Assessing the Effects of Benefits and Institutional Influences on the Continued Use of Environmentally Munificent Bypass Systems in Long-Haul Trucking

MIS Quarterly ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 1301-1312 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kent Maret ◽  
◽  
Robert F. Otondo ◽  
G. Stephen Taylor ◽  
◽  
...  
2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandra J. Winter ◽  
Jylana L. Sheats ◽  
Lauren A. Grieco ◽  
Eric B. Hekler ◽  
Matthew P. Buman ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Terence D. Keel

The proliferation of studies declaring that there is a genetic basis to health disparities and behavioral differences across the so-called races has encouraged the opponents of social constructionism to assert a victory for scientific progress over political correctness. I am not concerned in this essay with providing a response to critics who believe races are expressions of innate genetic or biological differences. Instead, I am interested in how genetic research on human differences has divided social constructionists over whether the race concept in science can be used for social justice and redressing embodied forms of discrimination. On one side, there is the position that race is an inherently flawed concept and that its continued use by scientists, medical professionals, and even social activists keeps alive the notion that it has a biological basis. On the other side of this debate are those who maintain a social constructionist position yet argue that not all instances of race in science stem from discriminatory politics or the desire to prove that humans belong to discrete biological units that can then be classified as superior or inferior. I would like to shift this debate away from the question of whether race is real and move instead toward thinking about the intellectual commitments necessary for science to expose past legacies of discrimination.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dayse Azevedo Gomes ◽  
Luiz Alberto N. Campos Filho ◽  
Lourdes Casanova

2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Himanshu Rajput

Social networking sites (SNSs) have become popular in India with the proliferation of Internet. SNSs have gained the interests of academicians and researchers. The current study is an endeavor to understand the continuance of social networking sites in India. The study applies an extended version of theory of planned behavior. Additional factors privacy concerns and habits were incorporated into the standard theory of planned behaviour. A survey was conducted in a Central University in India. Overall, data was collected from 150 respondents. PLS-SEM was used to test the proposed model. All the hypotheses except the moderating role of habits between intentions and continued use of social networking sites, were supported by the results. Habits were found to affect continued use of social networking sites indirectly through continued intentions.


1993 ◽  
Vol 320 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. P. Murarka

ABSTRACTSilicides have found application as high conductivity, high temperature, and corrosion resistance materials that form good electrical contacts to silicon and good low resistivity cladding on polysilicon films used as gate metal. Of various silicides investigated in past CoSi2 offers several advantages including lowest resistivity, self-aligned formation, low lattice mismatch with silicon, stability in presence of dopants and on SiO2, Si3N4, or Sioxynitrides, and reliability to process temperatures ≤900°C even when used in thicknesses as thin as 50-60 nm. Thus, CoSi2 has found an application in VLSI and ULSI. In this paper, the properties, formation and processing, reliability, and applicability of CoSi2 will be reviewed. It will be shown that CoSi2 is only silicide that offers properties and reliability for continued use in sub-0.25 pm VLSI and ULSI integrated circuits.


2021 ◽  
pp. 0143831X2110160
Author(s):  
Thomas Prosser ◽  
Barbara Bechter ◽  
Manuela Galetto ◽  
Sabrina Weber ◽  
Bengt Larsson

In this article the authors analyse social partner engagement in European sectoral social dialogue, testing two prominent theories to disentangle sector and country dynamics: institutional and resources and capabilities theories. While institutional theory accounted for certain social partner preferences, resources and capability theory proved stronger in predicting participation and provided insight into regulatory preferences. The authors conclude that resources and capability theory better explains their case, associating it with weaknesses of transnational governance. Specifically, limited incentives for participation mean that social partners with fewer resources forego participation, entailing pre-eminence of social partners with greater resources and hindering outcomes reflecting national institutional influences.


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