Results 41 to 50 of about 34,491 (242)
Systems‐Based Organisational Resilience Framework: A Delphi Study‐Based Validation and Verification
ABSTRACT The increasing systemic complexity of the Fourth Industrial Revolution has heightened the need for robust approaches to organisational resilience. Despite its growing prominence, resilience research remains fragmented, with limited consensus on core dimensions, causal interdependencies and mechanisms suitable for dynamic assessment. This study
Dumisani Manzini +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Barriers to Steel Decarbonization
Main identified barriers to steel decarbonization Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions are a leading contributor to global climate change, necessitating urgent mitigation strategies. While various metrics—such as total national emissions, per‐capita output, and historical contributions—define responsibility, determining accountability remains complex ...
Pasquale Cavaliere
wiley +1 more source
The chelating imino groups in [MCl4(DADDTEthane)] (M = Ti, Zr, Hf) give rise to a planar five‐membered (‐N=C‐C=N‐)M metallacycle. The two thiophene rings of the ligand backbone reside in a noncoplanar arrangement concerning the metallacycle, giving rise to two chiral C–C axes in the ligand backbone.
Dirk Schlüter +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Our current understanding of the origins of Homo sapiens is limited, in part, by the fragmented fossil record from Late Pleistocene and early Holocene Africa. Here, we re‐examine the Kabua 1 cranium, an enigmatic and little‐studied Kenyan fossil discovered in the 1950s. We compare virtual reconstructions created previously by our team with a wide range
Abel Marinus Bosman +7 more
wiley +1 more source
This article presents a synthesis of recent developments in the study of human evolution over the past five years. It begins with an overview of hominin species nomenclature and diversity, followed by an examination of the proposed population bottleneck ∼900,000 years ago.
James Cole +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Inadequate asset management in non-profit organizations, in this case, Higher Education (PT), will harm the value of the potential benefits that can be obtained from those assets.
Hasan Firdaus +2 more
doaj +1 more source
The year 2025 marked the ninetieth since a fossil hominin occipital bone was discovered in Swanscombe, southeast England. In subsequent years, its parietal bones were found, producing what remains the oldest partial cranium from Britain today. In the earliest analyses, it was interpreted as a descendant of the infamous fraudulent fossil Piltdown Man ...
Emma E. Bird, Chris Stringer
wiley +1 more source
Fenomena Akuntabilitas Perpajakan pada Jaman Bali Kuno: Suatu Studi Interpretif
The aim of this research to interpret the phenomenon of taxation accountability at the time of ancient Bali (IX-XV AD). Through of interpretive study with Ethnoarchaeology method archaeological and ethnographic data integration, the phenomenon of ...
I Gusti Ayu Nyoman Budiasih
doaj
Hallazgo de dos nuevos bisontes en la cueva de Altxerri (Aia, País Vasco). [PDF]
Se describen dos nuevos bisontes pintados, decubiertos, en la cueva de Altxerri en un lugar de difícil acceso, por construir una sima. Esta sima da origen a una larga galería, que pudo ser decorada fácilmente una vez haber accedido al fondo de la sima ...
J. Altuna
doaj
A drag on the ticket? Estimating top‐of‐the‐ticket effects on down‐ballot races
Abstract Campaign staff, journalists, and political scientists commonly attribute the poor performances of a party's down‐ballot candidates to low‐quality or extreme top‐of‐the‐ticket candidates, but empirical evidence on this conventional wisdom is scant. We estimate the effect of candidate quality and ideology in gubernatorial and U.S.
Kevin DeLuca +2 more
wiley +1 more source

