Search results for " Value chain"

showing 10 items of 28 documents

MAB2.0 project: Integrating algae production into wastewater treatment

2018

Abstract Different species of microalgae are highly efficient in removing nutrients from wastewater streams and are able to grow using flue gas as a CO2 source. These features indicate that application of microalgae has a promising outlook in wastewater treatment. However, practical aspects and process of integration of algae cultivation into an existing wastewater treatment line have not been investigated. The Climate-KIC co-funded Microalgae Biorefinery 2.0 project developed and demonstrated this integration process through a case study. The purpose of this paper is to introduce this process by phases and protocols, as well as report on the challenges and bottlenecks identified in the cas…

0106 biological sciencesFlue gasBio Process EngineeringProcess (engineering)[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Biomedical Engineeringwastewater treatment;microalgae;bioresource010501 environmental sciencesRaw material01 natural sciencesBiotecnologiaLead (geology)bioresourceAlgues010608 biotechnologyGeneticsProduction (economics)Life ScienceMolecular Biologyeaux usées0105 earth and related environmental sciencesmicroalgaeBiorefinery6. Clean watertraitement biologiquewastewater treatmentWastewater13. Climate action[SDE]Environmental SciencesMolecular MedicineSewage treatmentBBP Biorefinery & Sustainable Value ChainsBiochemical engineeringbioressourceAigües residuals Depuració Tractament biològicculture d'algueTP248.13-248.65Food ScienceBiotechnology
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Fine slicing of the value chain and offshoring of essential activities: empirical evidence from European multinationals

2014

The offshoring of more advanced activities is increasing and a debate about the limits of offshoring has emerged. Companies are fine-slicing their value chains, and moving beyond the offshoring of peripheral and non-core activities to the offshoring of advanced and essential activities that are closer to their core (e.g. research, design and product development). The challenge is to understand the limits of offshoring and the most appropriate modes of offshoring. The purpose of this paper is to analyze what activities are offshorable and how best to govern offshored activities. We argue that companies are redefining their core activities and in this process, some essential activities previo…

Department of ManagementEconomics and EconometricsHF5001-6182Process (engineering)Offshore outsourcingFaculty of EconomicsOutsourcingOffshoringBusinessValue chainEmpirical evidenceIndustrial organizationOffshoringbusiness.industrymultinational firmsglobal sourcingcore activitiesOffshoring; value chainCommerceMultinational corporationoutsourcingUniversity of ValenciaNew product developmentBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)value chaininternational strategiesbusiness
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The Developmental Contribution From Mobile Phones Across the Agricultural Value Chain in Rural Africa

2011

Published version of an article from the journal: The Electronic Journal of Information Systems in Developing Countries. Also available fro the publisher: http://www.ejisdc.org/Ojs2/index.php/ejisdc/article/viewFile/849/377 The most widespread information and communication technology (ICT) in developing countries today is the mobile phone. The majority of people in the least developed countries still live in rural areas and their livelihood depends on the primary industries. This study investigates the use of mobile phones among farmers in rural Tanzania in order to supply empirical data on the developmental role of this technology. The results show that the improved access to communication…

Economic growthVDP::Social science: 200::Economics: 210Developing countryVDP::Technology: 500::Information and communication technology: 550LivelihoodVDP::Agriculture and fishery disciplines: 900::Agriculture disciplines: 910Mobile phoneInformation and Communications TechnologyPrimary sector of the economyAgricultural value chainBusinessRural areaInformation SystemsLeast Developed CountriesThe Electronic Journal of Information Systems in Developing Countries
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Agribusiness

2019

The objective of this entry is to provide noneconomists with an analytical tool with which to understand various aspects of contemporary agriculture and food and fiber systems. The first part of the entry will provide an overview of the concept of agribusiness from its conception to current times. It will then present the main challenges facing the agribusiness system in the arena of recent global competition by illustrating key critical aspects, which are related to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Particular reference will be made to SDG2 which focuses explicitly on food by seeking to “end hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable…

Food MileWorld HungerUnited Nations Sustainable Development GoalAgribusineFood Loss and Wasteagricultural value chainSmall farms
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Agricultural Value Chain for Food Security: Challenges and Opportunities from SDG2

2019

The objective of this text is to provide non-economists with an analytical tool by which to understand various aspects of how contemporary agriculture and agribusiness systems function. It will begin by outlining Porter’s value chain paradigm and Porter’s value system. Thereafter, there will follow an overview of the meaning of agricultural value chain (AVC) and its main features.

Food securityAgricultural value chainSettore AGR/01 - Economia Ed Estimo RuraleAgribusineBusinessPorter’s value chainPorter’s value systemAgricultural economics
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Transferable and Negotiated Knowledge

2002

• Summary: This article explores the knowledge of community-based social workers in the context of an action research project aimed at exploring the practitioners’ own descriptions of their knowledge and expertise on the theme of spatial marginalization. • Findings: The knowledge of social workers seemed to be based on service users’ experiences and case examples, on value and moral constructions, and it was created from experience, by doing and in action. It was local and contextual, in some sense silent but shared through a discussion process. It was not based on empirically based scientific research understood in the traditional sense; rather, social workers resorted to practical knowle…

Health (social science)Knowledge managementSocial workbusiness.industry05 social sciencesTransferabilityKnowledge value chainContext (language use)Social relation0506 political science0502 economics and business050602 political science & public administrationPersonal knowledge managementDomain knowledgeSociologyAction researchbusiness050203 business & managementSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Journal of Social Work
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SHIPPING 4.0: GENERAL FRAMEWORK FOR A NEW CYBERSHIPPING ERA

2019

The fourth industrial revolution, also referred to as Industry 4.0, is a disruptive transformation process aimed which, by means of digital technologies, is substantially innovating the value creation processes in all industry contexts. With such premise, industry 4.0 is in particular expected to have a substantial impact on the maritime transport and shipping sectors, where smart ships and autonomous vessels are expected to be the building blocks of a new interconnected maritime ecosystem. The application of Industry 4.0 principles to the shipping domain (Shipping 4.0) has thus raised a scientific debate about the efficiency, sustainability, and safety of maritime transport. Recent researc…

Industry 4.0 Shipping Value chain Fleet managementSettore ING-IND/17 - Impianti Industriali Meccanici
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International Inflation Spillovers through Input Linkages

2019

We document that international input-output linkages contribute substantially to synchronizing producer price inflation (PPI) across countries. Using a multicountry, industry-level data set that combines information on PPI and exchange rates with global input-output linkages, we recover the underlying cost shocks that are propagated internationally via the global input-output network, thus generating the observed dynamics of PPI. We then compare the extent to which common global factors account for the variation in actual PPI and in the underlying cost shocks. Across a range of econometric tests, input-output linkages account for half of the global component of PPI inflation.

InflationEconomics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectSupply chain05 social sciencesMonetary policySynchronizingMonetary economicsGlobalization0502 economics and businessEconomics050207 economicsSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)050205 econometrics media_commonGlobal value chainThe Review of Economics and Statistics
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Evidence-Based Knowledge Management: an approach to effectively promote good health-care decision-making in the Information Era.

2009

The sharing of information and the growth of knowledge together represent a foundation for the promotion of quality improvement of health care systems. This paper concerns knowledge, not only from an epistemological point of view, but also from a pragmatic one. In our paper, knowledge is discussed as the hub to promote better decision making and continuous professional development. Effective thinking is particularly needed. The critical point is to think about how health care systems can develop both an effective knowledge management network and how health-care organizations can actually be based on it. In this way, knowledge and knowledge hierarchy are defined according to Russel Achkoff's…

Information managementGrowth of knowledgeKnowledge managementEvidence-Based Medicinebusiness.industryData managementKnowledge engineeringDecision MakingKnowledge value chainDecision making; Evidence-Based Medicine; Clinical governance; Knowledge managementBody of knowledgeOrganizational learningEmergency MedicineInternal MedicinePersonal knowledge managementMedicineHumanshealth care decision making evidence based medicine managementPractice Patterns Physicians'businessMedical InformaticsInternal and emergency medicine
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Comparing the applicability of two learning theories for knowledge transfer in information system implementation training

2004

This study reviews two traditional learning theories from the viewpoint of knowledge transfer in information system implementation training. The main goal of this study is to determine which is more applicable from the view of knowledge transfer in this context. In this study, behaviourist learning theory is found suitable for the transfer of data and information. Being more learner-centered, constructivist learning theory suits better for information system implementation training, as it enables combining system specific knowledge with knowledge of the existing organisational processes. This creates new organisation-specific knowledge necessary for the effective use of the information syst…

Knowledge managementbusiness.industryComputer scienceKnowledge engineeringOpen Knowledge Base ConnectivityKnowledge value chainMathematical knowledge managementProcedural knowledgeConstructivist teaching methodsBody of knowledgeKnowledge-based systemsKnowledge baseKnowledge extractionKnowledge integrationOrganizational learningInformation systemLearning theoryPersonal knowledge managementDomain knowledgebusinessKnowledge transferIEEE International Conference on Advanced Learning Technologies, 2004. Proceedings.
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