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1 – 10 of 12Yi Wang, Yangyang Jiang, Baojiang Geng, Ziqi Yan and Xiaorong Wang
This study aims to explore the social networks and network interactions of bed-and-breakfast (B&B) entrepreneurs in rural China. In addition, it evaluates how such network…
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to explore the social networks and network interactions of bed-and-breakfast (B&B) entrepreneurs in rural China. In addition, it evaluates how such network interactions relate to rural resilience.
Design/methodology/approach
In-depth interviews were performed in two locations: Ningbo and Dujiangyan, China. Purposive sampling was combined with snowball sampling to select interviewees. The 154 interviews involved 29 B&B owners and relevant social actors. All codes and data were analyzed using the discourse analysis framework.
Findings
The B&B owners’ social networks were identified based on strategic goals, revealing a business operation network, business development network and business citizenship network. Challenges in seeking financial support for rural B&Bs during the pandemic were specified along with network interactions. The institutional adaptation approach was used to evaluate network interaction in rural B&B business. It was argued that other networks would react based on primary network members’ goal compatibility and the effectiveness of the primary network in addressing obstacles.
Practical implications
This study indicates that the rural B&B entrepreneurs’ interactions with various networks could influence on business resilience, community resilience as well as rural resilience.
Originality/value
By combining the institutional adaptation typology with social network theory, this study generates a new typology of network interactions for rural B&Bs. The typology helps to explain how and why B&B entrepreneurs make decisions and provides a broader scope of social networks involved in these business operations.
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Zhaoqin Wang, Yu Shi and Xiaorong Wang
This paper aims to investigate the additive manufacturing (AM) approach of a spatial complex curve feature (SCCF, mapped from two-dimensional nonuniform rational B-splines…
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to investigate the additive manufacturing (AM) approach of a spatial complex curve feature (SCCF, mapped from two-dimensional nonuniform rational B-splines [2D-NURBS] curve) on a complex surface based on a serial robot using plasma built-up welding, and lays a foundation for plasma AM SCCFs on complex surfaces by combining the NURBS theory with the serial robotic kinematics.
Design/methodology/approach
Combining serial robotic kinematics and NURBS theory, a SCCF mapped from a square-like 2D-NURBS curve is prepared on a predefined complex NURBS surface using serial robotic plasma AM. The interpolation points C (ui) on the square-like 2D-NURBS curve are obtained using the equi-chord length interpolation method, and mapped on a predefined NURBS surface to get mapped points S (ui, vj). The homogeneous transformation matrix T = [n o a S (ui, vj)] of the plasma torch is calculated using the mapped points S (ui, vj) and the designated posture [n o a]. Using the inverse kinematics of the serial robot, the joint vector θ of the serial robot can be computed. After that, the AM programs are generated and transferred into the serial robotic controller and carried out by the serial robot of Motoman-UP6. The 2D-NURBS curve (square-like) is considered as AM trajectory planning curve, while its corresponding SCCF mapped from the 2D-NURBS curve as AM trajectory.
Findings
Simulation and experiments show that the preparation of SCCF (mapped from 2D-NURBS curve) on complex NURBS surface using robotic plasma AM is feasible and effective.
Originality/value
A SCCF mapped from a 2D-NURBS curve is prepared on a complex NURBS surface using the serial robotic plasma AM for the first time. It provides a theoretical and technical basis for plasma AM to produce SCCFs on complex surfaces. With the increasing demand for surface remanufacturing of complex parts, the serial robotic plasma AM of SCCFs on complex NURBS surfaces has a broad application prospect in aero-engine components, high-speed rail power components, nuclear industry components and complex molds.
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Ronald Busse, Malcolm Warner and Shuming Zhao
The purpose of this paper is to trace back the roots of US-driven “Human Resource Management” (HRM) school of thought which now become widely institutionalized in China, up to the…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to trace back the roots of US-driven “Human Resource Management” (HRM) school of thought which now become widely institutionalized in China, up to the present day.
Design/methodology/approach
It looks at the diffusion of management knowledge over the period to Chinese business, which involved in turn scientific management (SM), human relations (HR) and HRM, respectively, from the interwar years onwards, by using a bibliometric analysis of Chinese language sources, searching a number of databases now available.
Findings
The authors scanned the international, as well as Chinese, literature to support a conjecture of a HR route towards China and how it morphed into HRM and went on to conclude that there was by the end of the year 2015 still a significant output of academic publications with references to both HR and HRM, respectively, but that we must be cautious in asserting a firm conclusion.
Originality/value
This paper traces back the roots of Chinese HRM back to the US-driven HR school of thought.
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In this chapter, rephrasing Spivak's question into ‘can subaltern children speak?’, I reorient the research on China's gigantic population of children and youths in rural migrant…
Abstract
In this chapter, rephrasing Spivak's question into ‘can subaltern children speak?’, I reorient the research on China's gigantic population of children and youths in rural migrant families towards a critical interpretative approach. Based on life history and longitudinal ethnographic interview gathered with three cases, I unpack the multiple meanings migrants' children attach to mobility in their childhood experiences. First, despite emotional difficulties, children see their parents' out-migration more as a ‘mobility imperative’ than their abandonment of parental responsibilities, which should be contextualized in China's long-term urban-biased social policies and the resultant development gaps in rural and urban societies. Second, the seemingly ‘unstable’ and ‘flexible’ mobility patterns observed in migrant families should be understood in relation to a long-term family social mobility strategy to promote children's educational achievement and future attainment. The combination of absent class politics in an illiberal society with an enduring ideology of education-based meritocracy in Confucianism makes this strategy a culturally legitimate channel of social struggle for recognition and respect for the subaltern. Last, children in migrant families are active contributors to their families' everyday organization amidst mobilities through sharing care and household responsibilities, and developing temporal and mobility strategies to keep alive intergenerational exchanges and family togetherness. The study uncovers coexisting resilience and vulnerabilities of migrants' children in their ‘doing class’ in contemporary China. It also contributes insights into our understanding of the diversity of childhoods in Asian societies at the intersection of familyhood, class dynamics and cultural politics.
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Yucheng Liu, Xiaorong Fu and Xiangming Ren
Enterprises' multichannel operations provide various avenues for customer interaction; however, existing literature investigating customer-to-customer interaction (CCI) mainly…
Abstract
Purpose
Enterprises' multichannel operations provide various avenues for customer interaction; however, existing literature investigating customer-to-customer interaction (CCI) mainly focuses on a single channel. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the spillover effect of CCI and potential underlying mediating mechanisms in different information channels.
Design/methodology/approach
Three between-subjects experiments with 946 participants were employed to empirically validate the proposed hypotheses in the context of an experiential product and a material product.
Findings
Results suggest the clear spillover effect of CCI, indicating that positive CCI improves focal customers' satisfaction and purchase intention, whereas negative CCI reduces focal customers' satisfaction and purchase intention. Moreover, CCI's spillover effect varies based on the CCI channel. Offline CCI has a stronger positive spillover effect than online CCI. Contrarily, online CCI has a stronger negative spillover effect than offline CCI. Customer experience and trust are demonstrated to have mediating roles in this process.
Originality/value
This study is the first to comprehensively understand and compare the CCI spillover effect of the two information channels. The findings add to the existing knowledge of information processing in the psychological mechanisms influencing the belief in addition to providing insights for companies engaged in multichannel operations management across different channels.
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As internet dividends are gradually disappearing, loyalty programs have become the panacea for monetizing traffic, attracting new customers and retaining existing customers…
Abstract
Purpose
As internet dividends are gradually disappearing, loyalty programs have become the panacea for monetizing traffic, attracting new customers and retaining existing customers. Improving their effectiveness has thus become key to enterprises’ market competitiveness. However, member customers’ hedonic adaptation to this relationship strategy undermines its effectiveness. Based on the hedonic adaptation theory, this study aims to analyze the process of member customers' hedonic adaptation to preferential treatment in loyalty programs and explore the boundary conditions of alleviating this effect.
Design/methodology/approach
This study surveyed 271 member customers in China and tested the hypothesized relationships using structural equation modeling and multigroup analysis.
Findings
Preferential treatment suffers from hedonic adaptation to member customer engagement and customer gratitude, and customer tenure is a key condition for these effects. Customer gratitude is an intermediary mechanism that explains the hedonic adaptation effect of preferential treatment to member customers engagement. In addition, the structural characteristics of loyalty programs form the boundary condition that alleviates hedonic adaptation. The authors found that high-tier and -payment strategies are more likely to mitigate hedonic adaptation of preferential treatment to customer gratitude.
Originality/value
This study elucidates the factors that influence the effectiveness of preferential treatment and provides constructive insights into customer relationship management and for improving enterprise performance.
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In transnational families worldwide, different family members have varying degrees of mobility, as well as different physical and emotional experiences with relatives and places…
Abstract
In transnational families worldwide, different family members have varying degrees of mobility, as well as different physical and emotional experiences with relatives and places throughout their lives. For this reason, in recent decades, increasing attention has been placed upon the experiences of migrants' descendants growing up across borders.
Based on data from a multi-sited ethnography and a survey, this chapter explores the experiences of children growing up in Chinese transnational families split between Zhejiang province and their parents' immigration countries, located mainly in Europe. First, it introduces the migration context and methods, presenting the profiles and basic information of the 77 Chinese migrants' descendants who participated in a ‘Roots-seeking Journey’ summer camp held in their family area of origin in China, in 2018. Second, it explores their heterogeneous early childhood paths and conditions, paying particular attention to mobility, care strategies, intergenerational relations and transnational ties. Finally, this chapter introduces the concept of fluid childhoods, and reflects on the key role of care-related mobility and communication technologies in shaping their early life paths and experiences as well as further transnational engagement.
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The purpose of this study is to look at the market reaction to stock dividend announcements of real estate investment trusts (REITs) and further look at their determinants.
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this study is to look at the market reaction to stock dividend announcements of real estate investment trusts (REITs) and further look at their determinants.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper uses standard event methodology for market reaction to determine abnormal returns and CARs. Additionally the paper uses a logistic regression to analyze determinants.
Findings
Using a sample of 37 announcements from fourth quarter 2008 till first quarter 2010, the paper finds a mean negative abnormal return of −1.23 percent on the day of the announcement. Further, following the announcement day, the paper finds a weak significant positive abnormal return on the day after that (+1), which may convey some optimism from the investors. Further, when the paper looks at the characteristics of such REITs, it finds that REITs with higher leverage ratio and larger asset bases are more likely to issue stock dividend. Additionally, the results also indicate that the stock dividend announcement lead to an abnormal turnover of 0.24 percent for these REITs on the day following the announcement. This may suggest an increase in the marketability of the stock dividend REITs after the announcement date.
Practical implications
First, the reaction of the market will help gauge the response of investors to such announcements. This could provide REIT managers information on ex‐ante investor reaction to such dividend decisions. Second, this study will help identify the characteristics of REITs that declare stock dividends. For investors who rely on market trading information, study in this regard will help them to build up their portfolios.
Originality/value
This is the only study that looks exclusively at stock dividends in REITs and the second study to look at stock dividends in REITs in general. It is different from the other study in this field because of its methodology, sample size and some distinct results.
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Thailand has seen waves of youth-led protests over the past three years. Pro-democracy youth activists have vociferously criticised authority figures: teachers, parents and…
Abstract
Thailand has seen waves of youth-led protests over the past three years. Pro-democracy youth activists have vociferously criticised authority figures: teachers, parents and political leaders, especially the king. Drawing on vignettes assembled over a 14-year ethnographic work with young people in Thailand, as well as on current research on youth (online and offline) activism in Bangkok, I examine the multi-layered meaning of kinship in Thai society. The chapter reveals the political nature of childhood and parenthood as entangled modes of governance that come into being with other, both local and international cultural entities. I argue that Thai youth activists are attempting to rework dominant tropes that sustain “age-patriarchy” in the Buddhist kingdom. Their “engaged siblinghood” aims to reframe Thailand's generational order, refuting the moral principles that establish citizens' political subordination to monarchical paternalism and, relatedly, children's unquestionable respect to parents. As I show, Thai youth activists are doing so by engaging creatively with transnational discourses such as “democracy” and “children's rights,” while simultaneously drawing on K-pop icons, Japanese manga and Buddhist astrology. In articulating their dissent, these youths are thus bearers of a “bottom-up cosmopolitanism” that channels culturally hybrid, and politically subversive notions of childhood and citizenship in Southeast Asia's cyberspace and beyond. Whatever the outcome of their commitment, Thai youth activism signals the cultural disarticulation of the mytheme of the Father in Thailand, as well as the growing political influence of younger generations in the region.
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Chuanhong Miao, Xican Li and Jiehui Lu
The purpose of this paper is to establish the grey relational estimating model of soil pH value based on hyper-spectral data.
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to establish the grey relational estimating model of soil pH value based on hyper-spectral data.
Design/methodology/approach
As to the uncertainty of the factors affecting the soil pH value estimation based on hyper-spectral, the grey weighted relation estimation model was set up according to the grey system theory. Then the linear regression correction model is established according to the difference and grey relation degree information between the estimated samples and their corresponding pattern. At the same time, the model was applied to Hengshan county of Shanxi province.
Findings
The results are convincing: not only that the linear regression correction model of grey relation estimating pattern of soil pH value based on hyper-spectral data is valid, but also the model’s estimating accuracy is higher, which the corrected average relative error is 0.2578 per cent, and the decision coefficient R2=0.9876.
Practical implications
The method proposed in the paper can be used at soil pH value hyper-spectral inversion and even for other similar forecast problem.
Originality/value
The paper succeeds in realising both the soil pH value hyper-spectral grey relation estimating pattern based on the grey relational theory and the correction model of the estimating pattern by using the linear regression.
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