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Hilary Collins

Researcher at Open University

Publications -  22
Citations -  594

Hilary Collins is an academic researcher from Open University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Identity (social science) & Organizational identity. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 21 publications receiving 547 citations.

Papers
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Book

Creative Research: The Theory and Practice of Research for the Creative Industries

TL;DR: In this paper, Collins introduces and analyzes different techniques and procedures for collecting and analyzing a variety of data, highlighting the skills necessary to promote the effectiveness and validity of research within the creative industries.
Book

Creative Research: The Theory and Practice of Research for the Creative Industries (Required Reading Range)

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the key knowledge, practices and skills of research methods in the study of design management and focus on defining the research problem, deciding on a research process and undertaking a research project as a student at undergraduate or postgraduate level or as a practitioner within the creative fields.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can Design Thinking Still Add Value

TL;DR: It may be that design thinking needs to be seen by business as nothing less than a paradigm shift rather than as a process like TQM or JIT as mentioned in this paper, which is not the case here.
Journal ArticleDOI

Behind the digital curtain: a study of academic identities, liminalities and labour market adaptations for the ‘Uber-isation’ of HE

TL;DR: This paper explored sense-making narratives from teaching academics undertaking identity work in the context of a rapidly expanding digital education sphere, and considered the implications for emotio-nologia and identity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Connecting people to purpose builds a sustainable business model at Bark House

TL;DR: The Bark House, a purpose-driven, sustainability-oriented small and medium-size enterprise (SME) based in North Carolina, has developed a resilient business model that has generated hundreds of green-collar jobs as discussed by the authors.