Search results for " GOVERNANCE"

showing 10 items of 824 documents

Structural problems for the renewal of planning styles: the spanish case1

2005

This article first presents a historical review of Spain's involvement in the European Spatial Development Perspective (ESDP) preparation process to determine whether ESDP guidelines are different from, contrary to or in harmony with the interests of Spanish proposals. Particular attention is paid to the priority lines and territorial objectives of the Spanish delegation and its emphasis in substantive issues related to cohesion, and linking spatial planning with European Union (EU) funding. If, as the network paradigm maintains, spatial development is not possible without new methods of governance, our work has to focus on two related questions. The first question regards the evolution and…

Cohesion (linguistics)Harmony (color)EconomyCorporate governanceGeography Planning and DevelopmentRegional planningRegional sciencemedia_common.cataloged_instanceSociologyEuropean unionSpatial planningEuropean Spatial Development Perspectivemedia_commonEuropean Planning Studies
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Collaborative Governance in Portugal – Yes or No? A critical approach based on an empirical survey

2019

Collaborative governance can be defined as a concerted type of decision-making and collective action in which government bodies and private sector stakeholders interact as equal partners with the aim of achieving outcomes of interest for both parties. In practical terms, this is a type of governance where special meetings and negotiations are held – typically in somewhat elitist and secretive settings – with the aim of defining shared responsibilities and benefits associated with joint public-private ventures. Academic authors in favour of the adoption of collaborative governance in Portugal tend to present a rather positive view on the merits of this approach. They argue that it is potenti…

Collaboration governance Portugal surveySettore ICAR/21 - Urbanistica
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Critical issues in the management of the first phase of the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy: The role of some organizational flaws on the adoption of coll…

2020

In March and April 2020, in Italy, there was a fast and uncontrolled spread of COVID-19. The number of infected people and deaths multiplied quickly; in some regions of the Country the phenomenon got out of control. Intensive Care Units (ICUs) were rapidly saturated by COVID-19 patients, generating pressures on the Regional Health System that forced to the public decisionmakers to suspend all non-emergency services. In this short note we argue that Italy’s inability to contain the outbreak of the epidemic in the first phase was due to the low willingness of public organizations to apply effective collaborative governance models

Collaborative governance
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Going Public – Going Private: The Case of VC-Backed Firms

2012

We investigate the decisions of listed firms to go private once again. We start by revealing that while a significant number of firms which go public is VC-backed, an overproportional share of these VC-backed firms go private later on (they stay on the exchange for an average of 8.5 years). We interpret this very robust pattern such that IPOs of VC-backed firms are to a large extent a temporary rather than a permanent feature of the corporate governance of these firms.We investigate various potential hypotheses why VCs actually seem to be able to bring marginal firms to the exchange by relating the going-private decisions to various characteristics of the IPO market as well as to VC charact…

CommerceCorporate governancePortfolioMonetary economicsCertificationBusinessInitial public offeringSSRN Electronic Journal
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Urban gardens and institutional fences: The case of communal gardens in Turin

2017

Urban gardens take on different forms and meanings, which vary depending on the socio-economic context where they located/used and how it evolves over time. This makes a garden comparable to a micro-social ecosystem, different from other gardens and ever changing. As with every social-ecosystem resulting from a territorialisation process, there is a certain degree of social inertia that makes it difficult for outsiders with new motivations and demanding new spaces to enter into the "garden ecosystem". Drawing on existing literature and fieldwork in two urban communal gardens in Turin, the paper is mainly concerned with the spatiotemporal dimension of urban gardening, with a special focus on…

Communal gardenSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeUrban transitionUrban ecologyEcologyAdaptive governance; Communal gardens; Urban agriculture; Urban ecology; Urban gardening; Urban transition; Agronomy and Crop Science; Food Science; EcologyUrban gardeningAdaptive governance; Communal gardens; Urban agriculture; Urban ecology; Urban gardening; Urban transition; Food Science; Ecology; Agronomy and Crop ScienceAdaptive governanceAgronomy and Crop ScienceCommunal gardensUrban agricultureFood Science
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Stakeholders’ Attitudes about the Transplantations of the Mediterranean Seagrass Posidonia oceanica as a Habitat Restoration Measure after Anthropoge…

2021

Anthropogenic impacts on Posidonia oceanica meadows have led to a decline of this ecosystem throughout the Mediterranean. Transplantations have often been prescribed as a compensation measure to mitigate the impacts caused by coastal maritime works. Here a Q methodology approach was used to investigate the stakeholders’ attitudes in four case studies of P. oceanica transplants realized in Italian waters. Twenty-two respondents were asked to score 37 statements, and the resultant Q-sorting was analyzed via an inverse PCA using the KADE software. Four discourses, corresponding to the significant axes in the factorial analysis were identified: science and conservation (F1), oriented at a rigor…

Compensation measures Conflict resolution Environmental governance Environmental impact Stakeholders’ perceptionSettore BIO/07Geography Planning and DevelopmentFour discoursesTJ807-830Management Monitoring Policy and LawTD194-195environmental impactRenewable energy sourcesGE1-350Environmental impact assessmentstakeholders’ perceptionconflict resolutionRestoration ecologycompensation measuresEnvironmental effects of industries and plantsbiologyRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industryEnvironmental resource managementenvironmental governancecompensation measures; stakeholders’ perception; environmental impact; environmental governance; conflict resolutionbiology.organism_classificationEnvironmental sciencesSeagrassGeographyEnvironmental governancePosidonia oceanicaEnvironmentalismMediationbusinessSustainability
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The Idiosincrancies of the European M&A Market

2020

This paper provides a comprehensive descriptive analysis of the European market of mergers and acquisitions (MA 2) method of payment; 3) geographical scope; 4) target’s attitude; 5) bidders’ competition; 6) industry relatedness; 7) public status of the firms involved; and 8) acquirers’ ownership of targets before and after the transaction. Additionally, we identify the similarities and differences of this market with those of the dominant market worldwide, namely the US. Both markets show similar trends in their activity and the occurrence of waves concentrated around economic shocks. However, the European market notably exhibits higher levels of friendly and cash deals.

Competition (economics)Scope (project management)RestructuringCorporate governancemedia_common.quotation_subjectCashMergers and acquisitionsBusinessPaymentDatabase transactionIndustrial organizationmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Institutional Path Dependence in Competitive Dynamics: The Case of Paper Industries in Finland and the USA

2016

Prior research on competitive dynamics has failed to offer tools to understand distorted patterns of competition that emerge from distinct institutional and historical contexts. Our analysis suggests that a joint effect of institutional rules, governance structures, and shared cognition plays a pivotal role in firm-level competitive behavior and capability development. We show how globally significant market positions can result from specific institutional arrangements between firms and governments, especially if coupled with interfirm contractual commitments. Our results call for more attention to these interfirm commitments that are built on formal rules and governmental support, but whos…

Competitive dynamicsStrategy and ManagementCorporate governance05 social sciencesManagement Science and Operations ResearchCompetition (economics)Competitive behaviorManagement of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and businessJoint (building)Business050207 economicsBusiness and International ManagementEconomic systemShared cognition050203 business & managementPath dependenceManagerial and Decision Economics
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Innovations and ecosystems : a characterization of Smart Tampere innovation ecosystem

2019

Master's thesis Innovative governance and public management ME523 - University of Agder 2019 The following thesis focuses on innovation ecosystem. As described in thefirst section, innovations are of great importance for tackling global challenges such as climate change andthus,of relevancy for the regional economic development. The growing importance of innovationshas motivated numerous new approaches to innovation management, especiallyin the last years the approach ofinnovation ecosystem.In the secondsection, the concept of innovation ecosystem is introduced and the most relevantconcepts from the literature are discussed. It thereby compares innovation ecosystem to other concepts such as…

ComputingMilieux_GENERALInnovation ecosystemTampereNordic MP in Innovative Governance and Public Managementregional developmentVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Statsvitenskap og organisasjonsteori: 240::Offentlig og privat administrasjon: 242innovation ecosystemlocal contextME523innovation management
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Algorithms, Artificial Intelligence and Automated Decisions about Workers and the Risks of Discrimination: The Necessary Collective Governance of Dat…

2018

Big data, algorithms and artificial intelligence currently allow entrepreneurs to process information about their employees in a far more efficient manner and at a much lower cost than has been the case until now. This makes it possible to profile workers automatically and even allows technology itself to replace human resources supervisors and managers and to make decisions that have legal effects on the employees (recruitment, promotion, dismissals, etc.). This entails great risks of discrimination by the technology in command, as well as the defencelessness of the worker, who is unaware of the reasons underlying such a decision. This study analyses the guarantees established in the exist…

ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSIONbusiness.industryCorporate governancemedia_common.quotation_subjectBig dataSafeguardingPromotion (rank)Data Protection Act 1998Profiling (information science)Lower costBusinessArtificial intelligenceHuman resourcesAlgorithmmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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