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Introduction to Special Topic Forum: Not so Different after . . . Disciplinary differences characterizing tradi- tional treatments of trust suggest that inherent conflicts and divergent assumptions are at work (Fichman, 1997) Economists tend to view trust as either calculative (Williamson, 1993) or institu- tional (North, 1990) Psychologists commonly frame their assessments of trust in terms of at- tributes of trustors and trustees and focus upon a host of
Creating Flexible Work Arrangements Through Idiosyncratic Deals A survey of 887 employees in a German government agency assessed the antecedents and consequences of idiosyncratic arrangements individual workers negotiated with their supervisors Work arrangements promoting the individualization of employment conditions, such as part-time work and telecommuting, were positively related to the negotiation of idiosyncratic deals (“i-deals”) Worker
The social contract Public domain books belong to the public and we are merely their custodians Nevertheless, this work is expensive, so in order to keep providing this resource, we have taken steps to prevent abuse by commercial parties, including placing technical restrictions on automated querying
Cladis, CV - Brown University "The Blessed Fall: A Reappraisal of Rousseau's Account of the Human Social Condition," international lecture hosted by Centre de Recherche en Epistémologie Appliquée (CNRS lab), Paris, Fall 1994
A Vindication Of The Rights Of Woman Summary This seminal work argues for the equal education and social recognition of women, challenging the prevailing societal norms that relegated women to a secondary status This article provides a nuanced analysis of Wollstonecraft's arguments, exploring their historical context, key concepts, and lasting practical implications
t h e o x f o r d h a n d b o o k o f A D A M S M I T H A dam Smith (1723–90) is one of those iconic thinkers, like (say) Marx or Freud, whose name invokes a particular, distinctive perspective on human behaviour and social in stitutions Also like Marx and Freud, Smith’s work is name-checked more oft en than it is read Th at is to say there is a ‘popular’ awareness, but typically it is of an uninformed nature Th e Adam Smith of popular
HoltDiss:ReasoningWithSavages - eScholarship For a notable exceptions that suggests Smith’s knowledge of contemporary work in biology may have influenced his historical outlook, see Andrew S Skinner, “Adam Smith: Science and the Role of the Imagination,” in Hume and the Enlightenment, ed W B Todd (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1974), 181-82