Missing the Big Picture on State-Owned Enterprises: Quality of Aggregate Holdings Reporting of Public Administrations and Reform Implications

Author(s):  
Ulf Papenfuß ◽  
Lars Steinhauer ◽  
Benjamin Friedländer
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maia Chankseliani ◽  
Andrey Lovakov ◽  
Vladimir Pislyakov

AbstractThe world’s largest community of scientists disintegrated following the dissolution of the Soviet Union. With extremely scarce resources and limited academic freedom as starting points, researchers in this region have been creating new knowledge; they have been building on rich scientific traditions in selected disciplines and, at times, paving new paths in non-traditional disciplines. At present, the cumulative contribution of post-Soviet countries to global research output is only three percent, indicating that these countries are not key players on the global research scene. This study uses bibliometric methods to offer novel empirical insight into the quantity and impact of academic publications; it also looks at the quality of journals in which the output is published. The findings reveal that fifteen post-Soviet countries differ considerably in terms of how much they have prioritised research, as well as the quantity, quality, and impact of their publications. The research productivity across the region has not been high and, taken together, these countries have produced publications of considerably lower quality and lower impact when viewed in the context of global research output. At the same time, researchers from post-Soviet countries tap into international collaborative networks actively, resulting in an exceptionally large proportion of publications from this region being internationally co-authored. In the historical context of Soviet research being known as one of the least collaborative globally, this finding indicates that researchers in the region are attractive to international collaborators and may be seeking such partnerships due to relatively modest research capacity at home.


Author(s):  
Hendrik Knoche ◽  
M. Angela Sasse

This chapter provides an overview of the key factors that influence the quality of experience (QoE) of mobile TV services. It compiles the current knowledge from empirical studies and recommendations on four key requirements for the uptake of mobile TV services: (1) handset usability and its acceptance by the user, (2) the technical performance and reliability of the service, (3) the usability of the mobile TV service (depending on the delivery of content), and (4) the satisfaction with the content. It illustrates a number of factors that contribute to these requirements ranging from the context of use to the size of the display and the displayed content. The chapter highlights the interdependencies between these factors during the delivery of content in mobile TV services to a heterogeneous set of low resolution devices.


2011 ◽  
pp. 242-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hendrik Knoche ◽  
M. Angela Sasse

This chapter provides an overview of the key factors that influence the quality of experience (QoE) of mobile TV services. It compiles the current knowledge from empirical studies and recommendations on four key requirements for the uptake of mobile TV services: (1) handset usability and its acceptance by the user, (2) the technical performance and reliability of the service, (3) the usability of the mobile TV service (depending on the delivery of content), and (4) the satisfaction with the content. It illustrates a number of factors that contribute to these requirements ranging from the context of use to the size of the display and the displayed content. The chapter highlights the interdependencies between these factors during the delivery of content in mobile TV services to a heterogeneous set of low resolution devices.


Author(s):  
Ahmad Fauzi ◽  
Moch Tutuk Safirin

XYZ is a company that produces Medical Devices. One of the products produced is 16x16 hydrophilic sterile gauze. One of the factors that affect the quality of a product is the presence of defects in the product and waste which results in a longer lead time for a product. The investigative stages used in this study are using tools: seven tools, Big Picture Mapping, Value Stream Analysis (VALSAT) and then analyzing the causes of defects using the Ishikawa diagram (fishbone chart) where the output of this study is a proposed improvement using the FMEA method ( Failure Mode Effect and Analysis) to eliminate defects and waste that occur. Based on the research results, it is known that the type of waste identified by the calculation of Value Stream Activity and obtained Value Added with a percentage of 84.4%, Non Value Added by 1.0% and Necessary Non Value Added by 14.5%. From the results of production output in December 2019 to November 2020 amounting to 2,650,200 boxes, the number of defects is 1,316 boxes with an average sigma level of 5.16, while in FMEA it is known that the largest defects are spots with an RPN value of 504 and a suggestion for improvement is to place Experienced operators who have gone through the recruitment and training stages on superior qualifications on one machine according to their skills who understand SOPs and operators are given good comfort in the production process.                                                                                                   Keywords: Lean Six Sigma, Seven Waste, DMAIC, FMEA, kasa steril hidrofil 16x16.


2020 ◽  
Vol 71 ◽  
pp. 438-459
Author(s):  
Gustavo De Freitas Alves ◽  
Mary Anne Fontenele Martins ◽  
Rodrigo Lino de Brito ◽  
Wildenildo Oliveira dos Santos

Society benefits from public services and dealing with the relative risks, increases the quantity and quality of services delivered to citizens, improving the country's development and welfare. The focus of this article is to report ERM framework tailored to the public sector through a case study with qualitative and quantitative data, involving a specific situation of a contemporary phenomenon of ERM diffusion at Brazilian public organizations. The ERM Agile Canvas uses visual thinking, allowing the participants to quickly see the big picture and objectively plan the ERM treatment. Results allow the comparison of relationships between the sections uncovering the sensemaking and causality.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ha Nam Khanh Giao

In construction industry today, the consultancy companies need to improve service quality- an important part of consultancy service - in order to enhance customers’ loyalty, boosting business for future projects and word of mouth reputation. The question is whether the dimensions applied to measure the quality of the generic services can be applied to professional services such as construction project management service? If yes, how to do so? The research aims to conduct an assessment on service quality at AIC Management Co., Ltd based on SERVQUAL, a form of dimension-by-dimension analysis. The outcome would provide management with a big picture of current service quality. Consequently, recommendations will be provided according to the findings.


2012 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Pearce ◽  
Marianne Shearer ◽  
Karina Gardner ◽  
Jill Kelly ◽  
Tony Baixian Xu

This paper describes how the Melbourne East General Practice Network supports general practice to enable quality of care, it describes the challenges and enablers of change, and the evidence of practice capacity building and improved quality of care. Primary care is well known as a place where quality, relatively inexpensive medical care occurs. General practice is made up of multiple small sites with fragmented systems and a funding system that challenges a whole-of-practice approach to clinical care. General Practice Networks support GPs to synthesise complexity and crystallise solutions that enhance general practice beyond current capacity. Through a culture of change management, GP Networks create the link between the practice and the big picture of the whole health system and reduce the isolation of general practice. They distribute information (evidence-based learning and resources) and provide individualised support, responding to practice need and capacity.


2018 ◽  
pp. 103-125
Author(s):  
V. I. Kozlov

V. Kozlov, a critic specializing in contemporary poetry, discusses the major issues plaguing this branch of the literary process: such as the ‘synoptic’ quality of modern critical work, vitriolic conflicts between guilds, absence of a publication with a comprehensive overview of the current developments in poetry, etc. The author finds that the biggest problem of modern poetic criticism is that, unlike the Western school of literary criticism, it is unable to take in the big picture of all ongoing developments in modern poetry, and its every attempt to reconstruct it is guided by its subjective perceptions. He suggests that this could be ameliorated if the critics would refer to the philological school and return to universal criteria for the sake of a holistic literary process.


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