Results 251 to 260 of about 11,536,480 (358)
Individual Virtues, Social Movements, and Allyship in the Sphere of Intellectual Disability
Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
Tommy Ness
wiley +1 more source
Dialogue of the Deaf: How Deliberation With Discontented Citizens May Hopelessly Fail
ABSTRACT Governments employ public deliberation in response to citizen discontent, intending to achieve consensus, mutual understanding, and clarification. However, some studies suggest that deliberation can devolve into a “dialogue of the deaf,” where parties talk past each other, counterproductively leading to conflict, distrust, and confusion ...
Anouk van Twist
wiley +1 more source
Is postgraduate leadership education a match for the wicked problems of health systems leadership? A critical systematic review. [PDF]
Onyura B +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
No One Mourns the Wicked: The Ethics of Mourning Morally Flawed Celebrities
Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
Carme Isern‐Mas +2 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Participatory budgeting can encourage meaningful community engagement in all phases of the budgeting cycle to promote social equity. However, participatory budgeting administrators often experience administrative and political challenges in establishing participatory processes that effectively promote social equity.
Michelle L. Lofton +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Reply to O'Sullivan: Wicked problems demand sophisticated understandings of complexity and feedbacks, not focus on a single variable. [PDF]
Cumming GS, von Cramon-Taubadel S.
europepmc +1 more source
What Can the State of Nature Justify?
ABSTRACT Social contract theory is one of the most popular approaches to political justification. While the state of nature account in social contract theory is generally invoked to justify the state's authority, I argue in this paper that no extant account succeeds in doing so.
Arthur (Hongyang) Yang
wiley +1 more source
A Systems Model of Using the Deliberate Leadership® Framework for Addressing Wicked Problems
Gayle Peterson +3 more
openalex +1 more source
Abstract Purpose Cognitive‐behavioural therapy for psychosis (CBTp) achieves small to modest effect sizes, which invites the question, ‘What clinical modifications might improve outcomes?’ This paper proposes an integration of CBTp with a neuropsychoanalytic approach that in clinical practice might extend the gains achieved by CBTp alone.
Michael Garrett
wiley +1 more source

