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Organizing Business Knowledge: The MIT Process Handbook, MIT Press, 2003, ISBN 9780262134293; The Future of Work: How the New Order of Business Will Shape Your Organization, Your Management Style, and Your Life, Harvard Business School Press, 2004, ISBN 1591391253; Handbook of Collective Intelligence., MIT Press, 2015, ISBN 9780262029810
MIT has relatively few formal traditions, compared to many other universities, but has a rich culture of informal traditions and jargon. There are a few "big events" such as Commencement (graduation), but many smaller, decentralized activities sponsored by departments, labs, living groups, student activities, and ad hoc groups of MIT community members united by common interests.
MIT's endowment, real estate, and other financial assets are managed through by the MIT Investment Management Company (MITIMCo), a subsidiary of the MIT Corporation created in 2004. [173] A minor revenue source for much of the Institute's history, the endowment's role in MIT operations has grown due to strong investment returns since the 1990s ...
An employee handbook, sometimes also known as an employee manual, staff handbook, or company policy manual, is a book given to employees by an employer. The employee handbook can be used to bring together employment and job-related information which employees need to know. It typically has three types of content: [1]
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In her 40+ year career as a Special Assistant to the President and Chancellor of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Rowe became a model for the role of ombud. [3] Rowe was a founding member and the first President of the Corporate Ombudsman Association (COA), now the International Ombuds Association .
The Handbook of Phonological Theory. Oxford: Blackwell, pp 114–174. Steriade, Donca (1988) Reduplication and syllable transfer in Sanskrit and elsewhere. Phonology 5, 73-155. Steriade, Donca (1987) Locality conditions and feature geometry. Proceedings of NELS 17, 595–618.
Khovanova left the Soviet Union in 1990, and worked for several years in Israel and the US as a postdoctoral researcher. However, she stopped working as a researcher to raise her children, and then worked in the telecommunications and military contracting industry, before returning to academia as a lecturer at MIT.