Results 221 to 230 of about 645,667 (310)
A Call for Broadening the Analysis of Corporate Political Activities: Insights From Social Media as a Commercial Determinant of Health Comment on "Corporate Political Activity: Taxonomies and Model of Corporate Influence on Public Policy". [PDF]
Leão T.
europepmc +1 more source
Shaping expectations, losing flexibility: A study of CEO promises as strategic communication tools
Abstract Research Summary CEO promises are powerful but understudied communication tools. We develop a dual‐mechanism framework theorizing that while CEO promises elevate stakeholder expectations, they simultaneously constrain strategic flexibility. We argue that CEO promise‐making is shaped by two competing pressures: making more promises when the ...
Majid Majzoubi +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Lifecycle‐Based Governance to Build Reliable Ethical AI Systems
ABSTRACT Artificial intelligence (AI) systems represent a paradigm shift in technological capabilities, offering transformative potential across industries while introducing novel governance and implementation challenges. This paper presents a comprehensive framework for understanding AI systems through three critical dimensions: trustworthiness ...
Maikel Leon
wiley +1 more source
Commercial determinants of health: case study of ultra-processed food companies in Thailand. [PDF]
Jindarattanaporn N +2 more
europepmc +1 more source
Testing the market orientated model of political parties in a non-western context: The case of Taiwan [PDF]
Cheng, Isabelle, Fell, Dafydd
core
Moral Entrepreneurs of the Mastodon Migration
Social media platforms are imbued with politics and values through an interplay of coded architectures, platform policies, economic models, and algorithmic curation, together shaping and shaped by the activities of users. This dynamic set of relations is most evident during moments of disruption, in which platform politics and values come under debate.
Sean Ward +3 more
wiley +1 more source
To address interactionally troublesome exchanges (e.g., bullying, discrimination, or harassment) in the workplace, giving a name to negative personal experiences is crucial. Drawing on discussions of hermeneutical injustice, we explore the emancipatory potential of naming in post‐hoc tellings of these experiences, with particular attention to ...
Minna Leinonen +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Conflicts of interest and the role of governments in tobacco control. [PDF]
Bover PC, Huber L, Salgado L, Bostic C.
europepmc +1 more source

