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Institution

University of Lapland

EducationRovaniemi, Finland
About: University of Lapland is a education organization based out in Rovaniemi, Finland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Arctic & Context (language use). The organization has 665 authors who have published 1870 publications receiving 39129 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Rovaniemi & Lapin yliopisto.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the possibilities and challenges of using hybrid problem-based learning to help business students engage in critically reflexive processes and thus the social construction of corporate social responsibility meanings are explored.
Abstract: Although experiential learning has been widely discussed in relation to the teaching of corporate social responsibility, the socially mediated and discursive nature of experiential learning approaches to corporate social responsibility has been either neglected or given only cursory coverage in the literature. Considering this gap, I problematise corporate social responsibility education within the axioms of managerialism, arguing that it should also allow business students to critically evaluate, analyse and question the basic premises underlying contemporary business practices. Using an action research approach, I explore the possibilities and challenges of using hybrid problem-based learning to help business students engage in critically reflexive processes and, thus, the social construction of corporate social responsibility meanings. Drawing on discourse analysis, I illustrate two central discursive patterns that characterise the struggle over corporate social responsibility meanings in a series of c...

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the regime of innocent passage in international law through the analysis of relevant treaty rules, including recent developments at IMO, and state practice, focusing on passage by warships and to coastal state jurisdiction over pollution by vessels in general and over ships carrying hazardous cargoes in particular.

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2006-The Auk
TL;DR: The results suggest that current selection pressures from brood parasites do not always explain the current levels of defense in host populations under different parasitism pressures.
Abstract: Brood parasitism selects for defensive mechanisms that enhance host fitness. Therefore, host populations under different parasitism pressures may express different levels of defense against brood parasites. We tested the rejection responses of currently parasitized and unparasitized Common Redstart (Phoenicurus phoenicurus) populations in Finland to artificial Common Cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) eggs. We predicted a higher level of defense in the parasitized population, but in fact the rejection rate was higher in the nonparasitized population. Nonmimetic artificial eggs were rejected more often than mimetic ones. Desertion probability was higher in the nonparasitized population and was independent of artificial egg type. Common Redstarts in the parasitized population rejected the artificial eggs mostly through ejection, whereas desertion was a more frequent rejection method in the nonparasitized population. Our results suggest that current selection pressures from brood parasites do not always expla...

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a qualitative analysis based on interviews with virtually all top managers in the Nordic financial services company Nordea (53 men and two women) found that becoming international induces a particular masculine identity for the top managers.
Abstract: Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to address gender and management in contemporary globalization by focusing on the ways in which male top managers in a multinational corporation (MNC) construct their identities in interviews with researchers.Design/methodology/approach – Qualitative analysis based on interviews with virtually all top managers in the Nordic financial services company Nordea (53 men and two women).Findings – It is found that becoming international induces a particular masculine identity for the top managers. In becoming international, however, their national identification persists. The unstability of the MNC as a political constellation leaves room for questioning the transnational identity offered.Originality/value – This paper's findings suggest that in the global world of business, national identity can also be interpreted as something positive and productive, contrary to how it has been previously treated in feminist and men's studies literature.

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Brown trout introduction displaced macro-invertebrates, i.e. G. lacustris, from the pelagic area, and caused a trophic cascade effect that slightly increased the species richness of Cladocera, but markedly increased their abundance, as shown in the sediment record.
Abstract: Effects of fish introductions on lake ecosystems have long been debated. It has been hypothesized that such effects should be strongest in oligotrophic lakes, where fish were not originally present. We investigated two lakes (one naturally fishless, one fish-stocked in 1980) in northern Fennoscandia, selected because of the absence of other anthropogenic stressors and a well-known stocking history. The diet of the introduced brown trout (Salmo trutta L.) was analysed to estimate the effect of their predation on the pelagic invertebrate communities. Quantitative and qualitative samples were taken to assess the current abundances of pelagic macro- and micro-invertebrates in different habitats of both lakes, to infer the impact of brown trout presence. Past abundances of Cladocera, Chironomidae, Gammarus lacustris and Daphnia longispina were also estimated based on subfossil remains in the sediment, and used to assess how brown trout introduction affected macro- and micro-invertebrates living in different habitats. Relative abundance and species richness of Cladocera were evaluated in sediment cores from both lakes, to assess whether changes were caused by fish-introduction-induced trophic cascades or climate change. Also, planktonic Cladocera (Eubosmina) body sizes were measured to evaluate their response to the release of macro-invertebrate predation pressure. Brown trout introduction displaced macro-invertebrates, i.e. G. lacustris, from the pelagic area, and caused a trophic cascade effect that slightly increased the species richness of Cladocera, but markedly increased their abundance, as shown in the sediment record. Introduced brown trout did not, however, cause a decline in Chironomidae, G. lacustris or D. longispina abundances. On the contrary, it resulted in an approximately five-fold increase in Chironomidae accumulation rates in the sediment. The release of macro-invertebrate predation pressure did not lead to changes in the body shapes of Eubosmina, which could be a consequence of the composition of the original macro-invertebrate species assemblage.

22 citations


Authors

Showing all 710 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Hong Li10377942675
John C. Moore7638925542
Jeffrey M. Welker5717918135
Bruce C. Forbes431307984
Mats A. Granskog411415023
Manfred A. Lange38924256
Liisa Tyrväinen371126649
Samuli Helama351564008
Aslak Grinsted34899653
Jukka Jokimäki31934175
Sari Stark29582559
Elina Lahelma27862217
Jonna Häkkilä25972185
Rupert Gladstone23512320
Justus J. Randolph23662160
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202318
202261
2021158
2020157
2019172
2018128