Results 241 to 250 of about 287,277 (297)
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This chapter analyzes Social Impact Bonds (SIBs) as innovative, outcome-based financing tools that unite public, private, and third-sector actors to tackle complex social issues. Rooted in New Public Management, SIBs tie investor returns to independently verified social outcomes, promoting collaboration, risk-sharing, and performance-based service ...
Catherine Karyotis, Sharam Alijani
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Catherine Karyotis, Sharam Alijani
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2016
Abstract In situations of extreme hardship, such as Stalinist Russia, eucharistic observance has often been sustained by laywomen and laymen. This is in continuity with the practice in the early Church of domestic worship and reservation of the host.
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Abstract In situations of extreme hardship, such as Stalinist Russia, eucharistic observance has often been sustained by laywomen and laymen. This is in continuity with the practice in the early Church of domestic worship and reservation of the host.
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Can fnance help mankind? This is the question I have been asking myself for years. We are used to reading sad news about money. Apparently, money is used exclu-sively for illicit traffcking and only the wicked enjoy it, while good people are crushed by a system that exploits them. Is this true? Is this the way things really are? Perhaps money is just a
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The Displacement of Social Bond
2022In this paper, Vaccaro argues how it is changed the social bond that connects people together in a community by using social media.
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2016
In Belgium, leaders of a nonprofit are using a pay-for-success mechanism to fund a program for young migrant job seekers.
Dermine, Thomas +2 more
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In Belgium, leaders of a nonprofit are using a pay-for-success mechanism to fund a program for young migrant job seekers.
Dermine, Thomas +2 more
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2019
An emergent literature illustrates some mechanisms by which social bonds are maintained throughout the animal kingdom. Examples of social bonds include parent–offspring bonds, monogamous pair-bonds, and friendships. Each type of bond involves a set of behaviors that can impose paradoxical physiological consequences.
Lynea R. Witczak +2 more
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An emergent literature illustrates some mechanisms by which social bonds are maintained throughout the animal kingdom. Examples of social bonds include parent–offspring bonds, monogamous pair-bonds, and friendships. Each type of bond involves a set of behaviors that can impose paradoxical physiological consequences.
Lynea R. Witczak +2 more
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The Neurobiology of Social Bonds
Journal of Neuroendocrinology, 2004SummaryWhen released in the brain through giving birth or mating, the neuropeptides oxytocin and vasopressin are involved in promoting parent–offspring and monogamous bonds in animals such as sheep and voles. Bonds are only formed in species where receptors for these neuropeptides are highly expressed in dopamine‐producing reward centres.
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Social Bonding, Globalization, and Humanity *
New Global Studies, 2011What bonds hold human society together? How have these bonds evolved over time, and where do they extend in an era of globalization? This article shows how certain types of social bonds continue to dominate human civilization, explores some of the strains they are under at the present time, and suggests a few ways they may adapt to the global future by
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Social Bonds and the "Social Premium" SOCIAL BONDS AND THE "SOCIAL PREMIUM"
2022Torricelli, Costanza, Pellati, Eleonora
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