Parkinson's law (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Parkinson's law" in English language version.

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archive.org

arxiv.org

  • Klimek, Peter; Hanel, Rudolf; Thurner, Stefan (14 April 2008), "To how many politicians should government be left?", Physica A, 388 (18): 3939–3947, arXiv:0804.2202, Bibcode:2009PhyA..388.3939K, doi:10.1016/j.physa.2009.06.012, S2CID 12097887, It is often argued – as now e.g. in the discussion of the future size of the European Commission – that decision making bodies of a size beyond 20 become strongly inefficient. We report empirical evidence that the performance of national governments declines with increasing membership and undergoes a qualitative change in behavior at a particular group size. We use recent UNDP, World Bank and CIA data on overall government efficacy, i.e. stability, the quality of policy formulation as well as human development indices of individual countries and relate it to the country's cabinet size. We are able to understand our findings through a simple physical model of opinion dynamics in groups..

books.google.com

doi.org

  • Klimek, Peter; Hanel, Rudolf; Thurner, Stefan (14 April 2008), "To how many politicians should government be left?", Physica A, 388 (18): 3939–3947, arXiv:0804.2202, Bibcode:2009PhyA..388.3939K, doi:10.1016/j.physa.2009.06.012, S2CID 12097887, It is often argued – as now e.g. in the discussion of the future size of the European Commission – that decision making bodies of a size beyond 20 become strongly inefficient. We report empirical evidence that the performance of national governments declines with increasing membership and undergoes a qualitative change in behavior at a particular group size. We use recent UNDP, World Bank and CIA data on overall government efficacy, i.e. stability, the quality of policy formulation as well as human development indices of individual countries and relate it to the country's cabinet size. We are able to understand our findings through a simple physical model of opinion dynamics in groups..

economist.com

  • Parkinson, Cyril Northcote (19 November 1955). "Parkinson's Law". The Economist. London.

europa.eu

ec.europa.eu

harvard.edu

ui.adsabs.harvard.edu

  • Klimek, Peter; Hanel, Rudolf; Thurner, Stefan (14 April 2008), "To how many politicians should government be left?", Physica A, 388 (18): 3939–3947, arXiv:0804.2202, Bibcode:2009PhyA..388.3939K, doi:10.1016/j.physa.2009.06.012, S2CID 12097887, It is often argued – as now e.g. in the discussion of the future size of the European Commission – that decision making bodies of a size beyond 20 become strongly inefficient. We report empirical evidence that the performance of national governments declines with increasing membership and undergoes a qualitative change in behavior at a particular group size. We use recent UNDP, World Bank and CIA data on overall government efficacy, i.e. stability, the quality of policy formulation as well as human development indices of individual countries and relate it to the country's cabinet size. We are able to understand our findings through a simple physical model of opinion dynamics in groups..

nytimes.com

select.nytimes.com

oed.com

semanticscholar.org

api.semanticscholar.org

  • Klimek, Peter; Hanel, Rudolf; Thurner, Stefan (14 April 2008), "To how many politicians should government be left?", Physica A, 388 (18): 3939–3947, arXiv:0804.2202, Bibcode:2009PhyA..388.3939K, doi:10.1016/j.physa.2009.06.012, S2CID 12097887, It is often argued – as now e.g. in the discussion of the future size of the European Commission – that decision making bodies of a size beyond 20 become strongly inefficient. We report empirical evidence that the performance of national governments declines with increasing membership and undergoes a qualitative change in behavior at a particular group size. We use recent UNDP, World Bank and CIA data on overall government efficacy, i.e. stability, the quality of policy formulation as well as human development indices of individual countries and relate it to the country's cabinet size. We are able to understand our findings through a simple physical model of opinion dynamics in groups..

vividmethod.com

web.archive.org