A case study of the impact of leadership and management on the employment relationship in time of organizational change of the tourism industry in Dubai

A case study of the impact of leadership and management on the employment relationship in time of organizational change of the tourism industry in Dubai

A case study of the impact of leadership and management on the employment relationship in time of organizational change of the tourism industry in Dubai

A case study of the impact of leadership and management on the employment relationship in time of organizational change of the tourism industry in Dubai

research paper on seismic mitigation: post-recovery and reconstruction. Needs to be 10 pages. Please no plagiarism.

Need an research paper on seismic mitigation: post-recovery and reconstruction. Needs to be 10 pages. Please no plagiarism. In recent years, there have been three highly destructive earthquakes in Christchurch, New Zealand. “a triple disaster in Japan involving an earthquake followed by a tsunami” (Edgington, 2011, p.v), catastrophic earthquakes that destroyed the capital city of Port-au-Prince in Haiti, and those in Kobe, Japan.

Recovery is sometimes defined as a return to pre-disaster conditions. or the term may refer to a community resembling its own characteristics in the absence of the disaster occurrence, in terms of population size or economic output. Another definition of ‘recovery’ “recognizes that after a disaster, a community often undergoes significant change, so that it may never return to either the pre-disaster or without-disaster states” (Olshansky and Chang, 2009, p.201). This approach defines ‘recovery’ as the post-disaster attainment of a stable state or condition.

The ‘Disaster Life Cycle’ model refers to the five-time periods that comprise the life cycle of a disaster. These include the “pre-impact period, the impact period, the immediate post-impact period, the short-term recovery period, and the long-range recovery period” (Fischer, 1998, p.7). This theory assists in responding to natural as well as technological disasters, through the process of pre-disaster preparedness, emergency responses such as search and rescue operations, recovery and reconstruction, and mitigation against future calamities of a similar type (Mileti, 1999).

“Post-disaster recovery is a critical component of the disaster cycle because also provides significant opportunities for mitigation” (Olshansky and Chang, 2009, p.201), and consequently helps to break the cycle. The reasons include the requirement for new construction, the flow of post-disaster funding, and the ‘window of opportunity’ of increased awareness created by the disaster. Smith and Wenger (2007) emphasize the importance of developing an ethic of sustainable recovery.

In present times, city planners prepare plans related to emergency response and preparedness issues, which were conventionally undertaken by the civil defense or municipal emergency officers, states Edgington (2011).&nbsp.&nbsp.

Mothers. The work is to be 17 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page.

I will pay for the following article Mothers. The work is to be 17 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page. How social factors such as marital status, gender, socioeconomic state, and others have contributed to the lesser capability or total inability of mentally-ill mothers in performing their responsibilities as parents and primary providers of the basic needs of their children. Some ethical issues surrounding the topic will also be tackled while some personal accounts of affected mothers will be raised to allow sufficient and fair analysis of the situation.

There are many negative consequences of a mental illness that can affect not only the person who has it but also his or her family or anyone who is part of his or her immediate community including authorities, workmates, and many others.

 

Create a 4 pages page paper that discusses learning & physiological psychology.

Create a 4 pages page paper that discusses learning & physiological psychology. For the rats a daily retrieval from drug related memories at 10 minutes to an hour though not 6 hours earlier that the extinction session, attenuating drug originating reinstatements, spontaneous recoveries and further conditioned drug’s effects renewal and drugs seeking. For the heroin addicts, the retrieval on the drug-related memories at 10 minutes prior to the extinction period attenuated cue triggered heroin craves 1, 30 to 180 days after. A memory retrieval extinction process served to replicate the study to humans in lowering cravings and abstinences relapses (Ecker, 2012).

The study’s aim was to recover heroin in-patient addicts. On the first day, it consisted of actual measuring of heroin craving using visual analogue scales where participants had to rate their cravings scaling from 1 to 10. The second day saw the addicts were devolved into three sets. The first group consisted of non memory retrieval-extinction subjects, the second, was formed from memory retrievals under 10 minute duration delays and extinction while the third and last group consisted of memory retrievals under 6 hours delays and extinction. Measurements on blood pressure and heart rates were also recorded for all the participants. So as to avail more evaluation on reactions to cues the measurements were taken before and after cue induction (Ecker, 2012). A 5 minute long, heroin related, video was also viewed by the participants during memory retrieval. While under the extinction process, they were further exposed to 3 cues that were correlated to heroin, drug paraphernalia, for 4 sessions. Both stages took place over a 2 consecutive days’ period.

Following the extinction, the participants were requested to rate how they craved for heroin at that moment while measurements on blood pressures and heart rates were taken. Using visual analogue scales the crave levels were retaken in the 4th, 34th and 184th days.