22 research outputs found
2024 Journal of Law, Ethics, and Public Policy Symposium: The Dignity of Work
Friday, February 23, 2024 | 8:45 AM–5:00 PM | Eck Visitor Center Auditorium
The Journal of Law, Ethics, and Public Policy\u27s annual symposium will be held this Friday, February 23 in the auditorium of the Eck Visitor Center. This year\u27s theme is The Dignity of Work. The day consists of three panel sessions as well as a keynote address by Dr. Matthew Crawford, author of Shop Class as Soulcraft. Breakfast and lunch will be served. Breakfast starts at 8:45 a.m. The first session starts at 9:15 a.m.
Co-sponsors: Sheedy Family Program in Economy, Enterprise & Society Notre Dame Law School, Program on Church, State & Society De Nicola Center for Ethics & Culture Nanovic Institute for European Studies Center for Social Concerns Notre Dame Center for Citizenship & Constitutional Governmenthttps://scholarship.law.nd.edu/ndls_posters/1806/thumbnail.jp
2024 Journal of Law, Ethics, and Public Policy Symposium: The Dignity of Work
Friday, February 23, 2024 | 8:45 AM–5:00 PM | Eck Visitor Center Auditorium
The Journal of Law, Ethics, and Public Policy\u27s annual symposium will be held this Friday, February 23 in the auditorium of the Eck Visitor Center. This year\u27s theme is The Dignity of Work. The day consists of three panel sessions as well as a keynote address by Dr. Matthew Crawford, author of Shop Class as Soulcraft. Breakfast and lunch will be served. Breakfast starts at 8:45 a.m. The first session starts at 9:15 a.m.
Co-sponsors: Sheedy Family Program in Economy, Enterprise & Society Notre Dame Law School, Program on Church, State & Society De Nicola Center for Ethics & Culture Nanovic Institute for European Studies Center for Social Concerns Notre Dame Center for Citizenship & Constitutional Governmenthttps://scholarship.law.nd.edu/ndls_posters/1806/thumbnail.jp
The design and performance of earth and rockfill dams on drawdown
This thesis was scanned from the print manuscript for digital preservation and is copyright the author.
Researchers can access this thesis by asking their local university, institution or public library to
make a request on their behalf. Monash staff and postgraduate students can use the link in the References field
Duality and Reconciliation: Kleist, Hoffmann and German Romanticism
Heinrich von Kleist (1777-1811) and E.T.A. Hoffmann (1776-1822), two authors living and working during the time of German Romanticism, have long since distinguished themselves as contributors to the cultural atmosphere of Europe at the time and as individual, dynamic artists in their own right. In this thesis, I will offer an exploration of four novellas by Kleist, including Die Marquise von O… (1808), Das Erdbeben in Chili (1807), Michael Kohlhaas (1808), and Die Verlobung in Santo Domingo (1811), as well as four of Hoffmann’s works: Der Sandmann (1817), Das Fräulein von Scudéri (1819), Der goldne Topf (1814) and Das öde Haus (1817). In each of these works, themes of paradox, cognitive dissonance, and contradiction figure prominently and, as each author attempts to confront questions of the fantastic and the real, we begin to see the destructive potential of duality and the ways in which both Kleist and Hoffmann, working within the context of German Romanticism, choose to address the idea of reconciliation. In this thesis, I will argue that it is primarily this duality, and not its reconciliation, upon which both authors focus in a way that engages readers and provokes active participation in the reading of the texts. I also argue that the process of Romantic creation, while difficult to define, is in part driven by the pursuit of and attempt toward reconciliation. While Kleist is considered to be a classic outsider to Romanticism, we will see that, in addition, Hoffmann may in fact to a certain extent resist an exclusive categorization as a Romantic author as well and can also be seen as an outsider of the movement to which he is generally assumed to belong
Fatores críticos de sucesso: a experiência de uma franquia do segmento de vestuário feminino em Joinville/SC
TCC (graduação) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro Sócio Econômico, Curso de Administração.O objetivo deste trabalho consiste em analisar os fatores críticos de sucesso da gestão da franquia ALPHA de Joinville/SC, no período de 2003 a 2005. Foi identificado a história de vida da organização e de seus empreendedores, descrito o histórico da organização, explicado o processo de franchising, discorrido sobre empreendedorismo e identificados os fatores críticos de sucesso da organização. Os tipos de dados utilizados nesta pesquisa foram retirados de fonte tais como livros, jornais, internet, periódicos e revistas especializadas. A presente pesquisa caracteriza-se como estudo de caso, e tem por objeto a franquia da marca ALPHA situada na cidade de Joinville. Foram obtidas informações sobre a realidade da empresa no período de 2003 a 2005 para elaborar o presente trabalho. Com base na análise desenvolvida sobre o material bibliográfico e a realidade encontrada na empresa, identificou-se os principais fatores críticos de sucesso que são: ter um bom administrador (gerente), fazer uso de capital próprio, motivação para realizar, persistência na busca dos objetivos, autoconfiança, capacidade de assumir riscos, capacidade prospectiva para detectar tendências futuras, estratégia de marketing bem definida, conquista da fidelidade da clientela, comunicação eficaz com o mercado, tecnologia atual. localização adequada, relação de parceria estabelecida com fornecedor (franqueador). seleção do ponto comercial e direitos territoriais, fornecimento de informações, supervisão e suporte e por fim, o controle de qualidade. 0 tema apresentado no estudo é relevante para a sociedade, pois permite que empresário não cometam os mesmo erros cometidos pelos gestores da empresa ALPHA. Além disso, o histórico organizacional descrito no trabalho visa estimular e incentivar que demais pessoas abram seus próprios negócios, aquecendo assim a economia, gerando emprego e aumentando a arrecadação de impostos para o governo
Group portrait of staff of Base Hospital 50 at the outfitting station, New York, approximately 1918-1919
The organization of Base Hospital No. 50 was authorized by the U.S. War department for the American Red Cross in October 1917 under the auspices of the University of Washington in Seattle. This unit was called into active military service for duty in France during World War I.
Caption on mount: University of Washington Base 50.
Signatures on photograph: Belle McKay Fraser; Cora Gillespie; Evelyn Wood; Ethel Dorrance; Minnie Andrews; Helen E. Beeler; Martha M. Bloom; Edith Borkman; Tyra J. Cedergren; Maree Crowell Chandler; Linda M. Coleman; Clara M. Cramer; Grace V. Dye; Juanita A. Harden; Eva N. Johnson; Anna J. Johnson; Myrtle A. Johnson; Elizabeth C. Johnson; Theresa Langer; Agnetta Larson; Karon Lauridsen; Leslie G. Lettrick; Anna C. Long; Edna M. Mason; Ada Merrifield; Rose McE. Moran; Gertrude E. Morris; M.B. MacCosham; Katherine M. MacMillan; Lillian MacMillan; Mary E. McKay; Ethel Mae MacNaughton; Grace E. McMonagle; Amanda Needles; Zowitza Nicholas; Mollie O'Brien; Matilda S. Rasmussen; Celia K. Robb; Mary E. Russell; Mabel Seaborn; May Sheedy; Olive St. Cyr; Bertha M. Thayer; Bernice L. Thomson; Katherine M. Walsh; Alexandria C. Walker; Josephine E. Warner; Irene M. Wilkinson. PH Coll 387
The Future of Charge Card Networks
The general-purpose charge card is now ubiquitous and largely taken for granted. Annual charge card volume exceeds $5 trillion worldwide. Within the United States, nearly one billion cards are in use (about eight per household), and more than two billion worldwide. But charge cards, or more specifically, the cooperative networks that serve the largest card systems, Visa and MasterCard, are under legal attack through multiple lawsuits and under regulatory challenge in other countries. We trace in this essay multiple possible future 'scenarios'. This focus on possible futures distinguishes our work from many earlier studies of this subject.
