The librarian and researcher have to be able to uncover specific articles in their areas of interest. This Bibliography is designed to help. Volume IV, like Volume III, contains…
Abstract
The librarian and researcher have to be able to uncover specific articles in their areas of interest. This Bibliography is designed to help. Volume IV, like Volume III, contains features to help the reader to retrieve relevant literature from MCB University Press' considerable output. Each entry within has been indexed according to author(s) and the Fifth Edition of the SCIMP/SCAMP Thesaurus. The latter thus provides a full subject index to facilitate rapid retrieval. Each article or book is assigned its own unique number and this is used in both the subject and author index. This Volume indexes 29 journals indicating the depth, coverage and expansion of MCB's portfolio.
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Yong H. Kim, Kee H. Chung and Wallace R. Wood
The literature of traditional inventory analysis contains primarily cost minimisation models. These models avoid the interface of marketing and finance with logistics through…
Abstract
The literature of traditional inventory analysis contains primarily cost minimisation models. These models avoid the interface of marketing and finance with logistics through constraints and a combined logistics/marketing/finance objective of maximising firm's profit. Under certain conditions, the cost minimisation models will give the same results as the profit maximising results; however, if such conditions do not hold, the cost minimisation models may give results which are different from the profit maximising results. Such is the case when sales lot size for batch sales) decisions are analysed within a cost minimising framework. A proper framework based on discounted cash flow analysis as prescribed by finance theory is developed in this article. A numerical illustration is also presented.
There is a divergence between costing methodology and spending behaviour in transportation. This article identifies differences between economic and accounting cost concepts, and…
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There is a divergence between costing methodology and spending behaviour in transportation. This article identifies differences between economic and accounting cost concepts, and differences between the conceptual interpretations of cost estimates based on those concepts. In particular, the cost‐volume‐profit (breakeven) model is re‐examined in terms of its experimental and ex post estimates, and the reliability of those estimates, to describe and to guide managerial behaviour. Some criticism of statistical costing is warranted by the inherent difficulty of modelling human behaviour patterns. Likewise, enlightened interpretation of statistical cost estimates allows management to enhance the planning and control processes for which the figures were prepared.
Peter Boxall, Meng-Long Huo, Keith Macky and Jonathan Winterton
High-involvement work processes (HIWPs) are associated with high levels of employee influence over the work process, such as high levels of control over how to handle individual…
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High-involvement work processes (HIWPs) are associated with high levels of employee influence over the work process, such as high levels of control over how to handle individual job tasks or a high level of involvement at team or workplace level in designing work procedures. When implementations of HIWPs are accompanied by companion investments in human capital – for example, in better information and training, higher pay and stronger employee voice – it is appropriate to talk not only of HIWPs but of “high-involvement work systems” (HIWSs). This chapter reviews the theory and practice of HIWPs and HIWSs. Across a range of academic perspectives and societies, it has regularly been argued that steps to enhance employee involvement in decision-making create better opportunities to perform, better utilization of skill and human potential, and better employee motivation, leading, in turn, to various improvements in organizational and employee outcomes.
However, there are also costs to increased employee involvement and the authors review the important economic and sociopolitical contingencies that help to explain the incidence or distribution of HIWPs and HIWSs. The authors also review the research on the outcomes of higher employee involvement for firms and workers, discuss the quality of the research methods used, and consider the tensions with which the model is associated. This chapter concludes with an outline of the research agenda, envisaging an ongoing role for both quantitative and qualitative studies. Without ignoring the difficulties involved, the authors argue, from the societal perspective, that the high-involvement pathway should be considered one of the most important vectors available to improve the quality of work and employee well-being.
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The management of children′s literature is a search for value andsuitability. Effective policies in library and educational work arebased firmly on knowledge of materials, and on…
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The management of children′s literature is a search for value and suitability. Effective policies in library and educational work are based firmly on knowledge of materials, and on the bibliographical and critical frame within which the materials appear and might best be selected. Boundaries, like those between quality and popular books, and between children′s and adult materials, present important challenges for selection, and implicit in this process are professional acumen and judgement. Yet also there are attitudes and systems of values, which can powerfully influence selection on grounds of morality and good taste. To guard against undue subjectivity, the knowledge frame should acknowledge the relevance of social and experiential context for all reading materials, how readers think as well as how they read, and what explicit and implicit agendas the authors have. The good professional takes all these factors on board.