Institution
Saint Mary's University
Education•Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada•
About: Saint Mary's University is a education organization based out in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Stars. The organization has 1931 authors who have published 4993 publications receiving 143226 citations.
Topics: Population, Stars, Galaxy, Volcanic rock, Basalt
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A review of the literature on strategy explores the study and practice of strategy as a discourse, engulfed by its own truth effects as discussed by the authors, and demonstrates the value of a postmodern radical reflexive account through the application of Baudrillard's (1983, 1988, 1991, 1994) simulation and simulacra.
Abstract: Over the past three decades strategic management has become a crucial aspect of business education and practice. At the core of strategic management – linking technique to worldview – is modelling (e.g. value chain, SWOT analysis) whereby the complex elements of strategic thinking are simplified. This accounts in large part for the apparent popularity of strategic management as complex interrelationships are pursued through relatively simple models. Yet has the field of strategic management realized the third order of simulacra? Is strategic management a model of simulation whereby reality has been replaced by hyperreality? A review of the extant literature on strategy explores the study and practice of strategy as a discourse, engulfed by its own truth effects. An examination of the concepts of reflexivity demonstrates the value of a postmodern radical reflexive account through the application of Baudrillard's (1983, 1988, 1991, 1994) simulation and simulacra. It is through the development of a radical reflexive discourse of strategy as simulacra, this paper critically examines the study and practice of strategy and the lessons we can take from this perspective.
114 citations
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113 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, an automated method was developed to find the boundaries of geomorphological objects and to extract the objects as groups of aggregated pixels, with the boundaries being breaks of slope on two-dimensional downslope profiles.
113 citations
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TL;DR: The observed rates of period change in over 200 Milky Way Cepheids were demonstrated to be in general agreement with predictions from stellar evolutionary models, although the sample also disp....
Abstract: The rate of period change \documentclass{aastex} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{bm} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{pifont} \usepackage{stmaryrd} \usepackage{textcomp} \usepackage{portland,xspace} \usepackage{amsmath,amsxtra} \usepackage[OT2,OT1]{fontenc}
ewcommand\cyr{ \renewcommand\rmdefault{wncyr} \renewcommand\sfdefault{wncyss} \renewcommand\encodingdefault{OT2}
ormalfont \selectfont} \DeclareTextFontCommand{\textcyr}{\cyr} \pagestyle{empty} \DeclareMathSizes{10}{9}{7}{6} \begin{document} \landscape $\dot{P}$ \end{document} for a Cepheid is shown to be a parameter that is capable of indicating the instability‐strip crossing mode for individual objects and, in conjunction with light amplitude, the likely location of the object within the instability strip. The observed rates of period change in over 200 Milky Way Cepheids are demonstrated to be in general agreement with predictions from stellar evolutionary models, although the sample also disp...
113 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a critique of structuralist and post-modern approaches to the study of agrarian reform and the viability, nature and significance of peasant and landless movements in Latin America is presented.
Abstract: This article is a critique of structuralist and postmodern approaches to the study of agrarian reform and the viability, nature and significance of peasant and landless movements in Latin America. Contrary to the dominant structuralist view, we argue that peasant and landless workers’ movements in Latin America are not anachronistic but dynamic modern classes, which in many contexts play a major role in opposing the dominant neoliberal agenda. Against postmodern interpretations of such grassroots agrarian movements, we also argue that in terms of action and programme, peasant and landless workers’ movements have raised fundamental class issues, in some instances combining them with ethnic demands. Deploying a reconstituted class analysis, we examine four cases of peasant/landless workers movements currently challenging state power: the Rural Landless Workers Movement in Brazil, the Revolutionary Armed Forces in Colombia, the National Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities in Ecuador, and the Zapatista ...
113 citations
Authors
Showing all 1958 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Scott Chapman | 118 | 579 | 46199 |
Michael J. Zaworotko | 97 | 519 | 44441 |
Brad K. Gibson | 94 | 564 | 38959 |
Christine D. Wilson | 90 | 528 | 39198 |
Peter A. Cawood | 87 | 362 | 27832 |
Mark D. Fleming | 81 | 433 | 36107 |
Julian Barling | 75 | 262 | 22478 |
Winslow R. Briggs | 74 | 269 | 19375 |
Ian G. McCarthy | 71 | 204 | 17912 |
Tomislav Friščić | 70 | 294 | 18307 |
Nico Eisenhauer | 66 | 400 | 15746 |
Warren E. Piers | 64 | 217 | 14555 |
Amanda I. Karakas | 63 | 321 | 12797 |
Yuichi Terashima | 59 | 259 | 11994 |
Colin Mason | 58 | 236 | 12490 |