Organizational Change Models and Resistance: Schein, Lewin, Kotter

1. Technological Approach to Change

The technological paradigm views organizational change as a structured, mechanical process:

  • Change can be 100% planned and controlled by management.
  • Change is treated as a technological process.
  • Change requires hard competencies: the success of the change depends on the technical skills of the implementers rather than on emotional intelligence.
  • Mistakes result from bad planning or incorrect implementation.
  • We can avoid mistakes.

2. Social and Interpersonal Approach to

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Political Science Fundamentals: State, Sovereignty, and Welfare

Political Science Fundamentals

Political Science is the systematic study of power, government, and the state. It aids in understanding and improving society by promoting citizenship, good governance, social justice, and foreign policy. Its nature is both scientific and philosophical, encompassing various fields such as public administration, comparative politics, and international relations. Its core characteristic is the analysis of government structures and human political behavior.

Importance of

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Java Polymorphism, Overloading, Lambdas & Exceptions

Constructor and Method Overloading

class Calculator {
    // Constructor overloading: same name, different parameters
    Calculator() { System.out.println("Default Calculator created"); }
    Calculator(String mode) { System.out.println(mode + " Calculator created"); }
    // Method overloading: same name, different parameters
    int add(int a, int b) { return a + b; }
    double add(double a, double b) { return a + b; }
}

public class OverloadingDemo {
    public static void main(String[] args)
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Sports Journalism: Professional Values and Ethical Challenges

Part I – Intrinsic and Extrinsic Value of My Chosen Profession

My chosen profession is to become a sports journalist and reporter. I am especially inspired by figures such as Sara Carbonero, who represent professionalism, sensitivity, and credibility in sports media. Journalism is not just a job where you communicate information; it is a profession that shapes opinions, influences society, and builds trust between the media and the public. For this reason, reflecting on the intrinsic and extrinsic

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Third World Underdevelopment and Neocolonialism Dynamics

Third World Settings: Underdevelopment

The expression “Developing World” began to be used in the 1950s. This group included virtually all decolonized countries, and many other poor nations experiencing economic dependency. Third World countries are characterized by two certain facts: most of the population works in agricultural tasks, and industrialization is scarce.

Key Characteristics of Underdevelopment

  • Low per capita income.
  • Widespread malnutrition among much of the population.
  • Shorter life expectancy
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Architects and Leaders of the Second Spanish Republic

Niceto Alcalá-Zamora (1877–1949)

Alcalá-Zamora was twice a Liberal minister in the monarchy, shifting his allegiance to the Republicans during the dictatorship. This move attracted moderate and Catholic groups to his party. He was president of the Republican Committee and was jailed in 1930. After the Republic was proclaimed, he became the first Head of Government in 1931, resigning when the approved constitutional articles relating to religious freedom were passed. However, two months later,

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Operating System Synchronization and Scheduling Concepts

CPU Scheduling and Timing Metrics

CPU Scheduling is the process of deciding which of the processes in the ready queue should be allocated to the CPU for execution. It is necessary when a process switches from running to waiting, terminates, or when a new process is created.

Scheduling Criteria (Times)

The performance of a CPU scheduler is measured using several metrics, often expressed in terms of time:

  • CPU Utilization: The fraction of time the CPU is busy executing processes. (Goal: Maximize)
  • Throughput:
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Major Themes in Canadian History: 1900s to 1984

Unit 1: Defining Canadian Identity

Core Elements of Canadian Identity

  • Culture, institutions, and artifacts
  • Commitment to peacekeeping
  • Multiculturalism
  • Themes related to being the “Best country to live”

Immigration and Multiculturalism

  • Newcomers reshape Canada
  • Multicultural policy implementation
  • Diversity challenges

The Women’s Movement

  • Pursuit of gender equality
  • Workplace rights
  • Political rights

Aboriginal Rights (Indigenous Rights)

  • Land claims
  • Self-government initiatives
  • Addressing historical injustices

Social

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New Institutional Economics: Core Concepts and Applications

Chapter 1: New Institutional Economics Fundamentals

(1) New Institutional Economics (NIE) defines institutions as the “rules of the game” in a society that create the framework for human interaction.

(2) These institutions, which include formal rules (written laws) and informal norms (social codes), exist to reduce uncertainty and lower transaction costs by making human behavior predictable.

(3) The “golden triangle” or conceptual trunk of NIE consists of three core concepts: transaction costs (costs

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Cloud Computing, Web 2.0, and Inter-Process Communication

Cloud Computing Fundamentals

Cloud computing is a technology that allows users to store, manage, and process data over the internet instead of using local computers or physical servers.

Key Features of Cloud Computing

  • Provides on-demand access to computing resources.
  • Reduces the need for expensive hardware.
  • Users pay only for what they use (pay-as-you-go).
  • Data can be accessed from anywhere with internet connectivity.

Types of Cloud Services

  • IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service): Virtual machines, storage.
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