References: Annual Reports of LIC (from 1999 – 2007). Insurance Principles and Practice by M.N. Mishra – S Chand Publishers – 2008 Edition. Rao CS (2007). “The Regulatory Challenges Ahead” J. Insurance Chronicle 7: 10 Jain AK (2004). J. Insurance Inst. India 30: 53. Peter D (1999). “Innovate or Die”‚ J. Economist. 1(2): 41-55. Rao TSR (2000). “The Indian Insurance Industry the Road Ahead” J. Insurance Chronicle
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philanthropic employers began to develop a paternalistic care and concern for their employees. From the 1890s Quaker employers‚ for example‚ Cadbury and Rowntree‚ began to emphasize welfare by appointing ’industrial welfare ’ workers and building model factory villages. It was estimated that by 1914 there were probably between 60 and 70 welfare workers in Britain (Farnham‚ 1990). In the USA‚ Henry Ford ’s autoplant‚ for example‚ established a ’Sociological Department ’ to administer personnel
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happened because of your mental illness would be dismissed as a placebo effect. Although over the last 50 years the medical model has slowly began to change‚ the “Biopsychosocial model” has become more widely adopted. This medical model accepts that health and disease are strongly influenced by a combination of biological‚ psychological‚ and social factors. The biopsychosocial model describes health as a state of well-being that we can actively attain and maintain. This shows
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THE CONGRUENCE MODEL The Congruence Model A Roadmap for Understanding Organizational Performance The critical first step in designing and leading successful large-scale change is to fully understand the dynamics and performance of the enterprise. It’s simply impossible to prescribe the appropriate remedy without first diagnosing the nature and intensity of an organization’s problems. Yet‚ all too often‚ senior leaders– particularly those who have just recently assumed their positions or joined
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Similarly to the informative model‚ the interpretive model assumes that the physician is responsible for giving the patient with all important information concerning their state and treatment. However‚ the practitioner goes beyond providing the information and accepting the patient’s choices. Unlike the informative practitioner‚ the interpretive practitioner knows that the patient’s values are not completely recognized by the patient‚ in fact their values are often conflicting and underdeveloped
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CENTRE FOR MICRO FINANCE at IFMR Business Correspondent Model: A Preliminary Exploration Report compiled by Binit Rath‚ Minakshi Ramji and Alexandra Kobishyn Published for the Microfinance India Summit‚ October 2009 Thanks are due to Dan Kopf‚ a former Research Associate at the Centre for Micro Finance (CMF)‚ and Upamanyu Dash (Summer Intern 2009‚ IIFM) who was closely involved in the Orissa case study. The entire research team expresses its gratitude to the staff at FINO‚ A Little World (ALW)
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Knowledge Management Models Knowledge management literature is plentiful with different understandings of knowledge‚ information and data‚ as ideas and thoughts. As a result many organizations experience lots of expenses on knowledge management technologies‚ which hardly deliver with the expected outcome (Davenport‚ and Prusak‚ 1998). For further explanation‚ Argote et al.‚ (2003) tried to organize Knowledge Management literature by separating it into two parts: Knowledge Management context and
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2nd page DIFFERENT PSYCHOSOCIAL MODELS THE PSYCHOANALYTIC MODEL This model is based on the pioneering works of Sigmund Freud. The major principles are based on the clinical study of patients undergoing psychoanalysis‚ a method which the patient is asked to provide an unrestricted account of whatever comes to mind leaving nothing out. 1. Id‚ ego‚ and superego. Fundamental to this model is the concept that behavior results from the interaction of three key subsystems
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that are shared by ecological models‚ the Model of Human Occupation‚ and the Theory of Occupational Adaptation are person‚ environment‚ and occupation. Granted there are differences but ultimately‚ they all share the same purpose. Person Environment Occupation II) Three ecological models highlight the importance of considering the environment in occupational therapy: 1- The ecology of Human Performance model (EHP) 2- The person environment Occupation Performance model (PEOP) 3- The person environment
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I. THE CONCEPTUAL MODEL – TRICOMPONENT ATTITUDE MODEL Schiffman and Kanuk in 2007 defined attitude in consumer behavior that “is a learned predisposition to behave in a consistently favorable or unfavorable way with respect to a given object” . Similarly‚ Eagly and Chaiken‚ 1993 also defined that attitude is a psychological tendency that is expressed by evaluating a particular entity with some degree of favor or disfavor. There are also some studies mentioned the attitude of audience towards advertising
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