Results 211 to 220 of about 106,967 (283)
ABSTRACT This empirically grounded commentary explores the impacts of the COVID‐19 pandemic on the strategic direction of Canada's accounting profession and highlights opportunities and challenges that lie ahead in the post‐pandemic era. We undertake a systematic literature review using deductive and inductive approaches within both the academic ...
Merridee Bujaki +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Reasoning about possibilities: Modal logics, possible worlds, and mental models. [PDF]
Johnson-Laird PN, Ragni M.
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT Introduction Objective and subjective cognitive impairment are highly prevalent in mental disorders and transdiagnostic phenomena. Cognitive impairment is associated with poorer functional outcomes and therefore requires treatment, but little guidance is available for clinicians.
Kelly Allott +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Mystics at war: Padre Pio and Ludwig Wittgenstein. [PDF]
Galofaro F.
europepmc +1 more source
Strategic litigation as a challenge for deliberative democracy
Abstract Strategic litigation is a growing public concern, but remains understudied in democratic theory. In strategic litigation, collectives go to court with a political agenda that goes beyond their specific case. How should we assess the legitimacy of strategic litigation? Building on Lafont's model of deliberative democracy and Klein's distinction
Svenja Ahlhaus
wiley +1 more source
Not evolved to save the planet, yet capable to promote pro-environmental action leveraging human nature. [PDF]
Varella MAC +11 more
europepmc +1 more source
Police department design, political pressure, and racial inequality in arrests
Abstract This paper theorizes a source of bias in discretionary arrests: strategic limits on police officer learning. Officers have a variety of tactics at their disposal besides arrest that they use for less serious offenses when they judge the underlying behavior to be less severe. In departments led by a chief with special expertise in crime control,
Andrew J. McCall
wiley +1 more source
Oncologists' palliative care referral behaviour: testing utility of social exchange theory as an explanatory framework. [PDF]
Salins N, Hughes S, Preston N.
europepmc +1 more source
Presupposition and Entailment [PDF]
openaire +2 more sources
What political theory can learn from conceptual engineering: The case of “corruption”
Abstract Conceptual change is commonplace in political theory. Recent scholarship argues that improving a concept, or “engineering” it, can sharpen its normative and explanatory power. This article illustrates what political theory can learn from conceptual engineering (CE) by examining the evolution of “corruption” as a case study.
Emanuela Ceva, Patrizia Pedrini
wiley +1 more source

