Concept Paper: Public Interest To claim to hold the public interest is to claim something big. The ambiguity that arises from such a broad concept almost always means that it will have great‚ and sometimes detrimental‚ consequences. Because it is a sort of a “je ne sais quoi” (Sorauf – p. 623) of American politics‚ it is a strong but malleable tool that can be used by anyone who has the audacity to give it a meaning. Frank J. Sorauf‚ while conceding that no “neat and precise”(p
Premium Political philosophy Jean-Jacques Rousseau Political science
National Interest The world politics revolves round the term national interest. The history is as old as the history of world. The concept of National interest is indistinct and carries a meaning according to the milieu in which it is used by the states. The term national interest gained currency with the emergence of nation state system following the end of WWII‚ National interest become a tool to increase political control and the expansion of economic relations (Thompson‚ 1966). National interest
Premium International relations Nation State
PERSONAL INTEREST Every profession has sacred principles or ethics governing its operation or activities. Banking is no exception. Some of these principles defining sound banking behaviours are; 1. control mismatch between assets and liabilities 2. know your counterparty 3. expand cautiously into unfamiliar activities 4. avoidance of undue concentration of loans to a single activity‚ individuals and group But in a situation where banks all over the world are found wanting in terms
Premium Credit Interest Money
Interest Groups I. What is an Interest Group? II. Why do people Join Interest Groups? III. Types of Interest Groups IV. Interest Groups Incentives V. Interest Group Strategists VI. Regulating Lobbyists I. Interest Group Interest Group- An organized group of individuals having common goal and actively attempting to influence government policies. Why have interest groups been so successful in the United States? Variety of interest due to economic social cleavages among the members of the American
Premium United States Lobbying Advocacy group
There are many different definitions for Conflict of Interest‚ but most all mean the same or point to the same direction. When gifts‚ outside activities such as consulting‚ or financial and fiduciary interest have potential to create a certain decision or commitment with a business it is considered conflict of interest. Although there are numerous definitions the one adopted by the Institute of Medicine is helpful. It states‚ “A conflict of interest is a set of circumstances that creates a risk that
Premium Fiduciary Board of directors Stock
INTEREST INVENTORIES * assess the child’s likes and dislikes or the preferences * questionnaires that ask you about your likes and dislikes in a wide range of general activities. Your answers are used to develop a personal interest profile‚ which is then compared to the profiles of other students or to groups of people who are successfully employed in various occupations. A high level of similarity between your profile and the profiles of students in particular majors or people in particular
Premium Personality psychology Personality type Regulatory Focus Theory
What is an Interest Group? An interest group (also referred to as advocacy groups) is an organization organized by a special set of people with specific skills to lobby for or against a specific interest to benefit their cause. They usually lobby for one or more shared concerns to manipulate public policy and opinion especially in the U.S. Congress to benefit their cause‚ supporters‚ or one segment of society. They include a vast array of organizations such as: charitable organizations‚ civil right
Premium Trade union Agriculture Collective bargaining
Working Paper # 03-115 Rev. 09/04 Conflicts of Interest and the Case of Auditor Independence: Moral Seduction and Strategic Issue Cycling Don A. Moore Carnegie Mellon University Philip E. Tetlock Haas School of Business Lloyd Tanlu Harvard Business School Max H. Bazerman Harvard Business School This paper has benefited from the feedback of Art Brief‚ George Loewenstein‚ and three anonymous reviewers of an earlier version of the paper. This paper was supported by a grant from
Premium Audit Big Four auditors
------------------------------------------------- Learning curve From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia For other uses‚ see Learning curve (disambiguation). A Learning Curve is a graphical representation of the increase of Learning (Vertical axis) with Experience (Horizontal axis). | Fig 1: Learning curve for a single subject‚ showing how Learning improves with Experience | | Fig 2 : A learning curve expressed as a mathematical function | | Fig 3 : The metric for Learning can
Premium Learning curve Learning
developed alongside the common law. It has aided the protection of different rights and interests of and in relation to property. Although property can be seen as ‘things’‚ you can have different interests or rights in property depending on the persons relationship to the property and the nature of it. Property can be seen to be a power relationship between a person and a resource‚ ownership is seen as the highest interest as you will have absolute power over that item. With full ownership a person is
Premium Property Ownership Common law