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HOW ELITES PERSUADE: CULTURE IN NATIONALIST CONFLICT, SERBIA AND BOSNIA 1988-1999KISSOPOULOS, LISA 15 September 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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WORK-NONWORK GOAL CONFLICT: A SELF-REGULATORY EXPANSION OF WORK LIFE CONFLICTMcKee, John Michael 27 November 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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The Relationship Between Gender Role Conflict and Shame in College MalesThompkins, Christine Durham January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Deviation as a signal of the existence of conflict /Gray, Philip A. January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
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An empirical examination of the causes, level, and consequences of conflict in a high stake distribution channel /Rosenberg, Larry J. January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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Some developmental correlates of individually-perceived generation differences in value role-taking /Garsee, Jarrell Willis January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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An analysis of perceptual differences among the United States Olympic Committee Executive Board members, athletes' representatives and coaches /Chass, Baruch January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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Translating Editor COI Values to Action: The Missing LinkJaffer, Anushka January 2018 (has links)
Introduction: Conflict of interest (COI) exists when an individual in the publication process has a competing interest that could compromise their publication process responsibility. COI is commonly associated with authors and less so with editors. Many organizations (e.g. World Association of Medical Editors (WAME)) provide resources and recommendations for addressing COIs at medical journals. However, there are no data describing journals’ utilization of these resources for editor COI policy development or adoption, and little data on the value of editor COI policies. This study aimed to understand current editor COI practices and editors’ perceptions of COI policies, along with barriers to their implementation.
Methods: An online survey developed in LimeSurveyTM was distributed to editorial board members of oncology and health care sciences and services journals to measure respondents’ attitudes about COI definitions and features and COI policy experience; barriers to implementing editor COI policies; and editors’ perceptions of COI policies. Frequency analysis of survey data was conducted. Free-text responses were summarized.
Results: Response rate was 20.2% (66/327), and comprised complete and partial survey respondents. The majority of respondents were editors-in-chief. Overall, respondents agreed that defined WAME COI domains were important components of an editor COI policy. Nearly 50% of respondents belonged to journals with existing editor COI policies, which they continued to use. Nearly 25% were unaware of the current editor COI policy status at their journal. Few implementation barriers were identified, the most common being challenges with verification of disclosures. Overall, respondents did not report strong attitudes in favour of or against editor COI policies, but respondents agreed that journals with an editor COI policy were more credible and trustworthy.
Conclusion: This study shows that editor COI policy development and utilization is not a universal standard of practice and suggests that recognition of the value of an editor COI policy may not be widespread among editorial board members. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc) / Conflict of interest (COI) can play an important role in the stages of getting research published. However, COI of journal editors has not been studied. The aim of this study was to find whether COI policies for editors exist and to probe editors’ perceptions about the policies. The study found that editors believe COI policies are important but for the most part, whether a journal has an editor policy or not, does not affect their perception of the journal’s validity, quality, and transparency. This study also suggests there are few barriers to implementing an editor COI policy. Additional research is needed to demonstrate the role COI plays in the research enterprise with regard to research integrity, and journal credibility and trustworthiness.
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Distribution Channel Conflict: Implications for Channel Governance, and PerformanceEshghi, Kamran January 2018 (has links)
In this dissertation, my focus is on understanding distribution channel
conflict, its relationship with efficient channel governance and its impact on
channel performance. In particular, I will study (1) how the channel conflict
can be defined and interpreted, (2) how channel conflict can affect channel
governance, (3) what would be the performance outcomes of channel conflict,
and (4) how channel conflict can be managed. My theoretical frameworks
borrow mainly from transaction cost economics theory (TCE), and strategic
marketing.
On the empirical side, I employ several methods including meta-analysis
(Two-Stage SEM) as well as different econometrics techniques such as
Conditional Mixed-Process (CMP) regression estimation. My data comes from
diverse sources and are mainly hand collected and created from archival
sources. For the meta-analysis study, I extract empirical results of more than
100 studies on channel conflict since the 1960s. For the other empirical efforts,
the data comes from various sources. The major data collection undertakings
include extracting and integrating data from: (1) Franchise Disclosure
Document (FDD) of more than 1000 franchise firms, (2) firms records, and (3)
specific franchise rankings such as Entrepreneur and Franchise Times’ rankings
spanning from 2004 to 2015. The dissertation comprises following broad inter-related chapters (excluding Introduction and Conclusion chapters): (1) Managing Channel Conflict:
Insights from the Current Literature, (2) Conflict and Performance in Channels:
A Meta-Analysis, (3) Channel Conflict: Bad for Business?, (4) Adapting to
Channel Conflict: An Empirical Study?, and (5) Two Views on Channel
Conflict. Chapter 1 is a compendium on channel conflict that not only provides a
comprehensive literature review on channel conflict (since the 1960s) but also
identifies gaps and provides some managerial perspectives on channel conflict. One of the identified gaps in Chapter 1 revolves around the role of channel conflict and its relationship with other inter-firm constructs. In Chapter 2, I build on this identified gap by conducting a comprehensive meta-analysis study using Two-Stage SEM (TSSEM) method to aggregate the previous findings on channel conflict and its relationship with other inter-firm constructs particularly channel performance. I also investigate the potential moderators of the conflict-performance link. Chapters 1 and 2 set the stage for the next empirical work. One of the
enduring debates in the channel domain is about the functionality and dysfunctionality of channel conflict. In Chapter 3, I address this directly by exploring the non-linear (inverted U-shaped) relationship between channel conflict and performance. While Chapter 3 explores the empirical relation between conflict and performance, another understudied but important research question is about how firms react to channel conflict. Such reactions can span the range from relying on relational norms to more explicit adjustment in channel governance.
In Chapter 4, I address this by examining the effect of manifest channel conflict on channel governance, controlling for relational norms. In particular, I study how firms adapt their channel governance following litigation. Finally, Chapter 5 is a reflection on the body of knowledge that I have investigated above. This chapter will provide two views on channel conflict by comparing two different channel conflict conceptualizations. I illustrate the
differences between these two views by comparing them based on firms’ objectives, conflict characteristics, and managerial approaches toward channel conflict, providing real-world examples of how firms approach and manage channel conflict. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / In this dissertation, my focus is on understanding distribution channel
conflict, its relationship with efficient channel governance and its impact on
channel performance. Channel conflict is an endemic phenomenon. The
advent of new technologies (such as Internet-of-Things enabled monitoring
systems) and the emergence of the Internet as a primary medium of business
transactions have brought big changes to channel management. Use of
multiple channels to reach consumers and exchange value with business
partners have become much more common with these changes. While
channel conflict has always been an important business concern, these have
rekindled the interest and attention of researchers and managers to the
phenomena.
In this dissertation, I investigate the phenomenon of channel conflict and
its effect on channel governance and business performance by conducting
several independent studies spanning different research methods. The
research findings will address gaps in the extant research literature as well
as offer both theoretical and practical insights for researchers and
practitioners interested in distribution channels strategy and management.
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From Conflict Resolution to Transformative Peacebuilding: Reflections from CroatiaFetherston, A. Betts January 2000 (has links)
Yes
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