Results 231 to 240 of about 261,741 (359)
ABSTRACT This paper reviews methodological developments in Industrial Relations (IR) research on union effects from 1990 to 2023, based on 511 studies in six leading IR journals in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia. We find that institutional contexts shape methodological choices over time and note a general shift from ...
Kwon Hee Han +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Toward an Abolitionist Epidemiology of Displacement: Lessons From the United States on Border Detention of Migrants. [PDF]
Sirvent RD, Irfan B.
europepmc +1 more source
Compassionate Digital Innovation: A Pluralistic Perspective and Research Agenda
ABSTRACT Digital innovation offers significant societal, economic and environmental benefits but is also a source of profound harms. Prior information systems (IS) research has often overlooked the ethical tensions involved, framing harms as ‘unintended consequences’ rather than symptoms of deeper systemic problems.
Raffaele F. Ciriello +5 more
wiley +1 more source
The Impact of Brexit on UK Food Standards and Food Security: Perspectives on the Repositioning of Neoliberal Food Policy. [PDF]
Lingham S +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Commentary: Inequalities of provision of nationally funded clinical-academic training awards for healthcare professionals: quantitative comparisons across the four nations of the United Kingdom. [PDF]
McMahon A.
europepmc +1 more source
The Epistemic Harms of Botched Apologies for Past Wrongs
ABSTRACT Apologies often create expectations of meaningful change and repair. Yet when institutions or states deliver apologies for past wrongs that lack substantive reparative action, they risk deepening, rather than redressing, the harms they acknowledge.
Abraham Tobi
wiley +1 more source
Academy, a battleground for justice: a call for prioritarian scholarship. [PDF]
Shrime MG.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract Research on democratic backsliding and on EU counter‐actions is growing rapidly, but we have only begun to understand how EU actions are taken up in domestic political debates in backsliding member states. Our research builds on the assumption that the framing of these debates contributes to the (de‐)legitimation of EU actions and thus has ...
Michael Blauberger, Arndt Wonka
wiley +1 more source

