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Found 680788 results for '"timing"', showing 1-10
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  1. Journal of Management for Global Sustainable Development (Times Research Consultant (TRC))
    RePEc:trc:journl  Follow on MyIDEAS
  2. Andresson Silva Firmino & Ricardo Martins Abreu Silva & Valéria Cesário Times (2019): A reactive GRASP metaheuristic for the container retrieval problem to reduce crane’s working time
    ., energy, time, etc. ... Therefore, in this study, a crane’s trajectory is defined to better measure the crane’s working cost, and the optimization goal is to minimize the crane’s working time considering the crane’s trajectory. ... The experimental results show that the proposed algorithm is able to provide better solutions for both the number of container relocations and the crane’s working time, when compared to heuristic approaches in the recent literature.
    RePEc:spr:joheur:v:25:y:2019:i:2:d:10.1007_s10732-018-9390-0  Save to MyIDEAS
  3. Time, Victoria & Payne, Brian K. & Gainey, Randy R. (2010): Don't help victims of crime if you don't have the time: Assessing support for Good Samaritan laws
    In recent times, a great deal of legislative attention has been directed towards whether Good Samaritan laws should be developed- laws that require bystanders to help those who are imperiled.
    RePEc:eee:jcjust:v:38:y::i:4:p:790-795  Save to MyIDEAS
  4. Martin Stangborli Time & Frode Veggeland (2020): Adapting to a Global Health Challenge: Managing Antimicrobial Resistance in the Nordics
    This article explores the adaptation of Norway and Sweden to one of the major challenges to global public health, antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Guided by assumptions derived from institutional theory, the article investigates whether, and, if so, how the AMR problem has affected the two Nordic countries’ administrative systems and frameworks for Nordic cooperation. The article builds on selected literature, expert interviews, and public documents. The findings suggest that the international impact on Norway and Sweden’s managerial adaptation to AMR is limited. Instead, adaptation takes place through incremental change within existing structures for disease prevention and control and follows traditional ways of organizing political and administrative systems.
    RePEc:cog:poango:v:8:y:2020:i:4:p:53-64  Save to MyIDEAS
  5. Time, Victoria & Payne, Brian K. (2008): School violence prevention measures: School officials' attitudes about various strategies
    Concern about school violence has been escalating in recent years. A variety of strategies are used in efforts to prevent violence in schools. These remedies can be classified as legal, interactionist, and physical remedies. Legal remedies refer to laws, like the reasonable suspicion to search strategy that allows school officials to search and seize contraband. Interactionist remedies refer to practices that encourage students and other school officials to communicate more openly with school officials about possible cases of violence.
    RePEc:eee:jcjust:v:36:y:2008:i:4:p:301-306  Save to MyIDEAS
  6. Martin Stangborli Time & Frode Veggeland (2020): Adapting to a Global Health Challenge: Managing Antimicrobial Resistance in the Nordics
    This article explores the adaptation of Norway and Sweden to one of the major challenges to global public health, antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Guided by assumptions derived from institutional theory, the article investigates whether, and, if so, how the AMR problem has affected the two Nordic countries’ administrative systems and frameworks for Nordic cooperation. The article builds on selected literature, expert interviews, and public documents. The findings suggest that the international impact on Norway and Sweden’s managerial adaptation to AMR is limited. Instead, adaptation takes place through incremental change within existing structures for disease prevention and control and follows traditional ways of organizing political and administrative systems.
    RePEc:cog:poango:v8:y:2020:i:4:p:53-64  Save to MyIDEAS
  7. Bonneau Michel (2009): Time’ in tourism: ‘individual time’ and ‘social time
    The author does a review of the research into tourist activity and concludes that the particular character of tourist behaviour is reflected best in the study of time budgets. ... In the conclusions to the article the author presents typical examples of qualitative time (recreation, holidays, tourism).
    RePEc:vrs:touris:v:19:y:2009:i:1-2:p:13-16:n:1  Save to MyIDEAS
  8. Carmen Sirianni & Cynthia Negrey (2000): Working Time as Gendered Time
    Household-labor time and market-labor time are organized in part through the social structure of unequal gender relations. ... In this article we discuss the gendered underpinnings of the organization of time in contemporary Western society by critically examining household-labor time and the masculine models of career and noncareer employment. In addition to the important feminist goal of pay equity, we argue for a feminist politics of time that promotes alternative work-time arrangements for women and men to foster gender equality in the market and at home.
    RePEc:taf:femeco:v:6:y:2000:i:1:p:59-76  Save to MyIDEAS
  9. Stewart, Jay (2009): The Timing of Maternal Work and Time with Children
    I use data from the American Time Use Survey to examine how maternal employment affects when during the day that mothers of pre-school-age children spend doing enriching childcare and whether they adjust their schedules to spend time with their children at more-desirable times of day. I find that employed mothers shift enriching childcare time from workdays to nonwork days. On workdays, full-time employed parents shift enriching childcare time toward evenings, but there is little shifting among part-time employed mothers. I find no evidence that full-time employed mothers adjust their schedules to spent time with their children at more-preferred times of day, whereas part-time employed mothers shift employment to later in the day.
    RePEc:iza:izadps:dp4219  Save to MyIDEAS
  10. Kätlin Pulk (2022): Events, Time, and Events-Based Time
    The second approach views events as signifiers of time. Therefore, time is seen as residing in events, and events are seen as making time visible. This is important for reckoning time in events. ... The third approach sees events residing in time. ... The third approach is based on the ontology of time.
    RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-030-90696-2_6  Save to MyIDEAS
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