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Rational Management (rational + management)
Selected AbstractsRational Management, Performance Targets and Executive Agencies: Views from Agency Chief Executives in Northern IrelandPUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, Issue 3 2001Noel Hyndman The way in which central government services are delivered in both Britain and Northern Ireland has changed significantly since 1988. Executive Agencies have been created with the aim of improving the efficiency and effectiveness of service delivery, with changes being supported by an increasing focus on the rational management model as a basis for improving management in the public sector. This paper is a case study of nine agencies within the Northern Ireland ,family of agencies' and is the first study of its type in the UK. It presents the results of a series of interviews with agency Chief Executives that attempted to identify perceptions with respect to the development, use and impact of mission statements, objectives, targets and performance measures (components of a rational management approach). The main findings of the research include: Northern Ireland Chief Executives perceive an increased focus on quantification since agencification; this focus is viewed as helpful in providing a basis for improving management; systems in practice are considered to be much more flexible than a rigid management model would normally suggest; and, it is thought that the potential adverse consequences of such an approach can be managed. [source] Preventing the Spread of Invasive Species: Economic Benefits of Intervention Guided by Ecological PredictionsCONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2008REUBEN P. KELLER bioeconomía; economía de las invasiones; invasiones biológicas; Orconectes rusticus; predicciones ecológicas Abstract:,Preventing the invasion of freshwater aquatic species is the surest way to reduce their impacts, but it is also often expensive. Hence, the most efficient prevention programs will rely on accurate predictions of sites most at risk of becoming invaded and concentrate resources at those sites. Using data from Vilas County, Wisconsin (U.S.A.), collected in the 1970s, we constructed a predictive occurrence model for rusty crayfish (Orconectes rusticus) and applied it to an independent data set of 48 Vilas County lakes to predict which of these were most likely to become invaded between 1975 and 2005. We nested this invasion model within an economic framework to determine whether targeted management, derived from our quantitative predictions of likely invasion sites, would increase the economic value of lakes in the independent data set. Although the optimum expenditure on lake protection was high, protecting lakes at this level would have produced net economic benefits of at least $6 million over the last 30 years. We did not attempt to determine the value of nonmarket benefits of protection; thus, our results are likely to underestimate the total benefits from preventing invasions. Our results demonstrate that although few data are available early in an invasion, these data may be sufficient to support targeted, effective, and economically rational management. In addition, our results show that ecological predictions are becoming sufficiently accurate that their application in management can produce net economic benefits. Resumen:,La prevención de la invasión de especies dulceacuícolas es la manera más segura de reducir sus impactos, pero a menudo es costosa. Por lo tanto, los programas de prevención más eficientes dependerán de predicciones precisas de los sitios con mayor riesgo de ser invadidos y concentrarán recursos en esos sitios. Utilizando datos recolectados en los 70s en el Condado Vilas, Wisconsin (E.U.A.), desarrollamos un modelo predictivo de la ocurrencia de Orconectes rusticus y lo aplicamos en un conjunto de datos independientes de 48 lagos en el Condado de Vilas para predecir cuales fueron más susceptibles de ser invadidos entre 1975 y 2005. Anidamos este modelo de invasión en un marco económico para determinar si los objetivos de manejo, derivados de nuestras predicciones cuantitativas de sitios susceptibles a la invasión, incrementarían el valor económico de los lagos del conjunto independiente de datos. Aunque el gasto óptimo para la protección de lagos fue alto, la protección de lagos a este nivel podría haber producido beneficios económicos por un mínimo de $6 millones en los últimos 30 años. No intentamos determinar el valor de los beneficios no comerciables de la protección; por lo tanto, es probable que nuestros resultados subestimen los beneficios totales de la prevención de invasiones. Nuestros resultados demuestran que, aunque se disponga de pocos datos del inicio de una invasión, esos datos pueden ser suficientes para fundamentar acciones de manejo efectivas y económicamente racionales. Adicionalmente, nuestros resultados muestran que las predicciones ecológicas se están volviendo tan precisas que su aplicación en el manejo puede producir beneficios económicos netos. [source] Alpine grassland degradation and its control in the source region of the Yangtze and Yellow Rivers, ChinaGRASSLAND SCIENCE, Issue 3 2005Huakun Zhou Abstract Serious grassland degradation is endangering the environment of the source regions of the Yangtze and Yellow Rivers (SRYYR). There is an urgent need to analyze and review the grassland resources, status of grassland degradation, factors causing grassland degradation, and measures for grassland protection and restoration so as to ensure sustainable development in the SRYYR. This review shows that: (1) The alpine meadow, one of the most important grassland types in the SRYYR, can be divided into four subtypes: typical alpine meadow, alpine swamp meadow, alpine steppe meadow and alpine shrub meadow. (2) There is approximately 357.13 × 104 ha degraded grassland in this area, which is 34.34% of the area of all the investigated grasslands in the SRYYR, and heavily degraded grasslands cover an area of 74.34 × 104 ha, approximately 20.82% of the degraded grasslands. (3) Alpine grassland degradation in the SRYYR follows the following sequence: non-degraded grassland , lightly degraded grassland , moderately degraded grassland , heavily degraded grassland. (4) Grassland degradation in the SRYYR is caused by the integrated effect of anthropogenic and natural factors. The principal factors causing grassland degradation are thought to be long-term overgrazing and the destruction by rodents that follows, and climate warming, which accelerates the grassland degradation process. (5) Some effective management practices (e.g. rodent and ruderal weed control, establishment of artificial grassland, rational management of grassland, and optimizing livestock structure) and integrated countermeasures for the restoration of degraded grasslands have been developed in the SRYYR. [source] Polymorphic microsatellite DNA markers for the Patagonian squid, Loligo gahi (Cephalopoda)MOLECULAR ECOLOGY RESOURCES, Issue 3 2002P. W. Shaw Abstract Squid populations are being put under rapidly increasing commercial fishing pressure worldwide. The same species are known to be susceptible to extreme population fluctuations, so detailed knowledge of population substructuring and genetic diversity is essential for rational management. We present a set of microsatellite DNA loci suitable for population genetic analysis of Loligo gahi, the squid species subject to the most detailed monitoring and fishery control (around the Falkland Islands), with the future aim of generating management-related information to aid conservation of this valuable natural resource. [source] Diabetes in older people-moving towards rational prescribingPRESCRIBER, Issue 1 2009Alan Sinclair MSc Our series Prescribing in older people gives practical advice for successful management of the special problems faced by this age group. Here, Professor Sinclair describes the rational management of type 2 diabetes. Copyright © 2009 Wiley Interface Ltd [source] |