Results 111 to 120 of about 14,914 (306)
Speaking Up and Standing Out: How Gendered Logics Shape Women's Self‐Advocacy at Work
ABSTRACT A widely held assumption is that women self‐advocate less than men. Our study challenges this view. Drawing on interviews with 71 men and women in a multinational company's leadership development pipeline and 10 HRM managers, we examine how women navigate self‐advocacy within gendered organizational logics.
Vedika Lal +4 more
wiley +1 more source
In recent years, platform user privacy leaks have occurred frequently, heightening users’ privacy concerns, which may directly affect their behavior on short video platforms.
Heng Lu, Heng Lu, Aiye Wei, Xin Li
doaj +1 more source
A Conversation With David Bellhouse
Summary David Richard Bellhouse was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, on 19 July 1948. He studied actuarial mathematics and statistics at the University of Manitoba (BA, 1970; MA, 1972) and completed his PhD at the University of Waterloo, Ontario, in 1975. After being an Assistant Professor for 1 year at his alma mater, he joined the University of Western ...
Christian Genest
wiley +1 more source
Millise lauliku lapsepõli? Laulu „Kui ma olin väiksekene” allikatest ja autoritest
The childhood of which songster? On the origins and authors of a beloved song One of the most iconic and seminal musical works of Estonian culture, the song Lauliku lapsepõli (“Childhood of the Songster”), often referred to by its opening words, “Kui ...
Taive Särg
doaj +1 more source
Explicit Methodologies for Normative Evaluation in Public Policy, as Applied to Carbon Budgets
ABSTRACT What could philosophical or justice perspectives contribute to climate (and other applied philosophy) policy discussions? This question is important for philosophers on government policy committees. This article identifies two novel concerns about such contexts (which I call ‘contingent selection’ and ‘committee deference’) and systematizes ...
Kian Mintz‐Woo
wiley +1 more source
Consigning Injustice to History with Political Apologies
ABSTRACT Failures to remember the past properly can constitute a range of different wrongs. In this article, we identify a novel kind of wrong that often occurs through political apologies: consigning an injustice to history. Consigning acknowledges that a historical injustice took place but denies that it has any ongoing relevance for the present ...
Alfred Archer, Benjamin Matheson
wiley +1 more source

