Algorithmes et décisions publiques / / Gilles Rouet |
Autore | Barraud Boris |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Paris, : CNRS Éditions, 2021 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (264 p.) |
Altri autori (Persone) |
BenbouzidBilel
CarmèsMaryse CarnisLaurent ChazardEmmanuel CômeThierry DeydierJean MabiClément MagneStéphane RouetGilles |
Collana | Les essentiels d'Hermès |
Soggetto topico |
Communication
Political Science décision publique algorithme État services publics République numérique |
Soggetto non controllato |
décision publique
algorithme État services publics République numérique |
ISBN | 2-271-14166-4 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | fre |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910520203003321 |
Barraud Boris
![]() |
||
Paris, : CNRS Éditions, 2021 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Encyclopédie du management public / / Manel Benzerafa-Alilat, Danièle Lamarque, Gérald Orange |
Autore | Achmet Véronique |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Paris, : Institut de la gestion publique et du développement économique, 2023 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (750 p.) |
Altri autori (Persone) |
AlauxChristophe
AldrinJérémy AnberréeAlice ArthuisJean AssensChristophe AubouinNicolas AugiasDamien BaïzAdam BartoliAnnie BastiègeMarine BaubyPierre BécuweAudrey Benzerafa-AlilatManel BibardLaurent BlatrixCécile Boisard Le CoatLena BottiniFabien BoullangerHervé BozioAntoine BrilletFranck BurlaudAlain CadetIsabelle CappellettiLaurent CarassusDavid CarmouzeLaura Cartier-BressonAnémone Champierre de VilleneuveEdouard ChapetJean-Michel ChevallierJacques ChoffelDenis ChomienneHervé CoblenceEmmanuel CodoSylvie ColinFrédéric Collinet-OurtheMathilde CommeirasNathalie DesmaraisCéline DesmoulinsThibault de MaillardJacques de Saint-PolThibaut DonierVirginie DrevetonBenjamin DrumauxAnne DubostNathalie DuranPatrice DurancePhilippe DuranthonArnaud du BoysCéline EggrickxAriel EmeryYves Eymeri-DouzansJean-Michel FavoreuChristophe FavreauFlorian FerlazzoEdoardo FinezJean GandSébastien GarelGilles GélédanFabien GérardPatrick Germain-ThomasPatrick GiauqueDavid GibertPatrick GicquelJean-Éric GuenounMarcel GuglielmiGilles J HachmanianÉlisabeth HalpernCharlotte HassenteufelPatrick HermelPhilippe HernandezSolange JacobSteve JanandAnne JoncourYves KadaNicolas KerléoJean-François KletzFrédéric KouadioArmand Brice KovarJean-Philippe KriegerKristian KüblerDaniel KuszlaCatherine Lacouette-FougèreClément LamarqueDanièle LandeÉvelyne LascoumesPierre LauferRomain LedenvicPhilippe LemouzyLaurence LetortFrédérique Le ClaincheMichel Le GalèsPatrick Le SquerenZoé LhuilierGilles MalmBrice MarinPierre MaurelChristophe Mazars-ChapelonAgnès MengiMeriem MérindolValérie MullerÉtienne NikitinMarc NogueraFlorence OrangeGérald PallezFrédérique ParigotJulia PauliatHélène PengHongxia PeriacElvira PerrinChristelle PerroudThomas PinosFabienne PissalouxJean-Luc PorcherSimon QueyroiYoann RagaigneAurélien RangeonFrançois RevillardAnne RichouSaphia RocherMaria-Soledad RocherSébastien RouetGilles RouquetAurélien Safy-GodineauFatéma Saint-JonssonAnaïs SaunierPhilippe SaussoisJean-Michel SauviatIsabelle SchiffinoNathalie SpindlerJacques TandilashviliNino ThoenigJean-Claude TiberghienBruno TurcEmil VerrierPierre-Éric VersaillesDavid W WaintropFrançoise WellerJean-Marc YatimFatima ZillerJacques |
Soggetto topico |
Business, Finance
Political Science Public Admin. & Development Management (General) action publique dictionnaire évaluation des politiques publiques fonction publique management politiques publiques recherche services publics |
ISBN | 2-11-162107-2 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | fre |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910731413803321 |
Achmet Véronique
![]() |
||
Paris, : Institut de la gestion publique et du développement économique, 2023 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Esthétiques de la ville : equipements et usages |
Autore | Thierry Côme |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | [Place of publication not identified], : L'Harmattan, 2014 |
Collana | Collection Local & global Esthâetiques de la ville |
Soggetto topico |
Public spaces
Urban beautification City planning Sociology, Urban Architecture Art, Architecture & Applied Arts |
Soggetto genere / forma | Conference papers and proceedings. |
ISBN | 2-336-69249-X |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | fre |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910150268003321 |
Thierry Côme
![]() |
||
[Place of publication not identified], : L'Harmattan, 2014 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
France-Allemagne : incommunications et convergences / / Gilles Rouet, Michael Oustinoff |
Autore | Bonnaire Anne-Coralie |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Paris, : CNRS Éditions, 2021 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (304 p.) |
Altri autori (Persone) |
BretonOlivier
CordonnierSarah EhrhardtDamien HauMichel HerbetDominique KochUrsula E Oster-StierlePatricia OustinoffMichaël RouetGilles SuardEmmanuel TalbotDamien WagnerHedwig WeinachterMichèle WoltonDominique OustinoffMichael |
Collana | Les essentiels d'Hermès |
Soggetto topico | European federation |
Soggetto non controllato |
France
Allemagne relations franco-allemandes incommunication |
ISBN | 2-271-14168-0 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | fre |
Altri titoli varianti |
France-Allemagne
France-Allemagne |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910520202903321 |
Bonnaire Anne-Coralie
![]() |
||
Paris, : CNRS Éditions, 2021 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Inclusive Territories 1 : Role of Enterprises and Organizations |
Autore | Brasseur Martine |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2024 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (215 pages) |
Altri autori (Persone) |
BartoliAnnie
ChabaudDidier GrouiezPascal RouetGilles |
ISBN |
1-394-25553-5
1-394-25551-9 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1. Entrepreneurial Dynamics that Promote Inclusion Within a Territory -- Chapter 1. Inclusive Territory: An Ongoing Conceptualization -- 1.1. From economic territory to inclusive territory -- 1.1.1. A territory delimited historically by economics -- 1.1.2. A dynamic of coevolution with an inclusive goal -- 1.1.3. A collaborative cross-sectoral partnership -- 1.2. From exclusion to inclusion -- 1.2.1. A local response to a global exclusion problem -- 1.2.2. Serving people in the general interest -- 1.3. Conclusion -- 1.4. References -- Chapter 2. The Employer Group and its Stakeholders: Application for a Timeshare HR Manager Job -- 2.1. The employer group and its stakeholders: A network at the service of a territorialized HRM -- 2.1.1. The conditions for a successful inter-organizational network -- 2.1.2. The virtuous effects of the timeshare network through the example of an HR manager -- 2.2. The employer group and its stakeholders: Cross-references on the conditions for success -- 2.2.1. The diversity of representations of the success criterion -- 2.2.2. The profiles of the various stakeholders -- 2.2.3. The nature and quality of relationships between the stakeholders -- 2.3. Conclusion -- 2.4. Appendix -- 2.5. References -- Chapter 3. Contributions of a Science and Technology Park (STP) to Inclusive Mobility for a Territory -- 3.1. Main contributions of the literature -- 3.1.1. Contributions regarding STPs from the literature -- 3.1.2. Intelligence of cities and territories: From ICT to capabilities -- 3.2. Description of the Transalley case and its three embedded sub-cases -- 3.2.1. Demonstration and experimentation track -- 3.2.2. Presentation of the Institute for Sustainable Mobility and Transport -- 3.2.3. Presentation of the Mobility Kiosk.
3.3. Elements for characterizing the contributions of the STP -- 3.3.1. Characteristics of the three observed projects -- 3.3.2. Contributions of the STP through the three projects -- 3.4. From a smart territory to an inclusive territory -- 3.4.1. Collaborations and territory project -- 3.4.2. Organization and inclusive approach on two levels -- 3.4.3. Evaluation of STP activity by social value -- 3.5. Conclusion -- 3.6. References -- Chapter 4. Understanding the Development of Social Enterprise in South Korea -- 4.1. The concept of a social enterprise: A dual theoretical and geographical basis -- 4.2. Methodology of the study -- 4.3. A typology of the main forms of social enterprises observed in South Korea -- 4.4. Discussion: Understanding Korean social enterprise in the light of the EMES ideal type -- 4.5. Conclusion -- 4.6. References -- Part 2. Social Innovations by Inclusive Companies Within a Territory -- Chapter 5. Managing Inclusion and Diversity in Organizations: A Strategic Approach to Human Capital -- 5.1. An overview of the most current literature -- 5.1.1. Ethical issues -- 5.1.2. International cross-cultural inclusion -- 5.1.3. Barriers to inclusion and diversity -- 5.1.4. Reinforcing inclusive behavior -- 5.2. From research to practice -- 5.3. A case study -- 5.4. Conclusion -- 5.5. References -- Chapter 6. A Solidarity Economy Group Implementing Inclusive Recruitment Within a Territory -- 6.1. Vita Air, a recruitment method for inclusion -- 6.1.1. Background to the development of the Vita Air method -- 6.1.2. Foundations, principles and diffusion of the Vita Air method -- 6.2. ISA Groupe: Its organization and its culture in favor of inclusion -- 6.2.1. ISA Groupe's adoption of a transversal functional structure -- 6.2.2. ISA Groupe's reinforcement of its culture of inclusion. 6.3. ISA Groupe, from a reactive to a proactive inclusive approach -- 6.3.1. Support aimed at ensuring candidates are proactive in their approach -- 6.3.2. Adopting a proactive approach to developing its activities -- 6.3.3. Adopting an approach that leads actors to give meaning to their interaction -- 6.4. The process by which ISA Groupe implemented the Vita Air method: A long, gradual and consensual process -- 6.4.1. Preparing the ground to implement the model (2006-2012) -- 6.4.2. The time taken to integrate the model (2013-2014) -- 6.4.3. The time of dissemination and legitimization (since 2015) -- 6.5. Conclusion -- 6.6. References -- Chapter 7. The Role of Social Economy Entrepreneurs in Governing Inclusive Social Innovation Ecosystems: The Cause of Mobility for Vulnerable People in Lorraine -- 7.1. Conceptual framework -- 7.1.1. The production of social innovations -- 7.1.2. Social innovation within creative territories -- 7.1.3. The role of entrepreneurs in producing social innovation -- 7.2. The case of the mobility of vulnerable people in Lorraine -- 7.2.1. The context of the case -- 7.2.2. The Omnibus entrepreneurial process -- 7.2.3. Omnibus executives, intermediation players -- 7.3. Conclusion -- 7.4. References -- Chapter 8. Emergence and Diffusion of Diversity Management in Companies Linking a Territory: The Case of the Hérault Region in France -- 8.1. The emergence and diffusion of diversity management between isomorphism and institutional entrepreneurship -- 8.2. Methodological design of the action research -- 8.3. Results, analysis and discussion -- 8.3.1. The emergence of diversity management in Hérault: An institutional entrepreneurship model -- 8.3.2. Dissemination of diversity management in organizations in the Hérault region: Between normative isomorphism, utilitarianism and the will of the manager. 8.3.3. Operationalizing diversity management: A response to a coercive isomorphism -- 8.4. Conclusion -- 8.5. References -- Conclusion -- List of Authors -- Index -- EULA. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910830730803321 |
Brasseur Martine
![]() |
||
Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2024 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Inclusive Territories 1 : Role of Enterprises and Organizations |
Autore | Brasseur Martine |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2024 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (215 pages) |
Altri autori (Persone) |
BartoliAnnie
ChabaudDidier GrouiezPascal RouetGilles |
Soggetto topico |
Social entrepreneurship
Social responsibility of business |
ISBN |
9781394255535
1394255535 9781394255511 1394255519 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1. Entrepreneurial Dynamics that Promote Inclusion Within a Territory -- Chapter 1. Inclusive Territory: An Ongoing Conceptualization -- 1.1. From economic territory to inclusive territory -- 1.1.1. A territory delimited historically by economics -- 1.1.2. A dynamic of coevolution with an inclusive goal -- 1.1.3. A collaborative cross-sectoral partnership -- 1.2. From exclusion to inclusion -- 1.2.1. A local response to a global exclusion problem -- 1.2.2. Serving people in the general interest -- 1.3. Conclusion -- 1.4. References -- Chapter 2. The Employer Group and its Stakeholders: Application for a Timeshare HR Manager Job -- 2.1. The employer group and its stakeholders: A network at the service of a territorialized HRM -- 2.1.1. The conditions for a successful inter-organizational network -- 2.1.2. The virtuous effects of the timeshare network through the example of an HR manager -- 2.2. The employer group and its stakeholders: Cross-references on the conditions for success -- 2.2.1. The diversity of representations of the success criterion -- 2.2.2. The profiles of the various stakeholders -- 2.2.3. The nature and quality of relationships between the stakeholders -- 2.3. Conclusion -- 2.4. Appendix -- 2.5. References -- Chapter 3. Contributions of a Science and Technology Park (STP) to Inclusive Mobility for a Territory -- 3.1. Main contributions of the literature -- 3.1.1. Contributions regarding STPs from the literature -- 3.1.2. Intelligence of cities and territories: From ICT to capabilities -- 3.2. Description of the Transalley case and its three embedded sub-cases -- 3.2.1. Demonstration and experimentation track -- 3.2.2. Presentation of the Institute for Sustainable Mobility and Transport -- 3.2.3. Presentation of the Mobility Kiosk.
3.3. Elements for characterizing the contributions of the STP -- 3.3.1. Characteristics of the three observed projects -- 3.3.2. Contributions of the STP through the three projects -- 3.4. From a smart territory to an inclusive territory -- 3.4.1. Collaborations and territory project -- 3.4.2. Organization and inclusive approach on two levels -- 3.4.3. Evaluation of STP activity by social value -- 3.5. Conclusion -- 3.6. References -- Chapter 4. Understanding the Development of Social Enterprise in South Korea -- 4.1. The concept of a social enterprise: A dual theoretical and geographical basis -- 4.2. Methodology of the study -- 4.3. A typology of the main forms of social enterprises observed in South Korea -- 4.4. Discussion: Understanding Korean social enterprise in the light of the EMES ideal type -- 4.5. Conclusion -- 4.6. References -- Part 2. Social Innovations by Inclusive Companies Within a Territory -- Chapter 5. Managing Inclusion and Diversity in Organizations: A Strategic Approach to Human Capital -- 5.1. An overview of the most current literature -- 5.1.1. Ethical issues -- 5.1.2. International cross-cultural inclusion -- 5.1.3. Barriers to inclusion and diversity -- 5.1.4. Reinforcing inclusive behavior -- 5.2. From research to practice -- 5.3. A case study -- 5.4. Conclusion -- 5.5. References -- Chapter 6. A Solidarity Economy Group Implementing Inclusive Recruitment Within a Territory -- 6.1. Vita Air, a recruitment method for inclusion -- 6.1.1. Background to the development of the Vita Air method -- 6.1.2. Foundations, principles and diffusion of the Vita Air method -- 6.2. ISA Groupe: Its organization and its culture in favor of inclusion -- 6.2.1. ISA Groupe's adoption of a transversal functional structure -- 6.2.2. ISA Groupe's reinforcement of its culture of inclusion. 6.3. ISA Groupe, from a reactive to a proactive inclusive approach -- 6.3.1. Support aimed at ensuring candidates are proactive in their approach -- 6.3.2. Adopting a proactive approach to developing its activities -- 6.3.3. Adopting an approach that leads actors to give meaning to their interaction -- 6.4. The process by which ISA Groupe implemented the Vita Air method: A long, gradual and consensual process -- 6.4.1. Preparing the ground to implement the model (2006-2012) -- 6.4.2. The time taken to integrate the model (2013-2014) -- 6.4.3. The time of dissemination and legitimization (since 2015) -- 6.5. Conclusion -- 6.6. References -- Chapter 7. The Role of Social Economy Entrepreneurs in Governing Inclusive Social Innovation Ecosystems: The Cause of Mobility for Vulnerable People in Lorraine -- 7.1. Conceptual framework -- 7.1.1. The production of social innovations -- 7.1.2. Social innovation within creative territories -- 7.1.3. The role of entrepreneurs in producing social innovation -- 7.2. The case of the mobility of vulnerable people in Lorraine -- 7.2.1. The context of the case -- 7.2.2. The Omnibus entrepreneurial process -- 7.2.3. Omnibus executives, intermediation players -- 7.3. Conclusion -- 7.4. References -- Chapter 8. Emergence and Diffusion of Diversity Management in Companies Linking a Territory: The Case of the Hérault Region in France -- 8.1. The emergence and diffusion of diversity management between isomorphism and institutional entrepreneurship -- 8.2. Methodological design of the action research -- 8.3. Results, analysis and discussion -- 8.3.1. The emergence of diversity management in Hérault: An institutional entrepreneurship model -- 8.3.2. Dissemination of diversity management in organizations in the Hérault region: Between normative isomorphism, utilitarianism and the will of the manager. 8.3.3. Operationalizing diversity management: A response to a coercive isomorphism -- 8.4. Conclusion -- 8.5. References -- Conclusion -- List of Authors -- Index -- EULA. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910877550603321 |
Brasseur Martine
![]() |
||
Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2024 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Inclusive Territories 2 : Role of Institutions and Local Actors |
Autore | Brasseur Martine |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2024 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (211 pages) |
Altri autori (Persone) |
BartoliAnnie
ChabaudDidier GrouiezPascal RouetGilles |
ISBN |
1-394-27762-8
1-394-27760-1 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1. Inclusion of Discriminated and Marginalized Populations in a Territory -- Chapter 1. The Inclusion of People from Disadvantaged Territories: Two SMEs in Seine-Saint-Denis -- 1.1. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) policies and diversity in SMEs -- 1.1.1. Diversity and social responsibility -- 1.1.2. Diversity and territorial responsibility -- 1.2. Barriers and drivers for the recruitment and integration of people from disadvantaged areas -- 1.2.1. Recruitment -- 1.2.2. Integration -- 1.3. Contextualizing the inclusion of people from disadvantaged territories -- 1.3.1. Supporting urban recruitment through SMEs -- 1.3.2. Difficulties of employee inclusion -- 1.4. Conclusion -- 1.5. References -- Chapter 2. "Territories with Zero Long-Term Unemployment" through the Lens of Neo-Institutional Theory -- 2.1. Inclusive practice -- 2.1.1. Inclusion -- 2.1.2. The social enterprise -- 2.2. The perspective of neo-institutional theory -- 2.2.1. The institution as a product of actors -- 2.2.2. Actors initiating change -- 2.2.3. The contributions of neo-institutional theory to the question of the diffusion of inclusive practices -- 2.3. Case study: the territories with zero long-term unemployment experiment -- 2.3.1. A collective approach for another way to achieve entrepreneurship -- 2.3.2. An experiment in search of diffusion -- 2.3.3. A program in search of legitimacy -- 2.4. Conclusion -- 2.5. References -- Chapter 3. The Inclusion of Lebanese Women with Breast Cancer: Between Stigma and Resilience -- 3.1. From a social identity robbed by disease to stigmatization and resilience -- 3.2. The perspectives of 25 Lebanese women with breast cancer in the workplace -- 3.2.1. Beginning of the disease cycle and its representation in companies.
3.2.2. Work cycle, illness cycle: concordances -- 3.2.3. Resilience and trajectories -- 3.3. Conclusion -- 3.4. References -- Chapter 4. Women Entrepreneurs from Deprived Areas as Generators of Inclusion: A Capabilities Interpretation -- 4.1. Proposition of a framework for analyzing the inclusive territory -- 4.1.1. Inclusive territory: a fuzzy target -- 4.1.2. Generating inclusion: from concept to action -- 4.2. A qualitative and sensitive approach to local women's entrepreneurship -- 4.3. The capabilities of women entrepreneurs: a potential tool for inclusion -- 4.3.1. Environmental conversion factors -- 4.3.2. Social conversion factors -- 4.3.3. Individual conversion factors -- 4.4. The contribution of capabilities and the question of granularity -- 4.5. Conclusion -- 4.6. References -- Part 2. The Stakeholders of Inclusive Entrepreneurial Ecosystems -- Chapter 5. From Fighting Exclusion to Projects for Inclusion: The Evolution of Public and Private Policies -- 5.1. A brief history of the fight against social exclusion in France -- 5.1.1. Exclusion as a sign of social maladjustment that can be overcome by employment and the economy -- 5.1.2. Citizen solidarity: combating the cultural dimension of social exclusion -- 5.1.3. Market exclusion: an indicator of long-term unemployment questioning social rights -- 5.1.4. Exclusion as a process of disaffiliation and vulnerability combated by social and family support -- 5.1.5. Exclusion as a marker of marginality or even of refusal of assistance -- 5.1.6. A case-by-case approach to combating social exclusion and individual disintegration -- 5.1.7. Social exclusion: an inevitable dysfunction of modern society -- 5.1.8. From the fight against exclusion to inclusion projects: beyond a simple mirroring of reasoning -- 5.2. European policies: from anti-exclusion to pro-inclusion incentives. 5.2.1. Community policies to combat social exclusion -- 5.2.2. Towards an EU-wide approach to inclusion -- 5.3. Corporate dynamics and inclusive policies -- 5.3.1. Inclusion as a CSR variable -- 5.3.2. "Diversity and inclusion": the new managerial policies of large multinational companies -- 5.4. Public policies for inclusion at the territorial level -- 5.4.1. The development of the "inclusive city" -- 5.4.2. Towards a societal role for local authorities -- 5.5. Conclusion -- 5.6. References -- Chapter 6. Inclusive Governance in AOC Champagne -- 6.1. The Champagne sector as a practice area for the implementation of inclusive governance -- 6.1.1. A history of the relations between the actors of the champagne production chain -- 6.1.2. The Champagne region as a constructed space, bearing identities -- 6.1.3. Exclusion as a fertile ground for inclusion in the territory of AOC Champagne -- 6.1.4. Promoting inclusion to ensure the sustainability of the Champagne sector -- 6.2. A literature review of professional perspectives in the context of the Covid-19 pandemic -- 6.3. Inclusive governance in AOC Champagne -- 6.4. Conclusion -- 6.5. References -- Chapter 7. Promoting Inclusive Partnership Dynamics within a Territory: The Case of Territories with Zero Long-Term Unemployment -- 7.1. The impotence of public policies in the face of unemployment in France -- 7.2. Building a new common good: employment -- 7.3. A source as close as possible to the territories -- 7.4. Unprecedented unanimity in the French Parliament -- 7.5. Confidence in the unemployed (an excluded population) -- 7.6. The local employment committee: a new tool for shared governance -- 7.7. The role of the actors' representations -- 7.8. Compensation for territorial inequalities -- 7.9. Changing attitudes -- 7.10. An unprecedented articulation between the territory and the national dimension. 7.11. Social work transformed by access to employment for all -- 7.12. Highlighting the different aspects of poverty -- 7.13. New indicators to move towards an "unknown desirable" -- 7.14. Conclusion -- 7.15. References -- Chapter 8. The Contribution of Quebec's Community Credit Organizations to Social and Territorial Development -- 8.1. Community credit in Quebec -- 8.2. Community credit and inclusive dynamics in the territories: the Mauricie region -- 8.2.1. The socio-economic profile of the Mauricie region -- 8.2.2. Proximity support and the creation and maintenance of businesses and jobs -- 8.2.3. Factors of social inclusion: atypical entrepreneurs -- 8.2.4. The entrepreneurial ecosystem: diversification and networking -- 8.2.5. The community's contribution to the community -- 8.3. Conclusion -- 8.4. References -- Conclusion -- List of Authors -- Index -- EULA. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910835066103321 |
Brasseur Martine | ||
Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2024 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Inclusive Territories 2 : Role of Institutions and Local Actors |
Autore | Brasseur Martine |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2024 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (211 pages) |
Altri autori (Persone) |
BartoliAnnie
ChabaudDidier GrouiezPascal RouetGilles |
Soggetto topico |
Social integration
Social responsibility of business |
ISBN |
9781394277629
1394277628 9781394277605 1394277601 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1. Inclusion of Discriminated and Marginalized Populations in a Territory -- Chapter 1. The Inclusion of People from Disadvantaged Territories: Two SMEs in Seine-Saint-Denis -- 1.1. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) policies and diversity in SMEs -- 1.1.1. Diversity and social responsibility -- 1.1.2. Diversity and territorial responsibility -- 1.2. Barriers and drivers for the recruitment and integration of people from disadvantaged areas -- 1.2.1. Recruitment -- 1.2.2. Integration -- 1.3. Contextualizing the inclusion of people from disadvantaged territories -- 1.3.1. Supporting urban recruitment through SMEs -- 1.3.2. Difficulties of employee inclusion -- 1.4. Conclusion -- 1.5. References -- Chapter 2. "Territories with Zero Long-Term Unemployment" through the Lens of Neo-Institutional Theory -- 2.1. Inclusive practice -- 2.1.1. Inclusion -- 2.1.2. The social enterprise -- 2.2. The perspective of neo-institutional theory -- 2.2.1. The institution as a product of actors -- 2.2.2. Actors initiating change -- 2.2.3. The contributions of neo-institutional theory to the question of the diffusion of inclusive practices -- 2.3. Case study: the territories with zero long-term unemployment experiment -- 2.3.1. A collective approach for another way to achieve entrepreneurship -- 2.3.2. An experiment in search of diffusion -- 2.3.3. A program in search of legitimacy -- 2.4. Conclusion -- 2.5. References -- Chapter 3. The Inclusion of Lebanese Women with Breast Cancer: Between Stigma and Resilience -- 3.1. From a social identity robbed by disease to stigmatization and resilience -- 3.2. The perspectives of 25 Lebanese women with breast cancer in the workplace -- 3.2.1. Beginning of the disease cycle and its representation in companies.
3.2.2. Work cycle, illness cycle: concordances -- 3.2.3. Resilience and trajectories -- 3.3. Conclusion -- 3.4. References -- Chapter 4. Women Entrepreneurs from Deprived Areas as Generators of Inclusion: A Capabilities Interpretation -- 4.1. Proposition of a framework for analyzing the inclusive territory -- 4.1.1. Inclusive territory: a fuzzy target -- 4.1.2. Generating inclusion: from concept to action -- 4.2. A qualitative and sensitive approach to local women's entrepreneurship -- 4.3. The capabilities of women entrepreneurs: a potential tool for inclusion -- 4.3.1. Environmental conversion factors -- 4.3.2. Social conversion factors -- 4.3.3. Individual conversion factors -- 4.4. The contribution of capabilities and the question of granularity -- 4.5. Conclusion -- 4.6. References -- Part 2. The Stakeholders of Inclusive Entrepreneurial Ecosystems -- Chapter 5. From Fighting Exclusion to Projects for Inclusion: The Evolution of Public and Private Policies -- 5.1. A brief history of the fight against social exclusion in France -- 5.1.1. Exclusion as a sign of social maladjustment that can be overcome by employment and the economy -- 5.1.2. Citizen solidarity: combating the cultural dimension of social exclusion -- 5.1.3. Market exclusion: an indicator of long-term unemployment questioning social rights -- 5.1.4. Exclusion as a process of disaffiliation and vulnerability combated by social and family support -- 5.1.5. Exclusion as a marker of marginality or even of refusal of assistance -- 5.1.6. A case-by-case approach to combating social exclusion and individual disintegration -- 5.1.7. Social exclusion: an inevitable dysfunction of modern society -- 5.1.8. From the fight against exclusion to inclusion projects: beyond a simple mirroring of reasoning -- 5.2. European policies: from anti-exclusion to pro-inclusion incentives. 5.2.1. Community policies to combat social exclusion -- 5.2.2. Towards an EU-wide approach to inclusion -- 5.3. Corporate dynamics and inclusive policies -- 5.3.1. Inclusion as a CSR variable -- 5.3.2. "Diversity and inclusion": the new managerial policies of large multinational companies -- 5.4. Public policies for inclusion at the territorial level -- 5.4.1. The development of the "inclusive city" -- 5.4.2. Towards a societal role for local authorities -- 5.5. Conclusion -- 5.6. References -- Chapter 6. Inclusive Governance in AOC Champagne -- 6.1. The Champagne sector as a practice area for the implementation of inclusive governance -- 6.1.1. A history of the relations between the actors of the champagne production chain -- 6.1.2. The Champagne region as a constructed space, bearing identities -- 6.1.3. Exclusion as a fertile ground for inclusion in the territory of AOC Champagne -- 6.1.4. Promoting inclusion to ensure the sustainability of the Champagne sector -- 6.2. A literature review of professional perspectives in the context of the Covid-19 pandemic -- 6.3. Inclusive governance in AOC Champagne -- 6.4. Conclusion -- 6.5. References -- Chapter 7. Promoting Inclusive Partnership Dynamics within a Territory: The Case of Territories with Zero Long-Term Unemployment -- 7.1. The impotence of public policies in the face of unemployment in France -- 7.2. Building a new common good: employment -- 7.3. A source as close as possible to the territories -- 7.4. Unprecedented unanimity in the French Parliament -- 7.5. Confidence in the unemployed (an excluded population) -- 7.6. The local employment committee: a new tool for shared governance -- 7.7. The role of the actors' representations -- 7.8. Compensation for territorial inequalities -- 7.9. Changing attitudes -- 7.10. An unprecedented articulation between the territory and the national dimension. 7.11. Social work transformed by access to employment for all -- 7.12. Highlighting the different aspects of poverty -- 7.13. New indicators to move towards an "unknown desirable" -- 7.14. Conclusion -- 7.15. References -- Chapter 8. The Contribution of Quebec's Community Credit Organizations to Social and Territorial Development -- 8.1. Community credit in Quebec -- 8.2. Community credit and inclusive dynamics in the territories: the Mauricie region -- 8.2.1. The socio-economic profile of the Mauricie region -- 8.2.2. Proximity support and the creation and maintenance of businesses and jobs -- 8.2.3. Factors of social inclusion: atypical entrepreneurs -- 8.2.4. The entrepreneurial ecosystem: diversification and networking -- 8.2.5. The community's contribution to the community -- 8.3. Conclusion -- 8.4. References -- Conclusion -- List of Authors -- Index -- EULA. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910876749203321 |
Brasseur Martine
![]() |
||
Newark : , : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, , 2024 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Intégration et voisinage européens |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | [Place of publication not identified], : L'Harmattan, 2014 |
Collana | Local & global Intâegration et voisinage europâeens |
Soggetto topico |
European federation - History - European Union countries
Citizenship - European Union countries Social integration Government - Non-U.S Law, Politics & Government Government - Europe |
ISBN |
2-336-36249-X
2-336-71260-1 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | fre |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910153352103321 |
[Place of publication not identified], : L'Harmattan, 2014 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Participatory and digital democracy at the local level : European discourses and practices / / Gilles Rouet, Thierry Côme, editors |
Edizione | [1st ed. 2023.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2023] |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (413 pages) |
Disciplina | 352.3802854678 |
Collana | Contributions to political science |
Soggetto topico | Internet in public administration |
ISBN | 3-031-20943-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto | 1. Introduction -- 2. Actors and Discourses: typology of discourses according to the actors and contexts -- 3. Evolution of the legal framework in Europe for the use of digital participation at the “local” level : the French case -- 4. European Free Mobility and Italian Participatory Democracy. Knowledge and digital technology as a bridge -- 5. Youth and Democracy: Digital Opportunities for the Future of Participation?- 6. Silenced Voices and Freedom of Speech in the Digital Epoch: a Critical Perspective on the Post-Totalitarian Media Culture -- 7. The relationship between participatory democracy and digitalisation. Is there an East-West division in Europe?- 8. Differences and similarities in local gouvernance in Slovakia and Lithuania -- 9. Online citizen consultations since 2018: Europanova's experience -- 10. (Dis) Empowering Citizens at the Local Level in Bulgaria. Digitalization, Local Democracy and Participatory Practices before and post-COVID-2019 -- 11. The conditions of social learning in formal deliberative settings: a study of municipal councils in Brussels. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910734095503321 |
Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2023] | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|