An Explorative Study of Arts Companies as a Policy Target Group

2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-69
Author(s):  
Min Ah Lee ◽  
◽  
Sehun Kim ◽  
Joon hee Kim
Author(s):  
Laras Saketi ◽  
Ngalimun Ngalimun ◽  
Denok Kurniasih

Policy implementation is the implementation of a policy so that the objectives of the policy can be achieved. Implementation in terms of reducing slum area is one of the problems in Indonesia. The problem in this study was motivated by the lack of fulfillment of clean water needs, the people who participated  less  in  the  implementation  of  the  KOTAKU  program,  and  the absence of policies that supported the KOTAKU Program in the Purbalingga Kidul Village. This study aims to determine how much influence the idealized policy, target group, implementing organization and environmental factors have on the successful implementation of the No Slum City Program (KOTAKU) in the Purbalingga   Kidul   Village.   The   research   method   used   was   quantitative associative with a sample of 116 respondents and the sampling technique used the census method or total sampling. The analytical method used is Kendall Tau-c Correlation, Kendall W Concordance Coefficient and Ordinal Regression Analysis.  The  results  of  the  study  show  that:  (1)  There  is  a  positive  and significant influence between the idealized policy on the success of the implementation and the regression coefficient of 0.608. (2) There is a positive and significant influence between the target group on the success of the implementation with a regression coefficient of 0.413. (3) There is a positive and significant influence between implementing organization on the success of implementation with a regression coefficient of 0.645. (4) There is a positive and significant influence between the environmental factors on the success of the implementation with a regression coefficient of 0.706. (5) There is a positive and significant influence between idealized policy, target group, implementing organization and environmental factors on the success of implementation with a regression coefficient of 0.824.


2006 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 160-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Senokozlieva ◽  
Oliver Fischer ◽  
Gary Bente ◽  
Nicole Krämer

Abstract. TV news are essentially cultural phenomena. Previous research suggests that the often-overlooked formal and implicit characteristics of newscasts may be systematically related to culture-specific characteristics. Investigating these characteristics by means of a frame-by-frame content analysis is identified as a particularly promising methodological approach. To examine the relationship between culture and selected formal characteristics of newscasts, we present an explorative study that compares material from the USA, the Arab world, and Germany. Results indicate that there are many significant differences, some of which are in line with expectations derived from cultural specifics. Specifically, we argue that the number of persons presented as well as the context in which they are presented can be interpreted as indicators of Individualism/Collectivism. The conclusions underline the validity of the chosen methodological approach, but also demonstrate the need for more comprehensive and theory-driven category schemes.


2016 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Mange ◽  
Keren Sharvit ◽  
Nicolas Margas ◽  
Cécile Sénémeaud

Abstract. This research examines if aggressive responses through a shooter bias are systematically generated by priming outgroups or if a threat stereotypically associated with the primed outgroup is required. First, a pilot study identified outgroups stereotypically associated and not associated with threat. Afterwards, the main study included a manipulation of target group accessibility – ingroup versus nonthreatening outgroup versus threatening outgroup. Following exposure to primes of the group categories, the participants in all conditions played a shooter game in which the targets were males and females with ambiguous ethnicity and religion. Results demonstrated that while only priming of an outgroup stereotypically associated with threat elicits aggressive responses, priming of both nonthreatening and threatening outgroups leads to an increase in the ability to distinguish between stimuli compared to ingroup priming. These effects are discussed in terms of priming effects, dimensions of threat, and possible interpretations of this ability increase.


2011 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 61-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Becker ◽  
Stefan Höft ◽  
Marcus Holzenkamp ◽  
Frank M. Spinath

As previous meta-analyses have focused almost solely on English-speaking regions, this study presents the first systematic meta-analytical examination of the predictive validity of assessment centers (ACs) conducted in German-speaking regions. It summarizes 24 validity coefficients taken from 19 studies (N = 3,556), yielding a mean corrected validity of ρ = .396 (80% credibility interval .235 ≤ ρ ≤ .558). ACs with different purposes and different kinds of criterion measures were analyzed separately. Furthermore, target group (internal vs. external candidates), average age of the assessees, inclusion of intelligence measures, number of instruments used, AC duration, as well as time elapsed between AC and criterion assessment were found to moderate the validity.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Bering ◽  
Claudia Schedlich ◽  
Gisela Zurek

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