LITERATURE ON DUTCH STATE PRACTICE IN THE FIELD OF PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW, 2007
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 39, S. 459
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 39, S. 459
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 17, S. 311
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 16, S. 537
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 15, S. 489
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 13, S. 417
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 12, S. 359
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 11, S. 349
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Public personnel management, Band 46, Heft 4, S. 391-418
ISSN: 1945-7421
Public sector organizations are confronted with the intensifying competition for talent and suffer from a chronic shortage of talented people. There is little empirical research on the specific talent management (TM) issues in the public sector. This article aims to clarify how public sector organizations conceptualize TM, and particularly what (contextual) factors influence the adoption of an inclusive or a more segmented people management approach in the public sector. Theory on institutional mechanisms and institutional logics is used to clarify the impact of contextual factors. The empirical data are collected in two substudies on TM in the public sector. The data show that TM is highly contextual. Both the organizational internal and external context affect the intended TM strategy, including the actors involved in TM and their interrelated logs. This article is among the first to explore conceptually and empirically the influence of institutional logics on the different aspects of TM approach and as such provides some new directions for future TM research.
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 25, S. 557
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 14, S. 437
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 29, S. 293
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 27, S. 359
ISSN: 1574-0951
In: Netherlands yearbook of international law: NYIL, Band 26, S. 365
ISSN: 1574-0951
Many of today's Dutch writers were children during World War II. Even today, the traumatic childhood experience of enemy occupation is still central to the work of many of them. This interest cuts across the traditional boundaries between fiction, autobiography and the literature of trauma and recovery. A Family Occupation is the first English-language introduction to Dutch-language texts written by and about the 'Children of the War' and their cultural context. Their themes and literary conventions throw an interesting light on the Dutch approach to issues such as guilt and innocence, memory and narrative, national identity, child abuse and victimhood.
In: World literature studies: časopis pre výskum svetovej literatúry, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 42-55
ISSN: 1337-9690