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The Discovery of Grounded Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research.
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This article is published in Social Forces.The article was published on 1968-06-01. It has received 44847 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Grounded theory & Computer-assisted qualitative data analysis software.read more
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The Speed Trap: Exploring the Relationship Between Decision Making and Temporal Context
TL;DR: The authors explored the connection between speed and decisiveness and found that speed is critical to organizational success, but how an emphasis on speed affects organizational processes remains unclear, despite a growing sense of importance of speed in organizational success.
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ISO 9000: Outside the Iron Cage
TL;DR: This research project contributes to a better understanding of how institutional pressures, which create "isomorphic" organizations by leading them to adopt identical management models, are reinterpreted, renegotiated, and modified within organizations.
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Managing the Unknowable: The Effectiveness of Early-stage Investor Gut Feel in Entrepreneurial Investment Decisions
Laura Huang,Jone L. Pearce +1 more
TL;DR: This article examined early-stage entrepreneurial investment decision making under conditions of extreme uncertainty and found that angel investors rely on a combination of expertise-based intuition and formal analysis in which intuition trumps analysis, contrary to reports in other investment contexts.
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e-Government information systems: Evaluation-led design for public value and client trust
Michael Grimsley,Anthony Meehan +1 more
TL;DR: An evaluative design framework for e-Government projects that complements traditional approaches to IS evaluation is developed based upon Moor's concept of public value, which focuses upon citizens' and clients' experiences of service provision and service outcomes as contributors to the formation of public trust.
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Food sovereignty in US food movements: radical visions and neoliberal constraints
TL;DR: This paper investigated on-the-ground processes through which food sovereignty articulates with the work of food justice and community food security activists in Oakland, California, and Seattle, Washington, and found that US-based projects were constrained by broader forces of neoliberalism that remained unrecognized by local activists.