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Book part
Publication date: 4 April 2013

Chapter 3 Beyond Booker: Assessing the Prospects of Black and Latino Mayoral Contenders in Newark, New Jersey

Andra Gillespie

Purpose – Cory Booker will likely step down as mayor of Newark in 2014 or 2018. When he does, the possibility of a strong Latino candidate emerging is quite likely. There…

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Abstract

Purpose – Cory Booker will likely step down as mayor of Newark in 2014 or 2018. When he does, the possibility of a strong Latino candidate emerging is quite likely. There are a number of black politicians who would like to succeed Booker as well. This chapter identifies eight potential successors to Booker and assesses their ability to create a multiracial electoral coalition using prior vote performance in citywide elections.Design/methodology/approach – This study regresses district (or precinct) level vote preferences for the aforementioned potential successors in previous elections on the racial and ethnic composition of the district, using voter district demographic data from 2000 and 201011The 2010 data is still incomplete at the time of publication. As such, this data will be used sparingly. compiled by the US Census Bureau and the Minnesota Population Center.Findings − There is a decade’s worth of evidence suggesting racially polarized voting among blacks and Latinos in Newark. The racialized black and Latino candidates examined in this chapter had much stronger support in districts with large coethnic populations. In contrast, the more deracialized candidates often had softer support in districts with high concentrations of coethnic voters, but often performed better in districts with higher concentrations of non-coethnics.Originality/value − While the author cautions against reading too much into the findings, the results do portend a future of racially polarized voting in Newark, especially as the city’s population diversifies and as different factions vie for power.

Details

21st Century Urban Race Politics: Representing Minorities as Universal Interests
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S0195-7449(2013)0000018007
ISBN: 978-1-78190-184-7

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Book part
Publication date: 12 September 2014

How Stories Can Be Used in Organisations Seeking to Teach the Virtues

Katalin Illes and Howard Harris

Our focus is on the use of narrative in ethics education in organisations. The effectiveness of stories as a basis for executive education and organisational development…

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Abstract

Our focus is on the use of narrative in ethics education in organisations. The effectiveness of stories as a basis for executive education and organisational development has been described in other chapters in this book and elsewhere. Many writers provide examples linking stories and ethics, but the examples are drawn most often from overtly ethical stories. We offer a more expansive and inclusive view, suggesting that all stories are valuable for teaching ethics. We use Booker’s (2004) finding that all stories belong to one of seven basic plots – overcoming the monster; rags to riches; the quest; voyage and return; comedy; tragedy; and rebirth – to show that no major category of narrative need be omitted from those which can provide examples or links to the development of virtue in organisations. We provide examples of how stories can be used to encourage the development of specific virtues including courage, integrity, hope, inquisitiveness, humour and prudence. Six further aspects are considered – whether only moral stories are useful, the value of complexity, the benefit of familiarity, stories of failure, the selection of appropriate stories and whether non-fiction can be included.

Details

The Contribution of Fiction to Organizational Ethics
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-209620140000011009
ISBN: 978-1-78350-949-2

Keywords

  • Narrative
  • ethics
  • organisations
  • virtue
  • seven basic plots
  • Booker

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Article
Publication date: 9 April 2018

Co-creating value with customers: a study of mobile hotel bookings in China

Jialin (Snow) Wu, Rob Law and Jingyan Liu

This study aims to develop a framework to explain the reciprocity of the value co-creation process in mobile hotel booking context and to clarify values for customer and supplier.

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Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to develop a framework to explain the reciprocity of the value co-creation process in mobile hotel booking context and to clarify values for customer and supplier.

Design/methodology/approach

A research framework was developed based on the previous literature to derive insights on value co-creation process. Online surveys were conducted among mobile hotel bookers in China. Confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation modeling were used to test the proposed framework.

Findings

The findings suggested that suppliers should improve the values for customers (functionality, usability and perceived value) to achieve values for themselves [customer lifetime value (CLV), customer knowledge value (CKV), customer referral value (CRV) and customer influencer value (CIV)]. The relation between satisfaction and CLV was moderated by the CIV from other customers.

Practical implications

Suppliers should enhance customer value from the aspects of functionality, usability and perceived value to earn a competitive advantage. Moreover, for suppliers, non-transactional values such as other CIV play an increasingly critical role apart from economic value for development.

Originality/value

This study not only added empirical analysis on value co-creation in m-Tourism but also extended the current literature by validating a research model which integrates website evaluation research with Kumar et al. (2010)’s customer engagement value framework. Instead of serving as a mediator, mobile app was regarded as one of the indispensable actors involved in value co-creation.

Details

International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, vol. 30 no. 4
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCHM-08-2016-0476
ISSN: 0959-6119

Keywords

  • China
  • Value co-creation
  • Service-dominant logic
  • e-Tourism
  • Hotel booking
  • Mobile app

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Article
Publication date: 22 September 2020

White generosity: black freedom faced with good intentions

Natalie Wall

The author advances a theory of white generosity, a product of whiteness and of hierarchised relationships between races characterised by the giving to the racialised…

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Abstract

Purpose

The author advances a theory of white generosity, a product of whiteness and of hierarchised relationships between races characterised by the giving to the racialised person that which has not been asked for and which has no practical immediate purpose, which can be used by anti-racist scholars as a framework for analysing racial oppression.

Design/methodology/approach

Using postcolonial and cultural studies and deconstructionist techniques in tandem with autoethnography, the author uses textual readings to examine instances of “giving” shaped by white generosity, drawing on Jacques Derrida's work on the gift in order to deconstruct the structure and rhetorical moves of white generosity.

Findings

White generosity demands gratitude in excess of the value of the thing given. If for Derrida the gift is given unconditionally, becoming devalued as soon as it demands acknowledgement or draws attention to itself as gift, white generosity is the gift's inverse: a “giving” that manifests itself only as a demand for its supposed recipient's gratitude. Emancipation is no gift at all; simply a deferral of debt. The “gifts” of diversity, decolonisation, widening participation or access are all objects of brokerage in a system that is inherently unequal and violent for black folx.

Originality/value

White generosity is related to theoretical constructs, such as white fragility, that have commanded significant scholarly engagement. However, it has not previously been named or analysed in a systematic way. This article offers a theoretical framework for use by anti-racist activists and scholars to name, interrogate and deconstruct a powerful narrative used in the continued marginalisation of non-white folx.

Details

Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal, vol. ahead-of-print no. ahead-of-print
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/EDI-02-2020-0029
ISSN: 2040-7149

Keywords

  • Ethnic minorities
  • Culture
  • Diversity
  • Black people
  • Racial discrimination
  • White generosity

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Article
Publication date: 1 February 1998

The use of quality tools and techniques in product introduction: an assessment methodology

M. Spring, R. McQuater, K. Swift, B. Dale and J. Booker

Based on fieldwork carried out on two Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council‐funded projects in the area of design, the paper presents the details of an…

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Based on fieldwork carried out on two Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council‐funded projects in the area of design, the paper presents the details of an assessment approach which has been developed to assess the use and application of quality tools and techniques in the new product design and development process. Its use will help management recognise the symptoms, root causes, issues and problems that are adversely affecting NPDD, with respect to application (or lack of it) of quality tools and techniques.

Details

The TQM Magazine, vol. 10 no. 1
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/09544789810197855
ISSN: 0954-478X

Keywords

  • Assessment
  • Design
  • New product development
  • Qualitative techniques

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Article
Publication date: 1 April 1975

BUDGEN: The suburban located multiple

Jennifer Tanburn

Booker McConnell's supermarket and food store chain trades under the name of Budgen. In total, however, Booker's UK Food Distribution Division covers a wide range of food…

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Abstract

Booker McConnell's supermarket and food store chain trades under the name of Budgen. In total, however, Booker's UK Food Distribution Division covers a wide range of food distribution activities; its wholesale division delivers to members of the Mace voluntary group and also operates over 50 cash and carry warehouses; the division's turnover is around £180m.

Details

Retail and Distribution Management, vol. 3 no. 4
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb060372
ISSN: 0307-2363

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Article
Publication date: 12 March 2018

Rapha and its embedded storytelling

Catherine Glover

The purpose of this paper is to explore how British cycling brand Rapha innovatively embeds stories throughout its touchpoints and in its garments.

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to explore how British cycling brand Rapha innovatively embeds stories throughout its touchpoints and in its garments.

Design/methodology/approach

Using narrative inquiry methodology and subjective personal introspection, it analyses published brand texts, cycling apparel, primary interviews and lived experience to establish a key story theme and the role, form, value and continuity of stories in the brand’s canon.

Findings

It claims that Rapha’s texts reveal evidence of a specific story plot, the “Quest” (Booker, 2015), which acts as a structural editorial device and provides a rich lexicon that taps into a transformative personal experience. The study proposes that the brand’s employees identify themselves with quester values that define the brand’s essence, providing a coherent message and magnifying the agency in Rapha’s stories.

Research limitations/implications

This inquiry offers insight into a single consumer brand, yet it is the material manner in which stories are embedded within the brand offerings plus how lived experiences are recounted through structured storytelling that are of significance to wider practice and understanding.

Originality/value

It brings together industry, academic and personal insight to Rapha’s storytelling praxis to illustrate how storied content can be used to transmit values, purpose and passion to its audience.

Details

Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management: An International Journal, vol. 22 no. 1
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/JFMM-12-2016-0110
ISSN: 1361-2026

Keywords

  • Marketing
  • Fashion
  • Brand
  • Narrative inquiry
  • Story
  • Rapha

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Book part
Publication date: 12 February 2013

Common Skies and Divided Horizons? Sociology, Race, and Postcolonial Studies

Zine Magubane

This essay uses the sociology of race in the United States (as it pertains to the study of African Americans) as point of entry into the larger problem of what…

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This essay uses the sociology of race in the United States (as it pertains to the study of African Americans) as point of entry into the larger problem of what implications and impact the body of theory known as “postcolonialism” has for American sociology. It assesses how American sociology has historically dealt with what the discipline (in its less enlightened moments) called the “Negro Problem” and in its more “enlightened moments” called “the sociology of race relations.” The first half of the essay provides a sociological analysis of a hegemonic colonial institution – education – as a means of providing a partial history of how, why, and when American sociology shifted from a more “global” stance which placed the “Negro Problem” within the lager rubric of global difference and empire to a parochial sociology of “race relations” which expunged the history of colonialism from the discipline. The second half of the essay applies postcolonial literary theory to a series of texts written by the founder of the Chicago school of race relations, Robert Ezra Park, in order to document Park's shift from analyzing Black Americans within a colonial framework which saw the “Negro Problem” in America as an “aspect or phase” of the “Native Problem” in Africa to an immigration/assimilation paradigm that tenaciously avoided engaging with the fact that Black resistance to conflict in America might be articulated in global terms.

Details

Postcolonial Sociology
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S0198-8719(2013)0000024010
ISBN: 978-1-78190-603-3

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Article
Publication date: 1 June 1997

Problem‐oriented policing in public housing: identifying the distribution of problem places

Lorraine Green Mazerolle and William Terrill

Describes a problem‐oriented policing program in Jersey City that seeks to identify, analyze, and target drug, disorder, and violent crime problems in public housing…

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Describes a problem‐oriented policing program in Jersey City that seeks to identify, analyze, and target drug, disorder, and violent crime problems in public housing. Describes the problem scanning and identification processes that were used to detect hot spot locations within six public housing sites in the study. Begins the research with a premise that public housing sites differ from one site to the next and that, even within some public housing sites, some common area places will have problems, while others will not. Research findings support this premise. Concludes that there is a distribution of crime problems both across and within public housing sites challenging the hot spot label universalistically applied to public housing sites. The problem identification process has implications for the way problem‐solving teams approach policing public housing sites.

Details

Policing: An International Journal of Police Strategies & Management, vol. 20 no. 2
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/13639519710169117
ISSN: 1363-951X

Keywords

  • Cognitive mapping
  • Drug abuse
  • Housing
  • Police
  • Problem solving
  • Violence

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Article
Publication date: 1 May 2010

Does CO2 ameliorate phytotoxic effects of O3? A study case on their interactive effects on physiology, and yield of potato (Solanum tuberosumL. Cv. Kara) plants

Ibrahim A. Hassan

Potato (Solanum tuberosum L. cv. Kara) was grown in Open‐Top Chambers (OTCs) in Northern Egypt at ambient (ca 350 ppm) or doubled CO2 (ca 690 ppm) either in…

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Potato (Solanum tuberosum L. cv. Kara) was grown in Open‐Top Chambers (OTCs) in Northern Egypt at ambient (ca 350 ppm) or doubled CO2 (ca 690 ppm) either in charcoal‐filtered air (15 nl l‐1) or in non‐filtered ambient air (78 nll‐1 O3) to investigate the changes in physiology and yield under long‐term elevated CO2 and/or O3 throughout 100 days. Ambient O3 level reduced net photosynthetic rates, number and weight of tubers by 18 per cent, 41 per cent and 21 per cent, respectively, whereas elevated CO2 caused the opposite effect where it increased the same parameters by 44 per cent, 37 per cent and 20 per cent, respectively. Significant O3 x CO2 interactions were detected. However, O3 caused an increase in GR and POD by 18 per cent and 35 per cent, respectively, while CO2 caused an increase in POD only by 46 per cent, and there was no effect of O3 and/or CO2 on other enzymes. The results of this study are discussed in relation to predicted atmospheric changes.

Details

World Journal of Science, Technology and Sustainable Development, vol. 7 no. 2
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/20425945201000011
ISSN: 2042-5945

Keywords

  • Open‐Top Chambers
  • Potato (Solanum tuberosum)
  • O3
  • CO2
  • Photosynthesis
  • Stomatal Conductance
  • Antioxidant enzymes
  • Superoxide Dismutase
  • Glutathione Reductase
  • Ascorbate Peroxidase
  • APX
  • Guaiacol peroxidase

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