6,650 research outputs found

    Business Competitiveness in Bahrain: A Synopsis

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    Unbridled freedom to private business sector is a harbinger of business collapse and eventually the economic landscapes of nations. We have had ample examples very recently. Hence, suitable rules and regulations are essential in conditioning favourable business environment. The ease of doing business can be understood by the availability of a cross section of factors such as clarity of property rights, low cost of resolving disputes, predictability of economic policies and situation, protection to investments, impartial redressal mechanism, the freedom and low cost retrenchment policy and exit, ease of resource mobilisation etc. This report reviews two annual reports on Doing Business pertaining to Kingdom of Bahrain vis-a-vis major counterparts in the Middle East and other noted economies.Business competitiveness, Doing business, Business environment, Kingdom of Bahrain

    Individual and organizational factors affecting the implementation of Green IT: a case study of an Indian business school

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    Green Information Technology (Green IT) emerged as a critical research agenda for reducing organizations' carbon footprints to achieve environmental sustainability. This paper aims to understand the factors that affect the adoption of Green Information Technology in the context of a developing country. Studies that have focused on both individual and organizational level factors (multi‐level approach) remain limited. The Theory of Reasoned Action (TRA), Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB), and Technology‐Organization‐Environment (TOE) framework was used as a theoretical lens to address the gap in the literature. The theoretical background and participatory case study (qualitative) as the methodology was used to investigate the factors at multiple levels that could affect Green IT implementation in the developing country context (Indian business school). The findings reveal that three key dimensions affect the implementation of Green IT‐ Need, Scope, and the Inclination to adopt Green IT. Each dimension includes a mix of factors at the individual and organizational levels. This paper contributes to the theory by proposing a framework for multi‐level Green IT adoption. It also provides guidelines to the practitioners for considering the intervention factors at the individual and organizational levels

    Vector-exponential time-series modeling for polynomial J-spectral factorization

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    An iterative algorithm to perform the J-spectral factorization of a para-Hermitian matrix is presented. The algorithm proceeds by computing a special kernel representation of an interpolant for a sequence of points and associated directions determined from the spectral zeroes of the to-be factored matrix

    A behavioral view of Nevanlinna-Pick interpolation

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    The classical Nevanlinna-Pick (NP) interpolation problem is about finding a rational function that satisfies given interpolation conditions, along with a norm condition. In this paper we address the NP problem using concepts from behavioral systems theory and quadratic differential forms (QDFs). The NP problem is solved using a certain “dualization of data”. We address system theoretic motivations for this dualization and the advantages gained in this process. Finally, we address the problem of constructing interpolating functions that satisfy a “frequency dependent” norm condition

    Interpolation with bilinear differential forms

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    We present a recursive algorithm for modeling with bilinear differential forms. We discuss applications of this algorithm for interpolation with symmetric bivariate polynomials, and for computing storage functions for autonomous systems

    Evolution of Social Security in the Lap of Public Action: Recounting the Experience of Kerala

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    This paper is part of a large study on the Social Protection in Rural India and China. In this paper, we attempt at a critical appraisal of the historical development and experience of social security initiatives in Kerala, India. We situate the development experience of Kerala in a conceptual framework of participatory development, which we interpret in a broad context of organization and mobilization of people at specific junctures of historical progress of a society. Thus participatory development, in our view is participation in the progressive process of realization of human rights and thus in development; that is, public action, with an effective public demand and a wiling public supply, conditioned by the legitimate function of the state. It is also attempted to categorize the on-going social security schemes according to the definitional framework of our study, that is, in terms of the definitional division of social security into basic and contingent social security.Social security; Kerala; development; contingency
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