7,778 research outputs found
Happy Hour with Robin Sacks
Robin Sacks is the author of Get Off My Bus!: How to Get Clarity, Get in the Driver\u27s Seat, and Get Moving in Your Life! Introduction by Kristen Kuhlman, LSW, LHNA, MBA/HCM DHA Candidate
Robin Bruce Lockhart, La vie cachée des chartreux. Traduit de l'anglais par Françoise Laroche. 1990
Guelluy Robert. Robin Bruce Lockhart, La vie cachée des chartreux. Traduit de l'anglais par Françoise Laroche. 1990. In: Revue théologique de Louvain, 22ᵉ année, fasc. 3, 1991. p. 434
Homage to Georgia O'Keefe, West Hollywood, ca. 1990
Homage to Georgia O'Keefe, West Hollywood, ca. 1990, 8755 Melrose Avenue (between Robertson and San Vicente boulevards), West Hollywood. Surreal landscape with levitating Navajo pottery and a cow's skull. Acrylic, by Michael Kelly. Privately sponsored and by Bruce Eicher Inc. -- Dunitz, Street gallery, p. 92, #34
Natural climate solutions
Moderator: Renée Rondeau. Panelists: Imtiaz Rangwala, Bruce Rittenhouse, George Schisler, Betsy Neely, and Robin O'Malley.Presented at the 2018 CNHP Partners Meeting held on March 9, 2018 in the Grand Ballroom D, Lory Student Center, Colorado State University Campus, Fort Collins, Colorado.Panelists discuss the benefits for nature and people with natural climate solutions
When Managers Become Robin Hoods: A Mixed Method Investigation
When subordinates have suffered an unfairness, managers sometimes try to compensate them by allocating something extra that belongs to the organization. These reactions, which we label as managerial Robin Hood behaviors, are undertaken without the consent of senior leadership. In four studies, we present and test a theory of managerial Robin Hoodism. In study 1, we found that managers themselves reported engaging in Robin Hoodism for various reasons, including a moral concern with restoring justice. Study 2 results suggested that managerial Robin Hoodism is more likely to occur when the justice violations involve distributive and interpersonal justice rather than procedural justice violations. In studies 3 and 4, when moral identity (trait or primed) was low, both distributive and interpersonal justice violations showed similar relationships to managerial Robin Hoodism. However, when moral identity was high, interpersonal justice violations showed a strong relationship to managerial Robin Hoodism regardless of the level of distributive justice
Public management : Reinventing Government: a symposium. by Robin Butler
tag=1 data=Public management : Reinventing Government: a symposium. by Robin Butler
tag=2 data=Butler, Robin
tag=3 data=Public Administration,
tag=4 data=72
tag=5 data=2
tag=6 data=Summer 1994
tag=7 data=263-270.
tag=8 data=MANAGEMENT%PUBLIC SERVICE
tag=10 data=The author indicates how the major themes of the book [Reinventing Government] can be seen to correspond with many of the recent management initiatives in UK government.
tag=11 data=1994/6/8
tag=12 data=94/0490
tag=13 data=CABThe author indicates how the major themes of the book [Reinventing Government] can be seen to correspond with many of the recent management initiatives in UK government
Robin Becker, 16th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Robin Becker is the author of Giacometti’s Dog, published in 1990 by the University of Pittsburgh Press. Her previous books are Backtalk and Personal Effects, both published by Alice James Books She has received fellowships in poetry from the Massachusetts Artists Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. Her poems appear in many journals including Agni, The American Poetry Review, The Kenyon Review, and Ploughshares. She has published book reviews in Belles Lettres, The Boston Globe, The Boston Review, Prairie Schooner and The Women’s Review of Books She teaches in the Program in Writing and Humanistic Studies at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. This year she is Visiting Poet at Pennsylvania State University. Robin Becker serves as Poetry Editor for The Women’s Review of Books and as a member of the board of directors of Associated Writing Programs
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