Agenda

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Humanities and Social Sciences

Kinds of Agenda

  • broader agenda
  • conservation agenda
  • cultural agenda
  • development agenda
  • future agenda
  • future research agenda
  • global agenda
  • health agenda
  • ideological agenda
  • international agenda
  • learning agenda
  • management agenda
  • modernisation agenda
  • national agenda
  • new agenda
  • new research agenda
  • policy agenda
  • political agenda
  • public agenda
  • research agenda

  • Terms modified by Agenda

  • agenda setting

  • Selected Abstracts


    CAUSE FOR WORRY OR AGENDA FOR ACTION?

    EDUCATIONAL THEORY, Issue 3 2002
    Barbara S. Stengel
    First page of article [source]


    THERMAL GAMES: PUTTING TEMPERATURE BACK ON THE EVOLUTIONARY AGENDA

    EVOLUTION, Issue 4 2010
    Richard John Walters
    First page of article [source]


    GOVERNANCE AND CHARITIES: AN EXPLORATION OF KEY THEMES AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF A RESEARCH AGENDA

    FINANCIAL ACCOUNTABILITY & MANAGEMENT, Issue 1 2009
    Noel Hyndman
    The concept of governance has been widely discussed in both the business and non-business sectors. The debate has also been entered into within the charity sector, which comprises over 169,000 organizations in the UK. The UK-based Charity Commission, which describes itself as existing to ,promote sound governance and accountability', has taken a lead in this debate by promoting greater regulation and producing numerous recommendations with regard to the proper governance of charitable organizations. However, the concept of what is meant by governance is unclear and a myriad of ideas are placed under the umbrella of ,good governance'. This paper explores the major themes that form the basis of much of this discussion, examining both the theoretical underpinnings and empirical investigations relating to this area (looking from the perspective of the key stakeholders in the charity sector). Based on an analysis of the extant literature, this paper presents a broad definition of governance with respect to charities and outlines a future research agenda for those interested in adding to knowledge in this area [source]


    INSIGHTS INTO SERVICE OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT: A RESEARCH AGENDA

    PRODUCTION AND OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT, Issue 2 2003
    ALEDA V. ROTH
    This paper offers insights regarding an agenda for service operations management (SOM) research. First, we motivate the need for an SOM research agenda. Second, we offer a research framework that paints a broad-based picture of key architectural elements in the SOM research landscape. The framework builds upon prior and emerging research for designing, delivering and evaluating services. Third, in order to stimulate future research in SOM, we use this framework to hone in on five understudied and emerging research themes that underpin our proposed SOM research agenda. [source]


    DECENTRING POLICY NETWORKS: A THEORETICAL AGENDA

    PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, Issue 1 2009
    MARK BEVIR
    This introduction starts by specifying the theoretical and analytical framework underpinning the range of essays in this special issue. It then provides an overview of the existing literature on policy networks and network governance in order to identify what a decentred approach might contribute. What follows is an account of decentred theory, a discussion of the potential alternatives it can offer to existing accounts and how these might be achieved through reconstructing networks by appealing to notions of situated agency and tradition; it concludes by considering the potential methodologies to be employed, with particular emphasis on ethnography. [source]


    TWO TAXATION AGENDAS: THE GALLOP GOVERNMENT'S FIRST TERM

    ECONOMIC PAPERS: A JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMICS AND POLICY, Issue 1 2005
    Michael McLure
    This essay reviews state taxation policy in Western Australia over the Gallop Government's first term of office. Two tax agendas emerged, one concerning reform of the State's tax system and the other concerning measures to increase the tax yield in response to mid-term fiscal stress from unanticipated growth in expenditure. It is suggested that the lack of integration of these two agendas represented a lost policy opportunity, as integration would have provided the potential to implement a much more ambitious tax reform program than that realised by the Government. The lack of integration is partly attributed to the unrealistically low forward estimates of public expenditure outlined in the Government's first budget, as this served to mask the need for additional taxation revenue (and the consequent desirability of an integrated whole-of-term taxation policy) at the very time that reform measures were being actively contemplated. As a consequence, the dominant feature of the Government's first-term tax policy was not reform, but the introduction of large mid-term revenue-raising measures, especially increases in the State's highly inefficient conveyance duty. [source]


    From the Mountains to the Sea: Where Is Freshwater Conservation in the SCB Agenda?

    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2008
    Ken Vance-Borland
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Decision Sciences Research in China: A Critical Review and Research Agenda,Foundations and Overview,

    DECISION SCIENCES, Issue 4 2006
    Xiande Zhao
    ABSTRACT This article focuses on decision sciences research in China, providing an overview of current research and developing a foundation for future China-based research. China provides a unique research opportunity for decision sciences researchers, owing to its recent history, rapid economic development, and strong national culture. We examine recent economic reforms and their impact on the development of research questions in the decision sciences, as well as discuss characteristics of the diverse regions in China and their potential as sites for various types of research. We provide a brief overview of recent China-based research on decision sciences issues relating to national culture, supply chain management, quality management, production planning and control, operations strategy, and new product development and discuss some of the unique methodological challenges inherent in China-based research. We conclude by looking forward to emerging research opportunities in China. [source]


    Capital quality improvement and the sources of economic growth in the euro area

    ECONOMIC POLICY, Issue 42 2005
    Plutarchos Sakellaris
    SUMMARY Capital quality improvement and Euroland growth Sources of growth Europe's growth slowed in the 1990s, reinforcing the overall impression of a need to catch up with the US regarding standards of living. In reaction, EU leaders adopted the famous Lisbon Agenda in 2000. The Agenda is now under review, the aim being to determine why progress on its pro-growth goals has been unsatisfactory and what can be done about it. The first crucial step in this process is to understand the true sources of the European growth slowdown. Sources-of-growth calculations have always been imprecise, but evidence from the US suggests that ,quality upgrading', especially in capital goods , has substantially worsened the precision problem since the 1990s. Unfortunately, quality adjusted sources-of-growth calculations, however, have not performed satisfactorily for Europe, so Europe's leaders are working with potentially misleading accounts of Europe's growth slowdown. Redressing this omission is the goal of this paper. Failure to account properly for capital quality improvements leads to two mistakes. First, overall GDP is underestimated. Our calculations, for example, show that euro area GDP growth was underestimated on average by 0.7 percentage points annually in the late 1990s. However, similar quality-adjustment figures raise US growth figures in the same period by even more, so quality-adjusting suggests that the US,EU growth gap was even more pronounced than previously believed. Secondly, the sources-of-growth calculations used to prioritize Europe's pro-growth policies are skewed. Our calculations show that the contribution of the slowdown in disembodied technical progress to the overall slowdown is more pronounced after quality adjustment. Our findings point to the need for adoption of microeconomic measures aimed at enhancing overall efficiency and boosting innovation activity. Such measures would aim at a better business environment, e.g. by easing regulatory and administrative burden and liberalizing energy and telecommunications markets. , Plutarchos Sakellaris and Focco Vijselaar [source]


    Participation and/or/versus sustainability?

    ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE, Issue 4 2005
    Austria, Tensions between procedural, substantive goals in Two Local Agenda 21 processes in Sweden
    Abstract Local Agenda 21 (LA21) is committed to two types of goal: procedural goals substantiated primarily in the requirement to encourage greater participation in local decision making and substantive goals predominantly attached to the call for a sustainable development. In this article, we report on the LA21 processes of two communities, Helsingborg, Sweden, and Vienna, Austria. We analyse what kind of normative tension the two communities have experienced by concurrently striving for democracy and sustainability. We also discuss what impact the two LA21 processes have on local governance structures and what potentials for more fundamental system changes they hold. Our analysis shows that the challenge of actually reconciling possibly conflicting goals is far from easy. In Helsingborg, the apparent harmony of goals has been achieved partly by falling back on political rhetoric, partly by interpreting the two goals in a narrow way, i.e. sustainability policy has been reduced to environmental issues and citizen participation has been equated with ,paternalistic' consultation. The Viennese LA21 process has managed to implement the two goals in a more comprehensive way, but this has come at the cost of being marginalized by the central political actors. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment. [source]


    Agenda of involvement and engagement

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER CARE, Issue 6 2008
    GILL HUBBARD phd, ba (hons)
    Abstract This module describes how patients and carers can participate in healthcare research, policy and planning to impact on services, quality and outcomes of care. [source]


    The Cultural Mainstreaming Clause of Article 151(4) EC: Protection and Promotion of Cultural Diversity or Hidden Cultural Agenda?

    EUROPEAN LAW JOURNAL, Issue 5 2006
    Evangelia Psychogiopoulou
    The cultural cross-sectional clause of Article 151(4) EC, by calling for a reshaping of EC decision-making in other policy areas, which have to give due consideration to the impact they might have on cultural matters, enables the attainment of cultural objectives under EC headings other than Article 151 EC. In an attempt to inquire into this less-widely discussed facet of EC cultural action, the analysis highlights the principal characteristics of Article 151(4) EC and explores the influence it has exerted on both judicial and legislative Community practice. [source]


    The Immigration and Asylum Agenda

    EUROPEAN LAW JOURNAL, Issue 2 2004
    Gisbert Brinkmann
    Immigration and asylum of third-country nationals was inserted into Title IV EC by the Treaty of Amsterdam of 1997/1999. The European Council of Tampere of October 1999 provided a substantive input. The proposals of the European Commission cover almost all aspects of immigration and asylum and, in line with the Tampere conclusions, are oriented at the status of EU citizens. A common European migration and asylum policy has been realised at an astonishing speed, though some core instruments have not yet been adopted. During the negotiations the proposals have been watered down and thus provide only relatively low standards, in particular as regards access to employment, which is an important requisite for the integration of migrants. [source]


    EMU and the Shift in the European Labour Law Agenda: From ,Social Policy' to ,Employment Policy'

    EUROPEAN LAW JOURNAL, Issue 3 2001
    Diamond Ashiagbor
    This article examines the interaction between EMU and the European Union (EU) employment strategy and its implications for law. It focuses on the importance of EMU as a catalyst in the development of the EU's social and employment policy in the years following the Treaty on European Union in 1992, up to the inauguration of a new employment policy in the Treaty of Amsterdam. In analysing the EU's discourse on labour market regulation, it is arguable that a shift has occurred in the EU's position on the ,labour market flexibility' debate: that the EU institutions are more readily accepting of the orthodoxy that labour market regulation and labour market institutions are a major cause of unemployment within EU countries and that a deregulatory approach, which emphasises greater ,flexibility' in labour markets, is the key to solving Europe's unemployment ills, along with macroeconomic stability, restrictive fiscal policy and wage restraint. As the EU's employment strategy has matured, this increased emphasis on employment policy has come to displace discourses around social policy. This change in emphasis has important implications for EMU since it signals a re-orientation from an approach to labour market regulation which had as its core a strong concept of employment protection and high labour standards, to an approach which prioritises employment creation, and minimises the role of social policy, since social policy is seen as potentially increasing the regulatory burden. [source]


    Marital Research in the 20th Century and a Research Agenda for the 21st Century

    FAMILY PROCESS, Issue 2 2002
    John M. Gottman Ph.D.
    In this article we review the advances made in the 20th century in studying marriages. Progress moved from a self-report, personality-based approach to the study of interaction in the 1950s, following the advent of general systems theory. This shift led, beginning in the 1970s, to the rapid development of marital research using a multimethod approach. The development of more sophisticated observational measures in the 1970s followed theorizing about family process that was begun in the decade of the 1950s. New techniques for observation, particularly the study of affect and the merging of synchronized data streams using observational and self-report perceptual data, and the use of sequential and time-series analyses produced new understandings of process and power. Research in the decades of the 1980s and 1990s witnessed the realization of many secular changes in the American family, including the changing role of women, social science's discovery of violence and incest in the family, the beginning of the study of cultural variation in marriages, the expansion of the measurement of marital outcomes to include longevity, health, and physiology (including the immune system), and the study of co-morbidities that accompany marital distress. A research agenda for the 21st century is then described. [source]


    The Modern Girl around the World: A Research Agenda and Preliminary Findings

    GENDER & HISTORY, Issue 2 2005
    Modern Girl Around the World Research Group
    Our research collaboration examines how the Modern Girl emerged as a global phenomenon in the first half of the twentieth century. By wearing provocative fashions and pursuing romantic love, Modern Girls everywhere appeared to disregard the roles of dutiful daughter, wife and mother. We develop the Modern Girl as a heuristic category that allows new insights into forces of globalisation and manifestations of gendered modernity. Through a case study of cosmetics advertising in China, India, South Africa, Germany and the United States, we show that the Modern Girl in each locale was shaped through multidirectional citations of elements from elsewhere, through transnational processes of racialisation and through distinct articulations of nationalism. [source]


    The Business of Temporary Staffing: A Developing Research Agenda

    GEOGRAPHY COMPASS (ELECTRONIC), Issue 8 2010
    Neil M. Coe
    This paper offers a critical review of the existing literatures on temporary staffing. It argues that while research on both client firm rationales and the experiences and characteristics of temporary agency workers are relatively well advanced, work that explores the temporary staffing industry and its own strategies and expansionary logics is still in its infancy. This is a significant oversight given the increasingly widespread influence of this particular form of labour market intermediary. Grounded in recent work in economic geography, the paper maps a future research agenda. [source]


    Berthold Auerbach's Deutscher Volks-Kalender: Editing as Political Agenda

    GERMAN LIFE AND LETTERS, Issue 1 2002
    Kristina R. Sazaki
    An analysis of Berthold Auerbach's Deutscher Volks-Kalender (1858,69) reveals how Auerbach attempted to participate in and to shape the discourse on national identity. One of the most popular writers of his day, he used his position as editor to carry out a political agenda that advocated German unification. He attempted to unify the diverse strata of society by providing specific ideas and values , above all on German unification and emigration , that would be understood and accepted by the practical as well as the literary reader. Many stories and essays called directly or indirectly for a united Germany. Others dealt with the hot topic of America during the Civil War as a means to encourage Germans to remain in Germany. Auerbach routinely engaged like-minded contributors from the fields of politics, science, sociology, and the arts to create a multidisciplinary forum on nationhood. By employing images of family, friendship, and the organic and also by conjuring up a common literary tradition in Friedrich Schiller, Auerbach projected his concept of nation onto a popular form of mass culture , the calendar. [source]


    Interprofessional Practice in Health and Social Care: Challenging the Shared Learning Agenda

    HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY, Issue 1 2002
    Article first published online: 29 JAN 200
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Introduction: Putting Unsafe Abortion on the Development Agenda

    IDS BULLETIN, Issue 3 2008
    Andrea Cornwall
    First page of article [source]


    A Policy Agenda for Post-Apartheid South Africa (Introduction)

    IDS BULLETIN, Issue 4 2006
    Raphael Kaplinsky
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    An Agenda for Future Research on Applicant Reactions to Selection Procedures: A Construct-Oriented Approach

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SELECTION AND ASSESSMENT, Issue 1-2 2004
    David Chan
    This article offers an agenda for future research on applicant reactions to selection procedures. Advocating a construct-oriented approach, we propose that future research focuses attention on fundamental issues subsumed under seven distinct although related areas namely: (1) dimensions of applicant reactions, (2) changes in applicant reactions over time, (3) determinants of applicant reactions, (4) applicant reactions and test constructs, (5) criterion outcomes of applicant reactions, (6) reactions to new technology in testing, and (7) methodological and data analysis issues. [source]


    Applicant and Recruiter Reactions to New Technology in Selection: A Critical Review and Agenda for Future Research

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SELECTION AND ASSESSMENT, Issue 2-3 2003
    Neil AndersonArticle first published online: 30 JUL 200
    This paper presents a narrative review of recent research into applicant and recruiter reactions to new technology in employee selection. Different aspects of the use of new technology are noted including computer-based testing, Internet-based recruitment and candidate assessment, telephone-based and video-based interviews, video-based situational judgment tests, and virtual reality scenarios. It is argued that an appropriate way to conceptualize these advances is as ,technical innovations' as defined in the creativity and innovation research in Industrial, Work, and Organizational (IWO) psychology. Applicant reactions research is reviewed thematically, and studies into three main themes are discussed: Applicant preferences and reactions, equivalence, and adverse impact. Following Bartram (2001), an amphibian-monarchistic analogy is employed at several stages in the review. Four major criticisms of the extant applicant reactions research base are noted: its atheoretical orientation, a short-termist concentration upon reactions level outcomes, an over-reliance on students as surrogates, and a patchiness of coverage of crucial research questions. The second part of this paper explores neglected issues of recruiter adoption of new technology for employee selection. Again drawing from advances in the innovation and creativity literatures, this section explores likely antecedent factors at the individual and organizational levels of analysis. A general model of recruiter adoption of new technology is posited as a framework for future research in this area. For both applicant and recruiter reactions further research is called for and implications for practice are noted throughout. [source]


    City-Regions, Neoliberal Globalization and Democracy: A Research Agenda

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF URBAN AND REGIONAL RESEARCH, Issue 1 2007
    MARK PURCELL
    This paper argues that research on city-regions could benefit from more sustained and critical attention to the question of democracy. That is, it should examine more closely how decisions in city-regions are made, why they are made that way, and how they can be made more democratically. Much current research on politics in cities has framed the issue in terms of citizenship. That work has produced great insight. However, the attention to citizenship has prompted very little attention to democracy, even though the two concepts are deeply intertwined. Current interest in city-regions opens up the possibility that a vibrant line of research on democracy can be added to and engage with that on citizenship. [source]


    Conference on the Furure of Chinese Cities: A Research Agenda for the 21st Century

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF URBAN AND REGIONAL RESEARCH, Issue 1 2000
    Nancy C. Netting
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    The Force of a Weak Field: Law and Lawyers in the Government of the European Union (For a Renewed Research Agenda)

    INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY, Issue 2 2008
    Antoine Vauchez
    Rather than considering legal and judicial arenas as the mere surface of the weighty social processes that shape European integration, this article contends that they are actually one of the essential spaces where the government of Europe is being produced. To account for this paramount role played by law in EU polity, two hitherto unexplored research paths are followed. First of all, a socio-historical perspective focuses on the critical junctures at which Law has been formalized as a science of European government providing critical devices for integration. Second, a more sociological stance is taken in relation to the functioning of the "European legal field" (ELF). A preliminary inquiry leads to its characterization as weak, with porous internal and external borders. This article argues that this weak autonomy is what makes it strong and influential when it comes to shaping the representations and principles of EU government. [source]


    Global Intellectual Hegemony and the International Development Agenda

    INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL SCIENCE JOURNAL, Issue 166 2000
    Branislav Gosovic
    The worldwide homogenisation of thinking, analysis, and prescription, coupled with the de-legitimisation of social critique, dissent, and alternative thinking in the 1990s, are characteristic of globalisation and of the current international system. The homogenisation is the outcome of global geopolitical changes and the end of the Cold War, with the ascendance of a victorious paradigm. The resulting global intellectual hegemony (GIH) is of special concernto developing countries and to the United Nations. It has undermined the goals and aspirations of the former and contributed to their intellectual disarmament and disempowerment; it has undermined the mandate and role of the latter. This essay discusses GIH in the context of international development cooperation, showing how it is nurtured in many different ways. It is argued that the mechanisms at work are well-known in national politics, in particular inundemocratic societies, and are now projected by new technologies and through the global domination by those with power, a task made easier by the lack of organised and credible opposition. It suggests the need for further study and policy debate of this global phenomenon which seems to have largely passed unnoticed in academic, policy, and public opinion circles. [source]


    International Nonregimes: A Research Agenda,

    INTERNATIONAL STUDIES REVIEW, Issue 2 2007
    Radoslav S. Dimitrov
    Why are multilateral institutions absent from some areas of international relations? Governments have not concluded regulatory policy agreements on tactical nuclear weapons and small arms control, deforestation, information privacy, and other transnational issues. The absence of regimes in such policy arenas is an empirical phenomenon with considerable theoretical and policy implications. Yet, existing scholarship on global governance largely ignores the instances in which such institutions do not emerge. This essay develops a research agenda to extend and strengthen regime theory through analysis of nonregimes. We articulate the concept, draw a typology of nonregimes, discuss the contributions that nonregime studies can make to IR theory, outline methodological approaches to pursue the proposed agenda, and highlight a priori theoretical considerations to guide such research. Six illustrative cases in the realms of arms control, environmental management, and international political economy are described and used to make preliminary observations of factors that impede regime formation. [source]


    Grenzüberschreitendes politisches Lernen bei Gesundheitsreformen: Der Fall der Diagnosis Related Groups

    INTERNATIONALE REVUE FUR SOZIALE SICHERHEIT, Issue 4 2009
    Achim Schmid
    Auszug Beobachtungen über die Konvergenz von Gesundheitssystemen und die Verbreitung von Ideen, Wissen und Strategien über die Landesgrenzen hinweg haben die Frage aufgeworfen, wie die Länder von den Erfahrungen anderer lernen. Dieser Artikel untersucht die Rolle des grenzüberschreitenden politischen Lernens im Hinblick auf die Diagnosis Related Groups (DRGs). Wir geben einen Überblick über die Verbreitung dieses Politikinstruments und analysieren die Umsetzung von DRGs in drei Ländern, die diese kürzlich eingeführt haben: Deutschland, die Schweiz und die Niederlande. Die drei Fälle zeigen, dass für die Umsetzung dieses Instruments ausführliche Studien, die Zusammenarbeit der Interessengruppen und die Anpassung auf landesspezifische Bedürfnisse nötig waren. Die Länder lernten aus den Erfahrungen im Ausland, aber erst mit der Einführung eines gesetzlichen Rahmens für den Wettbewerb zwischen Krankenkassen traten die DRGs wirklich auf die politische Agenda. Während Deutschland und die Schweiz auf ausländische DRG-Modelle zurückgriffen, entwickelten die Niederlande ein eigenes Casemix-System zur Klassifizierung von Patienten. [source]


    The New Transatlantic Agenda at Ten: Reflections on an Experiment in International Governance,

    JCMS: JOURNAL OF COMMON MARKET STUDIES, Issue 5 2005
    MARK A. POLLACK
    The 1995 New Transatlantic Agenda (NTA) represents anovel experiment in international governance, linking the institutions of the EU and the United States at the intergovernmental, transgovernmental and transnational levels. This article draws lessons from the NTA after its first decade, noting tensions in the Brussels-Washington relationship, a highly variable pattern of effectiveness in transgovernmental regulatory co-operation, and a largely ineffectual record of transnational civil-society co-operation. [source]