a nature closer to the way human beings make meaning of experience.
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Interruption and alterity : dislocating communicationPinchevski, Amit January 2003 (has links)
This project attempts to question the way the relation between communication and ethics has traditionally been conceptualized, and to offer an alternative perspective on that relation. An implicit premise in many communication theories is that successful communication is ethically favorable, particularly in facilitating ideals such as greater understanding, participation and like-mindedness. Contrary to that view, this project proposes that ethical communication may lie in the interruption of communication, in instances wherein communication falls short, goes astray or even fails. Such interruptions, however, do not mark the end of ethical communication but rather its very beginning, for it is in such moments that communication faces the challenge of otherness. Mobilizing relevant ideas from the work of French philosopher Emmanuel Levinas to the field of communication studies, this project proposes the concept of interruption as the main correlative between ethics and communication. The investigation then sets out to explore three limit-cases in which the stakes of ethical communication are most crucial: understanding and misunderstanding, communicability and incommunicability, and silence and speech. The discussion employs a distinctive approach to study the place of alterity in communication: dislocation—a double gesture which implies both tampering with the proper activity of communicational procedures and pointing to the ethical possibilities opened up by interruptions. The issues above are addressed through critical analyses of themes such as: universal language or the undoing of Babel; the ethical significance of misunderstanding and the challenge introduced by translation; autism as a paradigmatic case of incommunicability in medical, scientific and social discourses; the epistemological status and the ethical stakes of incommunicability; and, finally, the ethical dimension of free speech, the significance of silence and the responsibility to the silent Other.
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