Results 91 to 100 of about 111,497 (250)
“We will write it again”: subverted hermeneutics in Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia
Arcadia can be read as a subverted detective story in which history is reinterpreted rather than deciphered. The sleuth is a ruthlessly ambitious scholar who distorts evidence so as to achieve his ends.
Aloysia Rousseau
doaj +1 more source
Contains fulltext : 142488.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)
Karsdorp, Folgert +3 more
openaire +4 more sources
Once an “Ideal Worker,” Always an “Ideal Worker”: The Impervious Status of Police Who Become Fathers
ABSTRACT Research chronicles the ways in which women police who are mothers are seen as being unfit for police work and promotional opportunities, as they navigate the male‐centric workplace and carry the bulk of domestic labor and childcare responsibilities at home.
Danielle E. Thompson, Debra Langan
wiley +1 more source
Volume 19, Number 4 - May 1937 [PDF]
Volume 19, Number 4 - May 1937. 64 pages including covers and advertisements. Hughes, Edward Riley, Commencement Geary, William Denis, O Salutaris Hostia Ryan, John J., On Propaganda and Art Gibbons, Walter F., Escape Serry, Franklin ...
core +1 more source
Abstract This study explores the intersection of the informal and circular economies and its implications for business, management and organization (BMO) scholarship and practice. Informal circularity, practices of collecting, reusing, repairing, recycling and repurposing materials outside formal economic, legal and regulatory arrangements, constitutes
Tulin Dzhengiz +3 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Important Projects of Common European Interest (IPCEIs) have become a central tool of the European Union's (EU) new industrial policy. IPCEIs derive their peculiar name from an exemption to the general prohibition on state aid that has existed since the Treaty of Rome but has only led to the creation of a stand‐alone policy instrument in 2014.
Timo Seidl, Henrique Lopes‐Valença
wiley +1 more source
This paper reviews the maxims used by three early modern fictional detectives: Monsieur Lecoq, C. Auguste Dupin and Sherlock Holmes. It find similarities between these maxims and Bayesian thought.
Kadane, Joseph B.
core +1 more source
Evidence Gathering Under Competitive and Noncompetitive Rewards
ABSTRACT Reward schemes may affect not only agents' effort but also their incentives to gather information in order to reduce the riskiness of the productive activity. In a laboratory experiment using a novel task, we find that the relationship between incentives and evidence gathering depends critically on the availability of information about peers ...
Philip Brookins +2 more
wiley +1 more source
DECLINE TO THE DEPTH OF THE BASEMENT, ASCENSION TO THE HEIGHT OF THE CEILING [PDF]
In the introduction of the study we stated that the social and literary crisis in the period of schematism that suppressed “low“, entertaining genres as “bourgeois relic“, had also its non intentional positive consequences on writing about a crime story:
Tomáš Horváth
doaj
When Great Powers Struggle: How Geopolitical Alignments of Small States Are Influenced by Their MNEs
Abstract Comparing two distinct deglobalization periods, this study shows how Finnish multinational enterprises (MNEs) used corporate diplomatic activities (CDA) to influence Finland's alignment with a struggling great power. Drawing from hegemonic stability theory and new institutional economics, we argue that the power's collapsing global networks ...
Saara Matala, Christian Stutz
wiley +1 more source

