Who Is Accountable? How Citizens Attribute Success and Failure in Cross‐Sector Collaborations
ABSTRACT Cross‐sector collaborations bring together organizations with different values, missions, and goals to achieve shared outcomes. However, how accountability is attributed across sectors remains unclear, particularly given the potential influence of sector bias on citizen perceptions.
Angela L. Samuel +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Beyond Usual Suspects: Revisiting Barriers to Childbearing Decisions in a Low Fertility Setting
Abstract Fertility rates in developed countries have declined to historically low levels, yet the reasons remain incompletely understood. This study examines the relative importance of diverse macro contextual constraints on childbearing intentions among young adults (aged 20–35) in Poland, a country emblematic of Europe's fertility decline.
Anna Kurowska +2 more
wiley +1 more source
National Identity and Fertility Intentions: Evidence from Hungary
Abstract This paper examines the association between national identity, defined as individuals’ cognitive and emotional attachment to the nation, and fertility intentions. A form of social identity, national identity shapes everyday interactions and choices, and individuals with a strong national identity are more likely to adjust their behavior and to
Dávid Erát
wiley +1 more source
Conflict Resolution in the 21st Century: A South Asian Perspective
ABSTRACT Conflicts in the contemporary international system have increasingly shifted from state‐centric power struggles to deeply rooted human needs crises. This study applies John Burton's Human Needs Theory to explain the persistence of the Kashmir conflict between India and Pakistan, focusing on the deprivation of identity, recognition, and ...
Hafeez Ullah Khan
wiley +1 more source
Optimizing Human Resource Conditions for 20‐Year Initial Public Offering (IPO) Survival
ABSTRACT The entrepreneurship literature emphasizes the importance of imprints founders leave on companies; those imprints can change at transformational events such as the initial public offering (IPO). Prior research has found that objective measures (such as structure or compensation systems) can imprint and predict survival post IPO.
Theresa M. Welbourne +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Robust Pluralism About Philosophical Progress
ABSTRACT This article argues that there are two fundamentally different types of alethic and epistemic progress in philosophy. It is widely assumed that such progress is to be assessed by reference to the quantity or quality of philosophy's product (i.e., a type of output or outcome, such as true answers, coherent views, knowledge, or understanding ...
John Bengson +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Measuring and analyzing the emotional engagement exhibited by chinese university students in ideological and political theory courses via the IPTCSSE. [PDF]
Wang L.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract In nations laden with colonial inequities, settler colonizers protect their structural advantages through ideologies that (a) distance the injustices of colonization from contemporary society (historical negation) and (b) exclude Indigenous culture from the mainstream national identity (symbolic exclusion).
Zoe Bertenshaw +2 more
wiley +1 more source
The structure of mass political belief systems: A network approach to understanding the left-right spectrum. [PDF]
Bentall RP +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Compensating personal climate response inefficacy with political conservatism?
Abstract People grapple with the reality that their individual actions are too insignificant to impact climate change—a phenomenon known as personal climate response inefficacy. The compensatory control theory articulates that people may turn to overarching social institutions or ideologies (e.g., conservatism) when they lack personal control. Inspired
Xiaobin Lou +2 more
wiley +1 more source

