Tips and Tricks

SFU Library Offers Thesis Workshops

May 13, 2011
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The SFU Library is offering a series of free thesis writing workshops for grad students this summer.  Register online: SFU Student Learning Commons Workshops.

Using the Thesis Template
In this workshop you will be introduced to or learn how to better use the SFU Library’s thesis template. Choose from one of three dates:

  • Wednesday, May 18
  • Thursday, May 26
  • Friday, June 3
  • Tuesday, June 21
  • Wednesday, July 13

The Thesis Template: Troubleshooting and Fine-tuning
This workshop, for graduate students who are already using a thesis template, gives you an opportunity to fine-tune your document. You’ll be able to send your document to the library and outline your questions and concerns.

  • Thursday, July 28
  • Tuesday, August 9

APA: Essentials for Academic Writing
This workshop provides a comprehensive user-friendly overview of APA citation and referencing style including an interactive component to ensure an understanding of its application. Expect to learn a variety of APA conventions for headings and their levels, quotation, numbers, tables and figures, caps, italics, and punctuation.

  • Tuesday, June 7

Note: Post edited on May19 to add more workshop dates due to popular demand.

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Defences and Events

  • Brian Uher-Koch, MSc Thesis Defence, Biological Sciences
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  • Joshua Newman, PhD Thesis Defence, Political Science
    5:00 PM - 8:00 PM
    May 22, 2013
    Location: SFU Harbour Centre, The Repap Policy Room (1425) Title: The Governance of Public-Private Partnerships: Success and Failure in the Transportation Sector Abstract Since the economic crises of the 1970s, the political climate in many developed countries has been reoriented from a focus on the public provision of goods and services to an emphasis on curbing government spending, reducing taxes, and limiting bureaucracy. As a consequence, alternative service delivery arrangements, in which non-government entities and private sector corporations are involved in public service delivery, have become increasingly popular in the last 30 years. The term “governance” is now commonly used to signify this shift away from a traditional hierarchical mode of government to a more horizontal environment of policy formulation and implementation. For many supporters of alternative service delivery, increased freedom for the private sector is regarded as the key to successful governance. Public-private partnerships (P3s) are a family of alternative service delivery mechanisms that allow the private sector to finance, own, and deliver goods and services to the public through long-term contractual arrangements with governments and other public sector agencies. P3s fit comfortably into the logic of alternative service delivery, which implies that by removing some – but not all – elements of the public sector and replacing them with some – but not all – aspects of the private sector, a balance between public sector accountability and private sector efficiency can be struck. However, this presents an inherent conflict, as the public sector is viewed simultaneously as the problem and as the solution to improving public service delivery. This inherent conflict in governance arrangements can sometimes lead to governance failure, a phenomenon that is not sufficiently understood. First, I show that governance failure can have negative consequences for the state and society. Then, I examine two case studies in P3 delivery of transportation infrastructure, the Canada Line in Vancouver, Canada and the Sydney Airport Link in Sydney, Australia, to determine how governance failure occurs and how it can be avoided. These two cases have similar technical parameters and political motivations, but in the Canadian case, where the public sector demonstrated policy leadership through the fostering of policy networks, through bounded-rational policy learning, and through a collaborative institutional approach to project implementation, successful governance was achieved. By contrast, the Australian case, in which the government was not substantially engaged in the partnership, resulted in governance failure. From an analysis of these two cases I conclude that public sector policy leadership is essential to the prevention of governance failure.
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