Results 151 to 160 of about 982,006 (344)
Populist Radical Right Parties and Pension Privatization
Abstract Populist radical right parties (PRRP) have experienced notable electoral success across Europe in recent decades. While their preferences regarding public social policy have been widely studied, their influence on private social policy remains underexplored. This article examines how PRRP seek to reconcile the tension between aiming to balance
Thomas Mayer
wiley +1 more source
Introduction. Que fait le New Public Management aux politiques environnementales
Sylvain Barone +2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Abstract From the beginning of widespread public interactions with ChatGPT and other large language models, some users have seen the disfluencies of chatbots as opportunities for them to go on an archaeological search for an unfettered chatbot persona that they need to jailbreak. These are not claims of sentience, but rather of personhood.
Courtney Handman
wiley +1 more source
Sélection d'articles sur la politique suisse: Agriculture, 2017
Karel Ziehli
openalex +1 more source
Perspectives on commoning. Autonomist principles and practices [PDF]
Mayaux, Pierre-Louis
core +1 more source
Monnet for Nothing? France's Mixed Europeanization [PDF]
This contribution tries both to assess the impact of the European Union on France and to discuss the rich literature on that topic originating both from EU studies, opinion studies, public policy analysis and institutional analysis. France’s relationship
Olivier Rozenberg
core
Contested heritage landscapes for Arabic language learning in a postcolonial France
Abstract This article analyzes the contested and multiple meanings of “heritage” that emerge for advanced Arabic language learners in a postcolonial France. A linguistic life histories approach reveals a fraught duality of privileged access and exclusionary adversity for heritage students of Arabic.
Chantal Tetreault +2 more
wiley +1 more source
L’impact de la COVID‐19 sur l’expérience client en magasin
ABSTRACT Customer experience, a key concept in marketing, consists of five dimensions (sensory, emotional, cognitive, behavioural and social) that can allow consumers to have a unique and pleasant experience. However, the COVID‐19 pandemic has significantly altered these dimensions and thus transformed the consumer's in‐store experience.
Samantha Langis, Isabelle Brun
wiley +1 more source

