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Article
Publication date: 1 June 2000

David Deakins, Eileen O’Neill and Patrick Mileham

Provides an analysis of the role of “external” or non‐executive directors and their relationship with executive entrepreneurs in small but entrepreneurial (growing) companies…

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Abstract

Provides an analysis of the role of “external” or non‐executive directors and their relationship with executive entrepreneurs in small but entrepreneurial (growing) companies, focusing on their influence on executive learning. We provide qualitative analysis of research based on 45 face‐to‐face interviews. Despite the importance given to individual executive and organisational learning in large companies, comparatively little literature exists on executive entrepreneurial learning in small companies. The factors that can affect such learning are discussed with emphasis on the role played by external directors who, it is argued, are likely to be appointed in such companies due to the need for additional expertise and knowledge in a rapidly changing environment.

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Education + Training, vol. 42 no. 4/5
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0040-0912

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Article
Publication date: 1 March 2005

Andrew Chambers

Aims to consider whether non‐executive directors add value.

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Abstract

Purpose

Aims to consider whether non‐executive directors add value.

Design/methodology/approach

A discussion based on current and recent trends in thinking about the role of non‐executive directors.

Findings

Considering the effect of the non‐executive director is not quite the same as addressing “the effective non‐executive director”. Do non‐executive directors have any effect and, if so, what are the effects and to what extent? Of course, positive answers to these questions would suggest tests to apply in determining whether someone has what it takes to make an effective contribution as a non‐executive director. This would also assist in determining the scope of the evaluation of the performance of each non‐executive director – which is now very much part of the 2003 Combined Code on Corporate Governance.

Originality/value

This paper offers useful insights into the roles of non‐executive directors.

Details

Measuring Business Excellence, vol. 9 no. 1
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 1368-3047

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Book part
Publication date: 11 August 2014

Justin A. Martin

Using the perspectives of dramaturgy and symbolic interactionists like George Herbert Mead and Carl Couch this study focuses on paid sex work in the hypermodern, virtual world of…

Abstract

Using the perspectives of dramaturgy and symbolic interactionists like George Herbert Mead and Carl Couch this study focuses on paid sex work in the hypermodern, virtual world of Second Life. Using seventeen semi-structured interviews and six months of ethnographic fieldwork, I find that the employment of sexual scripts, carrying off a successful erotic scene, and the creative use of communication and embodiment are highly valued in escorts’ performance of Second Life sex work. Escorts craft an online persona that is a digital representation of the self, which is manifested in the embodiment of their digital body or avatar. In addition to digital representations of the physical self, Second Life allows for multiple methods of computer-mediated communication, and escorts are able to re-embody the first life body through the trading of first life pictures, voice cybersex, and web cam cybersex. The data allow the conclusion that most escorts are unwilling to re-embody the first life body for reasons of personal safety and the desire to restrict access to the first life self. I find, however, that there is a porous boundary between first life and Second Life in which the first life self comes through in the Second Life persona. In the concluding remarks, I explore the implications this study has for the negotiation of privacy for new social media actors who are reluctant to fully disclose their lives yet perform a persistent, archived persona for friends and followers on the Internet. This study contributes to a small, but growing, body of literature on Second Life and expands the existing work on embodiment and privacy in the digital realm.

Details

Symbolic Interaction and New Social Media
Type: Book
ISBN: 978-1-78350-933-1

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