Learning in Non-Hierarchical Bureaucracies: The New Learning Profile
In: Korean Review of Public Administration, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 117-147
In: Korean Review of Public Administration, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 117-147
In: Journal of property investment & finance
ISSN: 1470-2002
PurposeThe technological disruption from artificial intelligence (AI) within the economy requires intelligent property professionals for tomorrow. This paper proposes that the direction of interaction between AI and tomorrow's property professional, the property graduate, should be AI-empowered rather than AI-directed.Design/methodology/approachThe paper reflects on the growing influence of AI in property combined with literature on technological adoption in the workplace. It proposes a way forward in navigating future decision-making.FindingsAn AI-empowered paradigm promotes the importance of industry-specific knowledge to determine factual information in decision-making. In contrast, an AI-directed paradigm leads to over-dominance of the user on pre-specified knowledge available through AI tools that could lead to AI-directed output that carries significant risk for the property industry.Practical implicationsNavigating the future requires a paradigm that moves from a computational focus driven predominantly by technological tools to one where tomorrow's professionals have a cognitive focus that leads to AI-enabled property graduates that can apply the correct tools in the right circumstances.Originality/valueThis paper reflects on the increasing role that technology and AI have within the property profession and brings to light the importance of learning through experience and the transparent use of AI tools in property.
Resilient Systems, Resilient Communities emerges from the University of Alberta interdisciplinary research network, Intersections of Sustainability, which focuses on the relationship between water governance, climate change, and community futures. The aim of the research network is to bring a whole-system approach to developing critical, solutions-driven research in partnership with government agencies, academic partners, civic organizations, policy makers, industry actors and non-government organizations. This collection of essays by members of the network extends these aims by providing a compendium of work that engages resilience thinking, a concept that continues to play a central role in academic and policy-making circles.
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Intro -- Title Page -- Contributors -- Introduction -- Chapter 1: Alasdair MacIntyre: An Intellectual Biography -- Chapter 2: MacIntyre and Theology -- Chapter 3: MacIntyre and Thomism -- Chapter 4: MacIntyre and Moral Philosophy -- Chapter 5: MacIntyre and Classical Philosophy -- Chapter 6: MacIntyre and Political Philosophy -- Chapter 7: MacIntyre and Marxism -- Chapter 8: MacIntyre and Frankfurt School Critical Theory -- Chapter 9: MacIntyre and Communication -- Chapter 10: MacIntyre and Business Ethics -- Chapter 11: MacIntyre and Sociology -- Chapter 12: MacIntyre and Education -- Chapter 13: MacIntyre and Law -- Chapter 14: MacIntyre and Therapeutic Method.
In: Contemporary Christian Insights
In: Contemporary Christian Insights Ser.
In this new book, Martin Israel explores the question: How can we learn to obey the commandment to love our neighbor? Through powerful meditations on the nature and responsibilities of existence and love Israel shows to his readers some of paths for the mystical walk that ends in love. He writes:One does not believe in God; one knows Him by experience, and that experience makes all life's vicissitudes worth while. For this end is glorious [and] as one grows so one's vision expands to include all humanity and ultimately all that lives
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Working paper
In: International feminist journal of politics, Band 22, Heft 3, S. 434-441
ISSN: 1468-4470
In: Forum for development studies: journal of Norwegian Institute of International Affairs and Norwegian Association for Development, Band 45, Heft 1, S. 119-141
ISSN: 1891-1765
Over the past 25 years, a new economy has taken place. Castells describes it as "informational, global and interconnected".It is global because it encompass all the globe, without leaving aside any, even remote, community. It is interconnected because all regional economies need each other in order to make sense of the global. But, why is it "informational"? And what does this mean?[Segue nel testo .]* Presentato dal Dipartimento di Studi su Società, Politica e Istituzioni.
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In: Adversarial Reasoning; Chapman & Hall/CRC Computer & Information Science Series, S. 315-333
In: Studies in conflict & terrorism, Band 24, Heft 1, S. 71-76
ISSN: 1057-610X