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Research Attempts (research + attempt)
Selected AbstractsTeaching Treaties as (Un)Usual Narratives: Disrupting the Curricular CommonsenseCURRICULUM INQUIRY, Issue 5 2008JENNIFER A. TUPPER This article examines the importance of treaty education for students living in a province entirely ceded through treaty. Specifically, we ask and attempt to answer the questions "Why teach treaties?" and "What is the effect of teaching treaties?" We build on research that explores teachers' use of a treaty resource kit, commissioned by the Office of the Treaty Commissioner in Saskatchewan. Working with six classrooms representing a mix of rural, urban and First Nations settings, the research attempts to make sense of what students understand, know and feel about treaties, about First Nations peoples and about the relationships between First Nations and non,First Nations peoples in Saskatchewan. It is revealing that initially students are unable to make sense of their province through the lens of treaty given the commonsense story of settlement they learn through mandated curricula. We offer a critique of the curricular approach in Saskatchewan which separates social studies, history and native studies into discrete courses. Drawing on critical race theory, particularly Joyce King's notion of "dysconscious" racism, we deconstruct curriculum and its role in maintaining dominance and privilege. We use the term (un)usual narrative to describe the potential of treaty education to disrupt the commonsense. (Un)usual narratives operate as both productive and interrogative, helping students to see "new" stories, and make "new" sense of their province through the lens of treaty. [source] Flow Coordination and Information Sharing in Supply Chains: Review, Implications, and Directions for Future ResearchDECISION SCIENCES, Issue 4 2002Funda Sahin ABSTRACT Advances in information technology, particularly in the e-business arena, are enabling firms to rethink their supply chain strategies and explore new avenues for inter-organizational cooperation. However, an incomplete understanding of the value of information sharing and physical flow coordination hinder these efforts. This research attempts to help fill these gaps by surveying prior research in the area, categorized in terms of information sharing and flow coordination. We conclude by highlighting gaps in the current body of knowledge and identifying promising areas for future research. [source] Maternal health: does prenatal care make a difference?HEALTH ECONOMICS, Issue 5 2006Karen Smith Conway Abstract This research attempts to close an important gap in health economics regarding the efficacy of prenatal care and policies designed to improve access to that care, such as Medicaid. We argue that a key beneficiary , the mother , has been left completely out of the analysis. If prenatal care significantly improves the health of the mother, then concluding that prenatal care is ,ineffective' or that the Medicaid expansions are a ,failure' is premature. This paper seeks to rectify the oversight by estimating the impact of prenatal care on maternal health and the associated cost savings. We first set up a joint maternal,infant health production framework that informs our empirical analysis. Using data from the National Maternal and Infant Health Survey, we estimate the effects of prenatal care on several different measures of maternal health such as body weight status and excessive hospitalizations. Our results suggest that receiving timely and adequate prenatal care may increase the probability of maintaining a healthy weight after the birth and, perhaps for blacks, of avoiding a lengthy hospitalization after the delivery. Given the costs to society of obesity and hospitalization, these are benefits worth exploring before making conclusions about the effectiveness of prenatal care , and Medicaid. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Relationships in nurse prescribing in district nursing practice in England: A preliminary investigationINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING PRACTICE, Issue 3 2005Rick Fisher RGN DNT BA(Hons) MScArticle first published online: 25 APR 200 Nurse prescribing is a significant change in the working lives of district nurses in the United Kingdom. It has been achieved as the result of a 13-year sociopolitical struggle, eventually culminating in an Act of Parliament, which enabled selected nurses to prescribe from a limited formulary. This research attempts to discover the nature of its impact on the relationships between prescribers, nurses, doctors, pharmacists, patients and carers. Using a qualitative approach, guided interviews were carried out with nurses, doctors, pharmacists, patients and carers. Initial findings indicate that far from producing an independent prescribing workforce, some prescribers are reverting to their preprescribing behaviour. For these prescribers, there is a suggestion that old hierarchies are being reinforced, which might be detrimental to nurse prescribing. [source] Client-Situated Architectural Practice: Implications for Architectural EducationJOURNAL OF ARCHITECTURAL EDUCATION, Issue 1 2001Brian Schermer The rising proportion of architects who work as in-house employees of large client organizations represents an important shift in the pattern of architectural employment. Client-situated practice presents new challenges for architects that they do not otherwise face in more traditional work settings. This research attempts to provide, through a case study of one group of in-house architects, a fuller understanding of the nature of this form of work. The study uses a community of practice perspective to shed light on how the architects fit within the client's organizational structure and hierarchy, the practical actions and strategies of the architects and others who are involved in building design, and the material and social context in which the architectural work is situated. After comparison with traditional practice, this article offers suggestions for preparing students for this growing form of architectural employment. [source] Consumer sophistication and the role of emotion on satisfaction judgments within credence servicesJOURNAL OF CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR, Issue 6 2007Tony Garry Evidence which demonstrates a link between the affective dimension and satisfaction in a tangible product based context is well documented. However, when placed in a credence service context the role of Affect becomes more complex. Previous research in this field has assumed consumer homogeneity when there is increasing evidence of consumer heterogeneity. This research attempts to address this by examining affective reactions to service encounters between two groups of respondents, one with the ability to make performance assessments about the service and one without. Findings suggest consumers of differing sophistication will vary in the way they form expectation and performance assessments about the technical, functional and affective components of credence services and that consumer sophistication may have a moderating influence on affective reactions evoked. This in turn has implications for the design and delivery of service offerings within such contexts. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] The anatomy of a forbidden desire: men, penetration and semen exchangeNURSING INQUIRY, Issue 1 2005Dave Holmes The rising popularity of unprotected anal sex (bareback sex) among men who have sex with men (MSM) is perplexing healthcare providers working in sexual health clinics. Epidemiological research on the topic overlooks several socio-cultural and psychological dimensions. Our research attempts to construct an appropriate theoretical edifice by which we can understand this sexual practice. In order to achieve this objective, a qualitative design was selected and 18 semiconductive in-depth interviews were carried out with barebackers from five European and North American cities. We then analyzed the data using two theoretical approaches that were sensitive to the issues of desire, transgression and pleasure. These theories are those of the late French psychoanalyst, Jacques Lacan, and those of poststructural thinkers, Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari. These theoretical frameworks helped shed light on the significance of bareback sex, and can potentially influence healthcare providers in gaining a better understanding not only of their clients, but also of their own role in the circuitry of desire at work within bareback. We found that while the exchange of semen constitutes a dangerous and irrational practice to healthcare professionals, it is nevertheless a significant variable in the sexual lives of barebackers that needs to be taken into consideration in the provision of healthcare services. [source] An examination of communication behaviors as mediators in individual-level interorganizational exchangesPSYCHOLOGY & MARKETING, Issue 1 2006Chickery J. Kasouf This research attempts to address some of the gaps in our understanding of individual-level interorganizational exchanges. To this end, a conceptual framework that integrates cooperative norms, communication behaviors, and perceived problem-solving efficacy is developed. Qualitative and quantitative methodologies were employed to explore relevance and significance of proposed constructs and relationships. Findings support the viability of constructs and proposed relationships. Specifically, communication behaviors were found to mediate the relationship between cooperative norms and problem-solving confidence to resolve conflict. These results hold implications for future research and management practice. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source] The Financial Sector and Economic Growth,THE ECONOMIC RECORD, Issue 2009ARUSHA COORAY The Mankiw,Romer,Weil (1992) augmented Solow,Swan (Solow 1956; Swan 1956) model is extended to incorporate the financial sector in this study. Distinguishing between financial capital, physical capital and human capital, the research attempts to identify, in particular, the effects of financial capital on economic growth. The effects of financial sector efficiency on economic growth are also examined. The financial sector augmented model is tested on a cross-section of 35 economies. Strong support is found for the model. [source] |