scholarly journals EXPLAINING LEADERSHIP BEHAVIORS IN PRIVATE AND PUBLIC MANAGERS: THE PUBLIC–PRIVATE DISTINCTION EXPLANATION VERSUS THE GENDER EXPLANATION

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jon Aarum Andersen
Author(s):  
G. Z. Yuzbashieva ◽  
A. M. Mustafayev ◽  
R. A. Imanov

The indicators that determine the change in the macroeconomic situation in the economy of Azerbaijan in 2010–2017, as well as the conditions for increasing the effectiveness of state intervention in solving economic problems are analyzed. It is noted that it is not the size of the public sector that becomes important, but its qualitative component (management and redistribution of resources and revenues, coordination of government intervention in economic relations). The main reasons limiting economic growth are identified, and the mechanisms for overcoming them are disclosed, since economic growth is of particular importance in the transformational period of state development. It substantiates the assertion that the forms and methods of state regulation should be the result of a reasonable combination of the private and public sectors of the economy to more effectively achieve the goal of economic development of the country and increase the welfare of the population. To this end, it is advisable to limit the actions of market forces and find a rational ratio of market and government measures that stimulate economic growth and development.It is shown that in the near future the development of the economy of Azerbaijan should be focused on the transition to the integration of various models of economic transformation; at the same time, “attraction of investments” should be carried out by methods of stimulating consumption, and the concept of a socially oriented economy, which the state also implements, should prevail, thereby ensuring social protection of the population and at the same time developing market relations. Disproportions in regional and sectoral development are also noted, which are the result of an ineffective distribution of goods produced, inadequate investment in human capital, a low level of coordination and stimulation of economic growth and development.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 656-673
Author(s):  
Adely Pereira Silveira ◽  
Fábio Perdigão Vasconcelos ◽  
Vanda Carneiro de Claudino Sales

No presente trabalho voltamos nossa atenção para as dunas móveis que são interfaces litorâneas, áreas continuamente modeladas pelas ações dos ventos e das ondas, importantes reservatórios de sedimentos que atuam na manutenção do fluxo sedimentar da faixa praial. Partindo deste universo, concentramos nossos estudos na Praia de Jericoacoara, município de Jijoca de Jericoacoara-CE, tendo como objetivo analisar a dinâmica morfossedimentar da Duna do Pôr do Sol na Praia de Jericoacoara, a partir da análise temporal de imagens de satélites; realização de perfis de praia,  cálculo do grau de declividade da face de avalanche da duna, da área e do volume sedimentar da duna; e da observação da evolução dos tipos de uso e de ocupação. Os resultados desta pesquisa possibilitaram a elaboração de diagnósticos e prognósticos evolutivos para a área estudada, fornecendo dados e informações que podem vir a subsidiar os gestores públicos na gestão adequada da zona costeira e na compreensão dos riscos ambientais.Palavras-chave: Dinâmica Costeira; Duna; Jericoacoara/CE. ABSTRACTIn the present work we turn our attention to the mobile dunes that are coastal interfaces and represent areas continuously modeled by the action of the winds and the waves, important reservoirs of sediments for  the maintenance of the sedimentary flow of the praial band. Starting from this universe, we concentrated our studies in the Beach of Jericoacoara, municipality of Jijoca of Jericoacoara-CE, aiming to analyze the morphosedimentary dynamics of the Dune of the Sunset on the Beach of Jericoacoara, based on the temporal analysis of satellite images; the realization of beach profiles, the calculation of the degree of slope of the slip face, the area and the sedimentary volume of the dune; and the observation of the evolution of types of use and occupation. The results of this research enabled the elaboration of diagnoses and evolutionary prognoses for the studied area, providing data and information that can subsidize the public managers in the adequate management of the coastal zone and in the understanding of the environmental risks.Keywords: Coastal Dynamics; Dune; Jericoacoara / CE. RESUMENEn el presente trabajo dirigimos nuestra atención a las dunas móviles que son interfaces costeras, áreas continuamente modeladas por las acciones de vientos y olas, importantes depósitos de sedimentos que actúan para mantener el flujo sedimentario de la playa. Desde este universo, enfocamos nuestros estudios en Jericoacoara Beach, Jijoca de Jericoacoara-CE, con el objetivo de analizar la dinámica morfosedimentaria de Sunset Dune en Jericoacoara Beach, a partir del análisis temporal de imágenes de satélite; haciendo perfiles de playa, calculando la pendiente de la cara de avalancha de dunas, el área y el volumen sedimentario de la duna; y observando la evolución de los tipos de uso y ocupación. Los resultados de esta investigación permitieron la elaboración de diagnósticos y pronósticos evolutivos para el área estudiada, proporcionando datos e información que pueden ayudar a los administradores públicos en el manejo adecuado de la zona costera y en la comprensión de los riesgos ambientales.Palabras clave: Dinámica costera; Duna; Jericoacoara / CE.


Author(s):  
Peter Knaack

G20 leaders vowed to collect and share OTC derivatives trade data so that regulators can obtain a global picture of market and risk evolution. This chapter employs a network perspective to explain why they have failed to meet this commitment to date. It examines three networks: the OTC derivatives market itself, and those of its private and public governance. The analysis shows that the Financial Stability Board (FSB), the public supervisory entity, struggles to establish itself at the center of the global regulatory network. It failed to act as a first mover in setting global trade identification standards (legal entity identifiers), and it has not been able to establish a core of global data warehouses. This is largely the result of unilateral action by FSB members. In particular, legislators in member countries have undermined FSB-led efforts by refusing to remove legal barriers to transnational regulatory cooperation and, in some instances, by erecting new ones.


Author(s):  
Pierre Pestieau ◽  
Mathieu Lefebvre

This chapter looks at the role of the public versus the private sector in the provision of insurance against social risks. After having discussed the evolution of the role of the family as support in the first place, the specificity of social insurance is emphasized in opposition to private insurance. Figures show the extent of spending on both private and public insurance and the chapter presents economic reasons to why the latter is more developed than the former. Issues related to moral hazard and adverse selection are addressed. The chapter also discusses somewhat more general arguments supporting social insurance such as population ageing, unemployment, fiscal competition and social dumping.


Author(s):  
Robin Holt

The chapter continues to discuss the association of judgment and sovereignty using Franz Kafka’s story Das Urteil (The Judgment). It does so in order to then introduce the public nature of spectating and how this has been played out in the thinking of Jurgen Habermas concerning speech situations, and in Hannah Arendt’s writings on the polis. Rather than pitch the public in contrast to the private, the chapter suggests spectating plays on the binary in ways that enrich both. This coming together of the private and public is then woven into the understanding of strategic inquiry as an organizational forming of self-presentation.


Author(s):  
Thomas W. Merrill

This chapter explores the relationship between private and public law. In civil law countries, the public-private distinction serves as an organizing principle of the entire legal system. In common law jurisdictions, the distinction is at best an implicit design principle and is used primarily as an informal device for categorizing different fields of law. Even if not explicitly recognized as an organizing principle, however, it is plausible that private and public law perform distinct functions. Private law supplies the tools that make private ordering possible—the discretionary decisions that individuals make in structuring their lives. Public law is concerned with providing public goods—broadly defined—that cannot be adequately supplied by private ordering. In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, various schools of thought derived from utilitarianism have assimilated both private and public rights to the same general criterion of aggregate welfare analysis. This has left judges with no clear conception of the distinction between private and public law. Another problematic feature of modern legal thought is a curious inversion in which scholars who focus on fields of private law have turned increasingly to law and economics, one of the derivatives of utilitarianism, whereas scholars who concern themselves with public law are increasingly drawn to new versions of natural rights thinking, in the form of universal human rights.


Author(s):  
Robin M. Boylorn

This chapter considers the role, importance, and impact of public intellectualism on the future of qualitative research. The chapter argues that the move toward technology and the public dissemination of information via the internet requires a shift in how and what we research with an expressed intention of reaching a broader and nonacademic audience. The chapter considers the relationship between the private and public sphere, and the so-called “bastardization” of intellectualism to explain the role and rise of public intellectualism in qualitative research. By considering issues such as personal subjectivity, accountability, representation, and epistemological privilege, the chapter discusses how public contexts inform qualitative research and, conversely, how qualitative research can inform the public.


2021 ◽  
pp. 001946462110203
Author(s):  
Dikshit Sarma Bhagabati ◽  
Prithvi Sinha ◽  
Sneha Garg

This essay aims to understand the role of religion in the social work of Pandita Ramabai (1858-1922). By focusing on a twenty-five-year period commencing with her conversion to Christianity in 1883, we argue that religion constructed a political framework for her work in Sharada Sadan and Mukti Mission. There is a lacuna in the conventional scholarship that underplays the nuances of religion in Ramabai’s reform efforts, which we try to fill by conceptualising faith and religiosity as two distinct signifiers of her private and public religious presentations respectively. Drawing on her published letters, the annual reports of the Ramabai Association in America, and a number of evangelical periodicals published during her lifetime, we analyse how she explored Christianity not just as a personal faith but also as a conduit for funds. The conversion enabled her access to American supporters, concomitantly consolidating their claim over her social work. Her peculiar religious identity—a conflation of Hinduism and Christianity—provoked strong protests from the Hindu orthodoxy while leading to a fall-out with the evangelists at the same time. Ramabai shaped the public portrayal of her religiosity to maximise support from American patrons, the colonial state, and liberal Indians, resisting the orthodoxy’s oppositions with these material exploits. Rather than surrendering to patriarchal cynicism, she capitalised on the socio-political volatilities of colonial India to further the nascent women’s movement.


2014 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 334-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Alford ◽  
Sophie Yates

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to add to the analytic toolkit of public sector practitioners by outlining a framework called Public Value Process Mapping (PVPM). This approach is designed to be more comprehensive than extant frameworks in either the private or public sectors, encapsulating multiple dimensions of productive processes. Design/methodology/approach – This paper explores the public administration and management literature to identify the major frameworks for visualising complex systems or processes, and a series of dimensions against which they can be compared. It then puts forward a more comprehensive framework – PVPM – and demonstrates its possible use with the example of Indigenous child nutrition in remote Australia. The benefits and limitations of the technique are then considered. Findings – First, extant process mapping frameworks each have some but not all of the features necessary to encompass certain dimensions of generic or public sector processes, such as: service-dominant logic; external as well internal providers; public and private value; and state coercive power. Second, PVPM can encompass the various dimensions more comprehensively, enabling visualisation of both the big picture and the fine detail of public value-creating processes. Third, PVPM has benefits – such as helping unearth opportunities or culprits affecting processes – as well as limitations – such as demonstrating causation and delineating the boundaries of maps. Practical implications – PVPM has a number of uses for policy analysts and public managers: it keeps the focus on outcomes; it can unearth a variety of processes and actors, some of them not immediately obvious; it can help to identify key processes and actors; it can help to identify the “real” culprits behind negative outcomes; and it highlights situations where multiple causes are at work. Originality/value – This approach, which draws on a number of precursors but constitutes a novel technique in the public sector context, enables the identification and to some extent the comprehension of a broader range of causal factors and actors. This heightens the possibility of imagining innovative solutions to difficult public policy issues, and alternative ways of delivering public services.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document