INTRODUCTIONThe purpose of this paper is to explore the role of institutions in influencing policy outcomes. First part of the paper provides a brief introduction to the study of institutions in political science. This is followed by description of factors influencing policy outcomes. Final part of the paper looks at the limitations of institutions, which pose additional constraints on policy outcomes.INSTITUTIONS IN POLITICAL SCIENCEThe study of institutions is central to the subject matter of political science and, to an even greater extent, public administration. According to Lowndes (1996:181), focus upon institutional arrangements for the delivery of public services is generally held to be defining of the sub-discipline of public administration. March and Olsen (1984) argue that social, political, and economic institutions have recently become larger, more complex and resourceful, and therefore more important to collective life. According to them, attention to political institutions has increased in the literature on legislatures, budgets, public policymaking, local government and political elites. According to Scharpf (1989), much of comparative political science research may be characterised as an attempt to explain and predict the influence of political institutions on the choice of public policy.INFLUENCING POLICY OUTCOMESSETTING NORMS IN DECISION MAKINGMarch and Olsen (1984,1989) see institutions as providing order in political life. Institutions increase capability by reducing comprehensiveness. Institutions express norms of decision-making and behaviour, providing a logic of appropriateness. Rules produce variation and deviation as well as conformity and standardisation. Institutions generally change in an incremental way through responding to environmental signals.AFFECTING POLICY OUTCOMESInstitutions are often seen as set of factors affecting the interactions between policy actors and hence the greater or lesser capacity of policy-making systems to adopt and implement effective responses to policy problems (Scharpf 2000:764). According to Gorges (2001), the European Commission and other EC institutions played a significant role in social policy-making. The European Commission sought to increase both its policy domain and its legitimacy, continually insisting that it would not abdicate its power to initiate policy. Although it is actors that are the proximate causes of policy responses, institutional conditions, to the extent that they are able to influence actor choices, are seen as remote causes. Actors are strongly influenced by the institutional rules to which they owe their existence and by institutional and cultural norms that define the criteria of their success or failure (Scharpf 2000). According to Scharpf (2000:770), in sociological institutionalism, institutions are defined very broadly so as to include not only externally imposed and sanctioned rules but also unquestioned routines and standard operating procedures and, more important, socially constructed and culturally taken-for-granted worldviews and shared normative notions of appropriateness. In that view, therefore, institutions will define not only what actors can do but also their perceptions and preferencesand thus what they will want to do. Institutions constrain, but do not completely determine, policy choices (Scharpf 1989). Certain policy options are unlikely to be chosen under certain institutional conditions. According to Scharpf (1989), policy choices are simultaneously influenced by at least four sets of factors, institutional, situational, preferential and perceptional.Institutional rules will affect policy by restricting options, constituting actor constellations, regulating their modes of interaction and by structuring the incentives of the participating actors (Scharpf 2000). Institutions are imposing substantive prohibitions to policy outcomes. Countries differ in the range of institutionally permissible policy options and there is an increasing tightness of international legal constraints. For example, the power of governments to determine wages and working time was routinely exercised by most countries but is ruled out in Germany. Moreover, the tight control of capital transfers and the highly discriminatory regulation of credit markets that facilitated the success of macroeconomic full-employment strategies in Sweden until the mid-1980s would now be ruled out by EU directives liberalising capital markets and financial services. The rules of negative integration, in particular European competition law, have become a major constraint on all economic policy options that could be construed as inhibiting or distorting free competition in the markets of EU member states. Institutional rules also define the constellations of actors that may participate in the adoption and implementation of policy responses and their permissible modes of interaction, which could be classified as mutual adjustment, negotiated agreement, voting, or hierarchical direction. Although most policy choices result from multi-actor interactions, some countries whose political institutions approximate the ideal Westminster model have the option of treating any major policy problem in a single- actor constellation. Here, all relevant policy choices are potentially determined by the preferences and perceptions prevailing in a unified action center. Hierarchical direction becomes an institutionally available mode of interaction, as exemplified in Britain, New Zealand, and possibly France. In rational-choice institutionalism, incentives are defined by reference to the self-interest of the corporate and collective actors involved in the policy process, for example, governments, political parties, central banks, labor unions, their subunits, or the individuals acting for them. In single-actor systems, the incentives that have the most direct effect on policy choices are constituted by the mechanisms of political accountability. In multi-actor systems, accountability is weakened and policy outcomes are more affected by incentives favoring cooperation or conflict between the veto actors.CRITICAL JUNCTURES AND DEVELOPMENTAL PATHWAYSIkenberry (1994) characterises political development as involving critical junctures and developmental pathways. According to the first principle, different founding moments of institutional formation send countries along broadly different developmental paths. The second principle suggests that institutions continue to evolve in response to changing environmental conditions and ongoing political maneuvering but in ways that are constrained by past trajectories. According to Thelen (1999), where state-builders faced geopolitical competition early, they were forced into greater concessions to the financiers, merchants, and administrators who financed and staffed the bureaucracy, resulting in patrimonial systems. Where rulers confronted geopolitical pressures later, they found themselves in a quite different world, where developments in education and finance made these side payments unnecessary, resulting in greater bureaucratic autonomy. Over time, some avenues of policy become increasingly blocked, if not entirely cut off, as decisions at one point in time can restrict future possibilities by sending policy off onto particular tracks (Thelen 1999).DIFFERENT THEORETICAL APPROACHESAlthough it is generally accepted that challenges to which policy actors may have to respond are influenced by the institutional setting, the dominant strands of current institutionalist theorising, rational-choice institutionalism and sociological institutionalism, differ in their conceptualisation of these influences (Scharpf 2000).LIMITATIONSInstitutions have limitations which have a significant effect on policy outcomes. These limitations are focus on structures and efficiency, focus on stability, political manipulation and policy networking.FOCUS ON STRUCTURES AND ECONOMIC EFFICIENCYIt has been argued that compliance with structures and practices often becomes more important than its actual efficacy (Lowndes 1996). According to DiMaggio and Powell (1991), it is the demand for similarity of structure and functioning, rather than for increased efficiency, that drives organisational change.According to Thelen (1999), the institutional approach begins with the observation that markets, embedded in political and social institutions, are the creation of governments and politics. The main purpose and effect of institutions are often seen as economising on fraction costs. Lowndes (1996:186) describes institutions as efficient organisational frameworks, which arise to solve problems of complex economic exchange. The critics of the new institutional economics, however, object to the proposal that a universal economic logic determines the choice of institutional systems, regardless of culture and circumstance or power and politics (Lowndes 1996).FOCUS ON STABILITYNorth (1990) stresses stability rather than efficiency as the economic rationale for institutions, arguing that technically inefficient institutions persist because they contribute to stability and harmony in interaction and because they are deeply embedded in culture and tradition. According to historical institutionalism, institutions do more than channel policy and structure political conflict. Thelen (1999) claims that institutions are socially constructed in the sense that they embody shared cultural understandings of the way the world works. This means that even when policy makers set out to redesign institutions, they are constrained in what they can conceive of by these embedded, cultural constraints. For example, the evolution of Japanese security policy shows how collectively held norms define appropriate conduct, shape actor identities, and influence actor interests, and in doing so, inform how political actors define what they want to accomplish (Thelen 1999). Pearson (2000) claims that path dependence can be used to explain the analysis of European party systems, labor incorporation in Latin America, the outcome of state-building processes in Europe, and the comparative development of health care systems.According to Thelen (1999), the problem with this approach is that dominant cultural norms emerge out of concrete political conflicts, in which different groups fight over which norms will prevail. Dominant policy paradigms can and do shift at times and organisational fields are often imposed by powerful actors. According to Stinchcombe (1997), it is legitimacy and not automaticity that explains why people follow scripts in the first place. Furthermore, the entrenchments of certain institutional arrangements obstruct an easy reversal of the initial choice (Pearson 2000). The conception of path dependence, in which preceding steps in a particular direction induce further movement in the same direction, is well captured by the idea of increasing returns. In an increasing returns process, the probability of further steps along the same path increases with each move down that path because of the costs associated with exit or change. According to North (1990), institutions induce self-reinforcing processes that make reversals of course increasingly unattractive over time. This, according to Arthur (1994) leads to unpredictability, inflexibility, nonergodicity and potential path inefficiency.POLITICAL MANIPULATIONIn politics, institutional constraints are ubiquitous (Pierson 2000). Politics involves struggles over the authority to establish, enforce and change the rules governing social action in a particular territory. According to Gorges (2001), the institutional change could be influenced by material and ideal incentives the policy entrepreneurs provide. Furthermore, change is most likely when there is an increase in the effectiveness of individuals seeking change and a decrease in the blocking power of individuals whose interests are served by the current institutional arrangements. Institutions are not neutral coordinating mechanisms but in fact reflect, and also reproduce and magnify, particular patterns of power distribution in politics (Thelen 1999). Thus, political arrangements and policy feedbacks actively facilitate the organisation and empowerment of certain groups while actively disarticulating and marginalising others. Manipulated by utility-maximising politicians and bureaucrats, institutions degenerate over time. They come to serve the individual, private interests of officials and any conception of the public interest is lost (Lowndes 1996:188). Public officials seek to augment their status and material through increases to budgets under their control, and utility-seeking politicians attempt to maximise votes by promising benefits and service enhancements, which results in waste and over-supply of government goods and services (Niskanen 1973). An alternative to the budget-maximising thesis is provided by bureau-shaping theory which accepts that bureaucrats are self-serving, but denies that they pursue a single course of utility-maximising action (Lowndes 1996). In rational-choice institutionalism, institutional rules are understood as external constraints and incentives structuring the purposeful choices of self-interested rational actors (Scharpf 2000). Thus, when certain actors are in a position to impose rules on others, the employment of power may be self-reinforcing (Pierson 2000). Actors may use political authority to generate changes in both formal institutions and various public policies designed to enhance their power. Skocpol (1992) argues that institutional arrangements affect the capabilities of various groups to achieve self-consciousness, organise, and make alliances. For example, the fragmentation of the state, as well as the organisation of party competition along patronage lines, actively mediated against the development of a unified working class that could then spearhead the movement for comprehensive social policies in the United States. Scharpf (2000) does not agree with this notion, arguing that actor preferences have at least two dimensions individual and organisational self-interest on one hand and normative obligations and aspirations on the other.INSTITUTIONS AND THE POLICY NETWORKINGThe policy network approach is concerned with the institutionalisation of relations between governmental and non-governmental actors (Lowndes 1996). The concern is with actual institutional practices rather than with formal organisational arrangements. Jordan (1990) refers to an institution as an extra-constitutional policy-making arrangement between industries and clientelistic groups. Lowndes (1996) points to the traditionally fragmented structure of British government and the influential role played by interest groups in policy-making. In such environment, policy is made not by a unified government machine but by an assortment of actors, governmental and nongovernmental, linked together in more or less formal and coherent networks (Lowndes 1996:190). Furthermore, institutions are embedded in networks of other institutions, and it is difficult to change one institution in a matrix because of this embeddedness. According to Lowndes (1996), policy networks routinise relationships, promoting continuity and stability. One example is the EU, where the European Commission has often granted access to, and attempted to institutionalise the participation of interest groups as a way of securing legitimacy for its proposals before presenting them to the Council of Ministers (Gorges 2001). The Commission has attempted to sustain and expand the Community political system by providing information to the social partners, forcing them to re-evaluate their interests and priorities, and supporting the development of a Community/Union system of interest intermediation by providing a forum for conflict resolution.The capacity for effective policy responses is affected not only by the quantity and quality but also by the diversity of policy-relevant information and analysis provided by an institutionalised information infrastructure (Scharpf 2000). Policy coordination in Austria, for example, was greatly facilitated by the fact that the government, the political parties, and the social partners relied on the analyses provided by a single economic research institute. In Germany, by contrast, unions and employers maintain separate research institutes, the federal government supports altogether six such institutes, the federal labor administration and the Bundesbank maintain large in-house research capacities, the independent Council of Economic Advisors relies on its own research staff, and the big commercial banks have their own macroeconomic research departments.The downside of the monopoly model is the risks of groupthink, or the failure to pay attention to observations, interpretations, and recommendations that do not conform to the dominant worldview (Scharpf 2000). This was arguably the case in Britain in the early 1970s, when policy makers in the treasury continued to rely on the Keynesian recommendations derived from the single macroeconomic simulation model, even when the economy had ceased to respond as predicted (Scharpf 2000).However, when the analyses of institutionalised information monopolists do fit the problem, they will facilitate effective problem solving in single-actor systems and effective coordination in multiactor systems. The pluralistic model, by contrast, will provide protection against the institutionalisation of error.CONCLUSIONThe paper has explored the role of institutions in influencing policy outcomes. Institutional conditions, to the extent that they are able to influence actor choices, are seen as remote causes. Institutions influence policy outcomes by setting norms in decision making. Furthermore, institutional rules affect policy by restricting options, constituting actor constellations, regulating their modes of interaction and by structuring the incentives of the participating actors. Although it is generally accepted that challenges to which policy actors may have to respond are influenced by the institutional setting, the dominant strands of current institutionalist theorising, rational-choice institutionalism and sociological institutionalism, differ in their conceptualisation of these influences.Limitations of institutions, such as the focus on structures and economic efficiency, the focus on stability, political manipulation and policy networking, further influence policy outcomes.BIBLIOGRAPHYArthur W.B. (1989). Competing Technologies, Increasing Returns, and lock-in by Historical Events. Economy Journal, Vol. 99.Ashford, D. E. (1977). Political Science and Policy Studies: towards a structural solution. Policy Studies Journal, Iss.5, pp.570-583.DiMaggio, P and Powell, W. (1991). Introduction, in W. Powell and P DiMaggio The new institutionalism in organizational analysis (eds). University of Chicago Press.Gorges, M.J. (2001). The New Institutionalism and the Study of the European Union: The case of the social dialogue. Western European Politics, Vol.24, Iss.4, pp.152.Ikenberry G.J. (1994). Historys Heavy Hand: institutions and the politics of the state. Conference on The New Institutionalism, University of Maryland.Jordan, G. (1990). Policy Community Realism versus New Institutionalist Ambiguit. Political Studies, Vol.38, pp.470-84.Lowndes, V. (1996). Varieties of New Institutionalism: A critical appraisal. Public Administration, Vol.74, pp.181-197.March, J. and Olsen, J. (1984). The New Institutionalism: Organizational factors in political life. The American Political Science Review, Vol.78, No.3, pp.734-749.March, J. and Olsen, J. (1989). Rediscovering Institutions: the organizational basis of politics. Free Press, New York.Niskanen, W. (1973). Bureaucracy: Servant or Master? Institute for Economic Affairs, London.North, D. (1990). Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance. Cambridge University Press.Pierson, P. (2000). Increasing Returns, Path Dependence, and the Study of Politics. The American Political Science Review, Vol.94, No.2, pp.251-267.Scharpf, F.W. (1989). Decision Rules, Decision Styles and Policy Choices, Journal of Theoretical Politics,Vol.1, Iss.2, pp.149-176.Scharpf, F.W. (2000). Institutions in Comparative Policy Research. Comparative Political Studies,Vol.33, pp.762-790.Skocpol T. (1979). States and Social Revolutions. Cambridge University Press.Stinchcombe A.L. (1997). On the Virtues of the old Institutionalism. Annu. Rev. Soc. Vol.23Thelen, K. (1999). Historical Institutionalism in Comparative Politics. Annual Review of Political Science, Vol.2, pp369-404.Get Help With Your EssayIf you need assistance with writing your essay, our professional essay writing service is here to help!Find out more





Role of Institutions in Policy Making
Mar 18, 2020 | Social Policy
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- BUSINESS FINANCE, NORTHEAST MONTESSORI INSTITUTE
- BUSINESS FINANCE, OAKLAND UNIVERSITY
- BUSINESS FINANCE, PARK UNIVERSITY
- BUSINESS FINANCE, RASMUSSEN COLLEGE
- BUSINESS FINANCE, SOUTHERN NEW HAMPSHIRE UNIVERSITY
- BUSINESS FINANCE, TRIDENT INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY
- Business Strategy
- C11E
- Calculus
- California Baptist University
- California Coast University
- CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY NORTHRIDGE, OTHER
- can be studied
- can never 21 really be liberating literacies. For a literacy to be liberating it must contain both the Discourse it is going to critique and a set of meta-elements (language
- Capella University
- Capella University, Humanities
- Capital L. George Adams
- CATEGORY
- CE304
- CE445
- CEE792
- CEGR338
- Chamberlain College of Nursing
- Chapter 3
- Charles R Drew University of Medicine and Science
- charles sturt university
- Chaudhary Charan Singh University, Humanities
- CHEM101
- CHEM111
- CHEM1411, Science
- CHEM202, Science
- CHEM210, Science
- CHEM410
- Chemistry
- Chemistry – Chemical Engineering
- Chemistry – Organic chemistry
- Chemistry – Pharmacology
- Chemistry – Physical chemistry
- ChemistryChemistry
- Childcare
- CHMY373, SCIENCE
- Choose three problematic issues that are currently facing older people living in the community?
- CINE286U
- CIS210
- cis273
- CIS359
- CIS510, Other
- CIS524
- CIVL6603, Science
- CJ430, SCIENCE
- CJA444
- CJUS300, Other
- Classics
- CMIT495
- CMSC140
- Colorado Christian University
- COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY GLOBAL, SCIENCE
- COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY, SCIENCE
- Colorado State UniversityGlobal
- Colorado Technical University
- COLORADO TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY, OTHER
- Colorado Technical University, Programming
- Columbia Southern University
- COLUMBIA SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY, OTHER
- Columbia Southern University, Science
- COLUMBIA SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY, WRITING
- Commerce
- Communication
- Communications
- COMMUNITY-BASED CORRECTIONS
- COMP1007
- Computer Science
- Computer Science – Java
- Computer Science- Python
- Computer ScienceComputer Science
- Construction
- correctness
- Cosc1437
- counseling chemical dependency adolescents
- Criminology
- CRJ305
- cross-site scripting
- CS101
- CSIT 100, PROGRAMMING
- CSPM326
- CST 610, PROGRAMMING
- Cultural Studies
- culturally appropriate intervention to address childhood obesity in a low-income African American community.
- CUR535
- CUYAMACA COLLEGE, HUMANITIES
- CUYMACA COLLAGE, HUMANITIES
- Data Analysis
- DAVIDSON COLLEGE, OTHER
- defensive programming allows for more efficient processes while also protecting systems from attack.
- DES201
- Describe the difference between glycogenesis and glycogenin ? Explain in 10 to 12 lines.
- Design
- Digital Marketing Plan for Nissan Motor Co. The plan will identify the current marketing opportunity and/or problem(s) and propose digital marketing solutions. Please use header in the attachment."
- Discuss one way in which the Soviet Union fulfilled communist thought, and another way in which it did not with reference to O'Neil's Chapter 9.
- Discuss the pros and cons of free-market based economies and how they impact the modern, globalized economy? What comes to your mind when you hear the term "globalization?"
- Dissertation
- DMM612, Science
- DMM649, SCIENCE
- Draft and essay of 1,000 words minimum, stating the Most Important and Relevant aspects to be considered when carrying on INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS or MULTI-CULTURAL NEGOTIATIONS.
- Drama
- each time a user extracts the ZIP file
- Earth Science – Geography
- Earth Science – GeographyEarth Science – Geography
- Earth Science – Geology
- EAS1601
- ECD 541, HUMANITIES
- ECE 452
- Ecommerce
- ECON335
- Economics
- ECPI University
- EDUC696
- Education
- EducationEducation
- EEL3472C
- EEL3705
- EET110
- EFFAT UNIVERSITY JEDDAH, HUMANITIES
- elasticity
- ELI2055A
- EMDG 230, SCIENCE
- Emglish
- Emory University
- Employment
- EN106
- EN106, HUMANITIES
- EN109
- EN206, HUMANITIES
- ENC1102, Writing
- eng 100
- ENG100
- ENG101
- ENG101, Humanities
- ENG102
- ENG102, Humanities
- eng106
- ENG1102, WRITING
- ENG124
- ENG124, Humanities
- ENG124, Writing
- ENG1340, HUMANITIES
- ENG200, Humanities
- ENG207
- eng2206
- ENG2211
- ENG305
- ENG812
- Engineering
- Engineering – Chemical Engineering
- Engineering – Civil Engineering
- Engineering – Civil EngineeringEngineering – Civil Engineering
- Engineering – Electrical Engineering
- Engineering – Electrical EngineeringEngineering – Electrical Engineering
- Engineering – Electronic Engineering
- Engineering – Mechanical Engineering
- Engineering – Mechanical EngineeringEngineering – Mechanical Engineering
- Engineering – Telecommunications Engineering
- EngineeringEngineering
- ENGL 120
- ENGL 124, OTHER
- ENGL 124, WRITING
- ENGL 2030, HUMANITIES
- ENGL1102
- ENGL120, HUMANITIES
- ENGL120SP2019, WRITING
- ENGL126
- ENGL1302
- ENGL130E, HUMANITIES
- ENGL147N, HUMANITIES
- ENGL2, Humanities
- English
- English – Article writing
- English – Article writingEnglish – Article writing
- English Language
- English Literature
- EnglishEnglish
- ENGR350
- ENST202CORE274
- ensuring you allocate dedicated time for coursework
- Environment
- Environmental Science
- Environmental Sciences
- Environmental Studies
- especially for a small company
- Essay Writing
- etc¦). Please note at least five organizational activities and be specific when responding.
- ETH321
- ETHC445N
- Ethnic Studies 101
- European Studies
- EXNS6223
- Family
- Fashion
- February 20). What is defensive programming? EasyTechJunkie. Retrieved December 30
- film industry
- FILM INDUSTRY, HUMANITIES
- Film Studies
- FIN 500
- FIN330, MATHEMATICS
- FIN370
- Final Essay
- Find the uniform most powerful level of alpha test and determine sample size with the central limit theorem
- Florida International University
- Florida National University
- Florida State College at Jacksonville
- FoothillDe Anza Community College District
- Foreign Languages
- Foreign Languages – Spanish
- formulations
- from https://www.pcmag.com/news/fat32-vs-ntfs-choose-your-own-format
- G124/enc1101
- Gallaudet University
- General Studies
- General_Business
- GEO1206
- GEOG100, Science
- Geography
- GEOL3200, HUMANITIES
- Geometry
- George Mason University
- GERM1027
- GERO 101, SCIENCE
- GERON101
- GLG101, Science
- GO16
- Government
- GovernmentGovernment
- GOVT2305
- GOVT2305, Humanities
- GOVT2306
- Grand Canyon University, Science
- Grand Canyon University, Writing
- Grantham University
- GRANTHAM UNIVERSITY, PROGRAMMING
- GRANTHAM UNIVERSITY, WRITING
- GROSSMONT COLLEGE, HUMANITIES
- Grossmont-Cuyamaca Community College District
- GROSSMONT-CUYAMACA COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT, HUMANITIES
- GU299, WRITING
- Hawaii Pacific University
- HC310
- HCA415
- HCA521
- HCM550, SCIENCE
- Hcs370
- HCS446
- he focused on aspects of the U.S. that combined democratic and increasingly capitalist characteristics. THINK ABOUT the points De Tocqueville made.
- Health & Medical
- Healthcare
- HIM 2588, MATHEMATICS
- HIM 500, SCIENCE
- HIM301
- HIS 108
- HIS101
- HIS105
- HIS200
- HIST104A, Humanities
- HIST111
- HIST1301, HUMANITIES
- HIST1302
- HIST1320
- HIST1700
- HIST2620
- HIST350, Humanities
- HIST405N, HUMANITIES
- HIST459, Humanities
- History
- History – American history
- History – American historyHistory – American history
- History – Ancient history
- History – Ancient historyHistory – Ancient history
- History – World history
- History – World historyHistory – World history
- HISTORY4250, Humanities
- HistoryHistory
- HLSS508, OTHER
- HMP403
- Hospitality
- HOST1066, WRITING
- Housing
- How do the changes in ship technology effect port operations? Discuss at least 3 factors contributing to port operations and development. Address cargo and passenger liners.250 words
- How have Mary Calderone, SIECUS and other sex educators changed how sex education is perceived? (100 words minimum)
- HOWARD UNIVERSITY, SCIENCE
- HR Management
- HRM300
- HRT6050, Writing
- HSA305
- HSA535
- HSC3201
- HSN476
- HUM1002
- HUM115
- HUM115, Writing
- Human Resource
- Human Resource Management
- Human Resource ManagementHuman Resource Management
- Human Resources
- HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT AND MANAGEMENT, SCIENCE
- Human Rights
- HUMANITIES
- Humanities, Alcorn State University
- HUMANITIES, HY 1110
- Humanities, LMC3225D
- HUMANITIES, LONG BEACH CITY COLLEGE
- HUMANITIES, MUSIC1306
- HUMANITIES, OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE
- HUMANITIES, PH 100
- HUMANITIES, POINT LOMA NAZARENE UNIVERSITY
- HUMANITIES, PRINCE GEORGE'S COMMUNITY COLLEGE
- Humanities, PSY105
- HUMANITIES, PSY330 THEORIES OF PERSONALITY
- Humanities, PSYC 1101
- HUMANITIES, PSYCH305
- HUMANITIES, PSYCH635 PSYCHOLOGY OF LEARNING
- HUMANITIES, RSCH8110
- HUMANITIES, SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
- HUMANITIES, SAN JACINTO COLLEGE
- Humanities, SOC1010
- HUMANITIES, SOC401
- HUMANITIES, SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION
- HUMANITIES, SOUTHERN NEW HAMPSHIRE UNIVERSITY
- HUMANITIES, STRAYER UNIVERSITY
- HUMANITIES, SWK110
- HUMANITIES, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
- HUMANITIES, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA IRVINE
- HUMANITIES, UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON-DOWNTOWN
- Humanities, University of Maryland University College
- i need the attached work to look like this. please redo and make it look like this.
- I need these questions answered fully. I have the assignment and the notes attached for it. Do not use chegg or course hero. This is due Wednesday 4/14 at 10:00 pm which is almost 4 full days. Thanks!
- I need to re organize a research paper I attached all my information and I attached you an example how is going to be. Please follow the instruction and the references has to be APA 7edition
- Identify a cardiac or respiratory issue and outline the key steps necessary to include for prevention and health promotion
- identify the leadership theory that best aligns with your personal leadership style
- if you suggest trying to do this
- IGLOBAL UNIVERSITY
- IHS2215
- Iii Mlch
- III nuistery of such superficialities was meant to
- Implement classifiers KMeans, Random Forest and Decision Tree, SVM,XGBoost and Naive Bayes for the given dataset of audio samples to findout top genre for an audio sample(which one fits best)
- In a cardiac issue what are the key steps necessary to include for prevention and health promotion.
- in any other way
- include a paragraph about which side of the case a forensic psychologists might support and why.
- indeed
- India
- INDIANA UNIVERSITY BLOOMINGTON, SCIENCE
- INF690
- INF690, Other
- Information Systems
- Information SystemsInformation Systems
- Information Technology
- INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION SAUDI ARABIA, PROGRAMMING
- INT700, OTHER
- International Business
- International Relations
- International Studies
- Internet
- Introduction to Biology
- Is jury nullification sometimes justifiable? When?
- ISSC351
- It Research
- IT380
- IT550, Business & Finance , Southern New Hampshire University
- ITC3001
- ITP120
- ITS 631, PROGRAMMING
- ITS835, Other
- JEDDAH COLLEGE OF ADVERTISING, WRITING
- Journalism
- KNOWLEDGE IS POWER, OTHER
- Languages
- Law
- Law – Civil
- Law – CivilLaw – Civil
- Law – Criminal
- Law – CriminalLaw – Criminal
- LawLaw
- Leadership
- lecture slides
- Leisure Management
- Liberty University
- LIBERTY UNIVERSITY, WRITING
- lIlgll.Igt· (1II1In·d
- Linguistics
- literacy is always plural: literacies (there are many of them
- Literature
- Literature Review
- Literature review funnel on "cyber security"
- LiteratureLiterature
- MA105
- MAJAN COLLEGE, WRITING
- Management
- Manpower
- Marketing
- Math
- MATH 1030
- MATH144, MATHEMATICS
- Mathematics
- Mathematics – Algebra
- Mathematics – Calculus
- Mathematics – Geometry
- Mathematics – Numerical analysis
- Mathematics – Precalculus
- Mathematics – Probability
- Mathematics – Statistics
- Mathematics – StatisticsMathematics – Statistics
- Mathematics – Trigonometry
- MATHEMATICS, MGT3332
- Mathematics, National American University
- Mathematics, PSY325
- MATHEMATICS, PUBH8545
- Mathematics, QNT275
- MATHEMATICS, STAT 201
- MBA503
- McMaster University
- ME350B, SCIENCE
- MECH4430, SCIENCE
- Mechanics
- Media
- Medical
- Medical Essays
- MGMT2702
- MGMT410
- MGT173, SCIENCE
- MHR6451
- MIAMI UNIVERSITY, WRITING
- Military
- Military Science
- MKT501
- MKT690, OTHER
- MN576
- MN581
- MN610, SCIENCE
- MNGT3711
- Music
- MVC109
- N4685
- NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH, SCIENCE
- NATIONAL UNIVERSITY, SCIENCE
- Needs to be at least 300 wordswithin the past five years.No plagiarism! What key aspects do you believe should guide ethical behavior related to health information, technology, and social media?
- no workable ""affirmative action"" for Discourses: you can't 19 Ill' let into the game after missing the apprenticeship and be expected to have a fnir shot at playing it. Social groups will not
- Northcentral University
- not writing)
- nothing can stand in her way once she has her mind set. I will say that she can sometimes be hard headed
- Nova Southeastern University
- NR447, SCIENCE
- NRS429VN
- NRS44V, OTHER
- NRS451VN
- NRSE4540
- NSG426
- NSG486
- NSG6102
- NSG6102, SCIENCE
- Numerical Analysis
- NUR231NUR2349, SCIENCE
- NUR647E
- NURS350
- NURS508
- NURS6640
- Nursing
- NURSING LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT, SCIENCE
- NursingNursing
- Nutrition
- offering learners the flexibility to acquire new skills and knowledge from the comfort of their homes. However
- OHIO UNIVERSITY, SCIENCE
- Online Discussion Forums Grade and Reflection Assignment : Current Topic Artificial Intelligence HR Planning Career and Management Development Labour RelationsForum
- operation security
- Operations Management
- or do those companies have an ethical obligation to protect people? In this assignment
- ORG5800, OTHER
- Organisations
- OTHER
- Other, PAD631
- OTHER, PARK UNIVERSITY
- OTHER, PLA1223
- Other, POLI330N
- OTHER, PROFESSIONAL NURSING NU231 NUR2349
- Other, RTM404
- OTHER, SAINT LEO UNIVERSITY
- OTHER, SOC3210C1
- Other, SOCW6333
- OTHER, SOUTHERN NEW HAMPSHIRE UNIVERSITY
- Other, The University Of Southern Mississippi
- OTHER, TRIDENT UNIVERSITY INTERNATIONAL
- Other, UC
- OTHER, UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
- OTHER, UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA
- Other, Walden University
- paying attention to grammar and spelling. Actively participate in discussions
- Personal Development
- PhD Dissertation Research
- PHI 413V, SCIENCE
- Philosophy
- Photography
- PHY290
- PHYS204L206
- Physics
- Physics – Astronomy
- Physics – Electromagnetism
- Physics – Geophysics
- Physics – Mechanics
- Physics – Optics
- PhysicsPhysics
- Physiology
- PNGE332, SCIENCE
- Political Science
- Political SciencePolitical Science
- Politics
- PowerPoint slides
- privacy
- PROFESSIONAL NURSING NU231 NUR2349, SCIENCE
- PROFESSIONAL NURSING NU231NUR2349, SCIENCE
- Programming
- Programming , College of Applied Sciences
- PROGRAMMING, STRAYER UNIVERSITY
- PROGRAMMING, WILMINGTON UNIVERSITY
- Project Management
- proper grammar
- Protein
- provide a discussion on what could have been done better to minimize the risk of failure. If you have not yet been involved with a business process redesign
- PSYC8754, WRITING
- Psychology
- PsychologyPsychology
- PUB373, SCIENCE
- Purdue University
- Rasmussen College
- Read a poam and write a paragraph to prove "The table turned".
- Reading
- ReadingReading
- readings
- Reference this
- REL1030
- Religion
- RES861, Science RES861
- Research Methodology
- Research methods
- Research Proposal
- Research questions
- Retail
- Rutgers university
- SAFE4150
- safety statutes
- Santa Clara University
- SCI 220, SCIENCE
- SCI115, SCIENCE
- Science
- Science, Strayer University
- SCIENCE, THOMAS JEFFERSON UNIVERSITY
- SCIENCE, WEST COAST UNIVERSITY
- SCIENCE, WEST TEXAS A & M UNIVERSITY
- Sciences
- SCM371, Writing
- Search in scholarly sources the similarities and difference between PhD and DNP. Post three similarities and three differences found on your research. Do not forget to include your reference.
- Security
- self-actualization
- several things can happen
- Should the government operate public transportation systems?250 words
- so that it is not biased?
- so too
- SOC 450
- Social Policy
- Social Science
- Social Science – Philosophy
- Social Science – PhilosophySocial Science – Philosophy
- Social Science – Sociology
- Social Science – SociologySocial Science – Sociology
- Social Sciences
- Social ScienceSocial Science
- Social Work
- Society
- Sociology
- someone cannot engage in a Discourse in a less than fully fluent manner. You are either in it or you're not. Discourses are connected with displays of
- SP19, WRITING
- SPC2608
- SPD310
- Sports
- Statistics
- succeeding in online courses requires a different approach compared to traditional classroom settings. To help you make the most of your online learning experience
- such as notifications from social media or email. Organize your study materials and have a reliable internet connection to ensure seamless access to course materials.
- Technology
- that personal ethics and organizations ethics are two different and unrelated concepts. Others
- the attribute is useful
- The directions are attached. However you must read the PDF file first in order to answer the questions.
- the role of work and money
- Theatre
- then reply to a minimum of 2 of your classmates' original posts.
- Theology
- Threat of artificial intelligence 800 words.
- to be true of second language acquisition or socially situ ated cognition (Beebe
- to better promote the value and dignity of individuals or groups and to serve others in ways that promote human flourishing.
- to usc a Discourse. The most you can do is III It'! them practice being a linguist with you.
- total fat consumption
- Tourism
- Translation
- Transportation
- U110
- Uncategorized
- University of Central Missouri
- University of South Florida
- UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA, WRITING
- Video Games
- Watch this meditation https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doQGx4hdF3M&feature=youtu.be and write a one page reflection
- WCWP10B
- we can always ask about how much ten- 12 """""" or conflict is present between any two of a person's Discourses (Rosaldo
- What approaches to the study of poverty does economic sociology offer? More specifically, what might sociologists studying poverty focus on besides poor households, neighborhoods, and individuals?
- What is the philosophical matrices for Behaviorism, Constructivism, and Reconstructivism
- What key aspects do you believe should guide ethical behavior related to health information, technology, and social media?
- what place did government have to improve markets? What does the concept of ""crowding out"" mean in all of this?
- What should be done to maintain optimum stock levels and why is it important to keep accurate and up-to-date records of stock in medical practice?
- whether good or bad. The intent of the short research projects is to dig a little deeper into some of the topics
- which triggers the vulnerability. As soon as the user downloads this shortcut file on Windows 10; windows explorer will
- Would somebody read these quotes and answer those three questions at the bottom for me?Disregard number two I will look for myself in the text.
- Write short essay based on evidence about the 2 cons of Sex Education 250-300 words 2 reference minimum no plagiarism
- WRITING
- writing assignment, you will analyze asymmetric and symmetric encryption. Evaluate the differences between the two of them and which one that you would determine is the most secure.
- Writing, Personal Code of Technology Ethics
- you believe you can provide the CIO with the information he needs.
- you will learn how to search for scholarly
- you will need to read the TCP standard. TCP was first defined in RFC 793. A link to this document is provided. https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc793
- Young People
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