Research Context: Northern Catalonia

Author(s):  
James Hawkey
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 121
Author(s):  
Heru Kurnianto Tjahjono ◽  
Majang Palupi

ABSTRACTThis study is a review of an article wrote by Majang Palupi and had published in the Journal of Management and Business Research 2013, 8 (1): 15-24 under the heading of “The influence of compensation justice, employee rotation policy and affective commitment to the retaliation behavior of civil servants.” The purpose of this study is to provide a good record of conceptual side, method and research context. The method is done by reviewing a number of literaturerelated to the topic of the article. Results indicate that it is important to consider the conceptual, methodological and contextual aspects of providing a number of records for this study. Future studies are important to conduct a broader review of the effects of distributivejustice and commitment to retaliation behavior in Indonesia in different contexts such as different industries, among different workers generations and other demographic factors.Keywords:distributive justice, affective commitment, context and retaliation behaviorABSTRAKStudi ini merupakan review atas artikel Majang Palupi yang dimuat di Jurnal Riset Manajemen dan Bisnis tahun 2013, 8(1):15-24 dengan judul pengaruh keadilan kompensasi, kebijakan rotasi karyawan dan komitmen afektif pada perilaku retaliasi karyawan PNS. Tujuan studi ini adalah memberikan catatan baik dari sisi konsepsual, metode dan konteks penelitian. Metode yang dilakukan dengan review sejumlah literatur yang berkaitan dengan topik paper. Hasil menunjukkan bahwapenting mempertimbangkan aspek konseptual, aspek metode dan konteks dalam memberikan sejumlah catatan untuk penelitian ini. Studi ke depan penting melakukan review yang lebih luas terkait pengaruh keadilan distributif dan komitmen pada perilaku retaliasi di Indonesia dalam berbagai konteks seperti industri yang berbeda, antar generasi dan faktor demografi lainnya


2017 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 356-386 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva Thomann ◽  
Martino Maggetti

Recent years have witnessed a host of innovations for conducting research with qualitative comparative analysis (QCA). Concurrently, important issues surrounding its uses have been highlighted. In this article, we seek to help users design QCA studies. We argue that establishing inference with QCA involves three intertwined design components: first, clarifying the question of external validity; second, ensuring internal validity; and third, explicitly adopting a specific mode of reasoning. We identify several emerging approaches to QCA rather than just one. Some approaches emphasize case knowledge, while others are condition oriented. Approaches emphasize either substantively interpretable or redundancy-free explanations, and some designs apply an inductive/explorative mode of reasoning, while others integrate deductive elements. Based on extant literature, we discuss issues surrounding inference with QCA and the tools available under different approaches to address these issues. We specify trade-offs and the importance of doing justice to the nature and goals of QCA in a specific research context.


1981 ◽  
pp. 21-47
Author(s):  
Sheila Rosenblum ◽  
Karen Seashore Louis
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 78-87
Author(s):  
RINAT F. PATEEV ◽  

The article presents an attempt to understand Islamic activism, a phenomenon where the differentiation between social and political components is difficult. New perspectives of analysis are associated with the research context of socio-cultural transformations in Muslim communities that have begun since the 19th century. Secularization was important process that affected Muslim communities, but not reinterpreted implicitly at the theological and philosophical level. The process of secularization is not considered by author as a phenomenon of inevitable “atheization” of Muslim communities, but associated with differentiation of various spheres of public life and emergence of new forms religious activism that developed during the mutual competition.


2021 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. 125-134
Author(s):  
Ruth Faleolo

This paper is a consideration of how the method/methodology of talanoa and vā, can be used online by Pacific researchers to respond to the current pandemic’s effect on the traditional face-to-face physical spaces used for knowledge-sharing. The following discussion examines and explores the two concepts: talanoa and vā. It is important to understand how these research approaches work in a multi-sited research context, particularly when travel regulations and social distancing rules require Pacific researchers and their informants to keep physically apart. Virtual sociocultural spaces have become increasingly important to Pacific knowledge-sharing. As a Pacific researcher, I share my thoughts on talanoa and vā and how these concepts have been transferred online in previous research (2015–2019) and more recently, during COVID-19.


2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 609-622
Author(s):  
VITOR MOURA LIMA ◽  
RAFAEL CUBA MANCEBO ◽  
LUÍS ALEXANDRE GRUBITS DE PAULA PESSÔA ◽  
ALESSANDRA DE SÁ MELLO DA COSTA

Abstract Consumers, whether more or less consciously, attach their identity to places in order to give meaning to their lives. In this research, we discuss the process by which consumers attach their identity to commercial settings, based on the extended self and place attachment theories. Through observations, in-depth interviews, and discourse analysis, this study explores the bonds people make with a place, taking a Brazilian heritage market as a research context. The findings suggest that the link between consumers’ identities and commercial settings occurs in different forms, based not only on their self-narratives but also on the physical space.


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