Archives for 2020

Unleashing the Opportunity of Research in Latin America
Business and Management INK
February 20, 2020

Unleashing the Opportunity of Research in Latin America

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When Is a Terrorist Not a Terrorist?
International Debate
February 20, 2020

When Is a Terrorist Not a Terrorist?

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White House Budget Would Reduce NSF, Kill Minerva
Academic Funding
February 18, 2020

White House Budget Would Reduce NSF, Kill Minerva

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It’s About Time: For Shareholders and Bondholders Alike, Temporal Orientation is What Really Counts
Business and Management INK
February 18, 2020

It’s About Time: For Shareholders and Bondholders Alike, Temporal Orientation is What Really Counts

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Coronavirus, Wuhan, and Social Science

Coronavirus, Wuhan, and Social Science

As a social scientist in globalization studies, I am interested in the role some of the less visible layers of globalization — such as awareness of our connections with the lives of people elsewhere — have in shaping our responses, including emotional responses, to global threats, like this one and those to come…

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Think You Love Your Valentine? Psychology Says Things May Be Complicated

Think You Love Your Valentine? Psychology Says Things May Be Complicated

Valentine cards are filled with expressions of unequivocal adoration and appreciation. That’s fitting for the holiday set aside to express love and reaffirm commitment to one’s romantic partner.

But what if there’s more going on below the surface of these adoring declarations? How might thoughts and feelings that people are not even aware of shape their romantic relationships?

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Registration for ICTeSSH 2020 Now Open!

Registration for ICTeSSH 2020 Now Open!

The conference organizers are happy to welcome anyone interested in Information-Communication Technologies (ICT) and Social Sciences & Humanities (SSH) to the conference! The conference will bring together SSH researchers, computer scientists, informaticians, publishers, librarians, vendors of research ICT tools, SSH decision makers and others. There are many reasons why you should consider participating…

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Measuring and Modeling the Unobservable

Measuring and Modeling the Unobservable

The authors of a recent article in Project Management Journal We believe the implications arising from this recent research have the potential to change the debate regarding the relative merits of the several structural equation modeling methods.

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Impact in Action: Home in the Remaking

Impact in Action: Home in the Remaking

Being at the intersection of two or more cultures and confronting new cultural codes such as values, symbols, lifestyles or products, immigrants may feel comfort and estrangement concurrently and this can result in a conflict of their individual and social identities.

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Bridging the Divide Between Academics and Movements

Bridging the Divide Between Academics and Movements

For academic researchers working with social movements and activist groups can present unique challenges. Finding ways to work effectively together, whilst acknowledging differences in power and objectives, is often problematic. Drawing on perspectives from different social movements and academia, Diana Mitlin, Jhono Bennett, Philipp Horn, Sophie King, Jack Makau and George Masimba Nyama present insights from the Slum/Shack Dwellers International movement on how academics can successfully co-produce useful knowledge for social movements.

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Free Essay Collection Examines State of Open Data

Free Essay Collection Examines State of Open Data

By offering a broad overview of the open data movement’s first 10 years, the editors of a recent collection of essays hope to provide an account that helps practitioners, policy-makers, community advocates, and anyone else in the open data movement, to progress the movement over the next 10 years…

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A Century Ago, Congress Dismissed a U.S. Census

A Century Ago, Congress Dismissed a U.S. Census

Census 2020 is far from the first census to set off bitter political fights. One hundred years ago, results from Census 1920 initiated a decadelong struggle about how to allocate a state’s seats in Congress. The political arguments were so bitter that Congress eventually decided they would not use Census 1920 results.

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