1,471 research outputs found
Financial contagion among members of the EU-8: a cointegration and granger causality approach
The aim of this paper is to examine whether the banking crisis in the US and Western Europe that began in August 2007 spilled over to the currencies the EU-8 such that it could be viewed as financial contagion. The currencies of the EU-8 that will be studied are of the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Lithuania, Latvia, Poland and Slovakia, daily, from 2005 to 2008
Europe: is it ready for free movement of its workforce?
Purpose â To examine what could be achieved through workforce mobility in Europe.
Design/methodology/approach â Literature and case review
Findings â Findings indicate that full mobility of a European workforce is largely permitted and tolerated though a complex web of legal policy and constraints which need to be reviewed if full mobility is to be achieved within the EU.
Practical implications â The paper draws on integration and trade theory to highlight the issues of mobility within the EU. The paper may prove useful to policy makers and researchers.
Originality / value â This paper allows researchers to gain an understanding of the issues in workforce mobility within the EU and build a conceptual portrait of the challenges faced by policy makers
Whither enterprise architecture?
Is the current approach to enterprise architecture dogmatic and over-ambitious? Peter Kemp and Dr John McManus MBCS give their vie
Governance and information governance: some ethical considerations within an expanding information society
Governance and information governance ought to be an integral part of any government or
organisations information and business strategy. More than ever before information and
knowledge can be produced, exchanged, shared and communicated through many different
mediums. Whilst sharing information and knowledge provides many benefits it also provides
many challenges and risks to governments, global organisations and the individual citizen.
Information governance is one element of a governance and compliance programme, but an
increasingly important one, because many regulations apply to how information is managed
and protected from theft and abuse, much of which resides with external agencies usually
outside the control of the individual citizen. This paper explores some of the compliance and
quality issues within governance and information governance including those ethical
concerns as related to individual citizens and multiple stakeholders engaged directly or
indirectly in the governance process
Infra-red spectra of chemisorbed species
Imperial Users onl
Fostering Chinese firms through entrepreneurship, globalisation and international finance
The success of ventures that have pursued non traditional marketing approaches may be attributed to a range of forward thinking practices which it is argued here, should be the starting and finishing points for Chinese companies. Chinese multinationals need to develop entrepreneurial ability more compatible with their growth in the international markets. Chinas educational framework is still largely based on rote learning, which is a method typically seen as ill suited to modern needs. Many Chinese high tech sectors are still dominated by overseas know-how and the ongoing strength of wholly foreign- owned enterprises
The Cultivationists
An excerpt from the novel The Cultivationists.
Obie saw his first sign that the Lord was angry Thursday evening when he awoke from his nap to find his erstwhile girlfriend passed out beside him in her rocking chair. Heâd tried to clear things up at the start of this second go-round. âDelilah,â heâd told her, âIâm writing a book, which means I like to be alone. If youâre one of these women that wants to wake up beside a man each morning, piss off,â but here she was, threatening to stay all night and onward into his writing time
Arabian Gulf Cup offers hope of diplomatic breakthrough
On 8th December, Sayed Mohammed Jaffer, the captain of the Bahrain national football team, lifted aloft the Arabian Gulf Cup at Abdullah bin Khalifa stadium in Doha. The victory of his tiny island nation didnât simply signal an unexpected triumph on the football field. It also represented a glimmer of hope for a diplomatic breakthrough. Less than a month earlier, Bahrain hadnât even been expected to participate in the tournament â the biannual highpoint on the regionâs football calendar. The kingdom, along with Gulf neighbours Saudi Arabia and the UAE, had announced that it would refuse to take part in the contest. The decision was the latest snub of Doha in a dispute that has run since June 2017, when Gulf neighbours Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain (along with Egypt) severed diplomatic relations with Qatar, closing their land border and airspace to Qatar. The blockading countries accused Qatar of supporting terrorism, a charge that Doha repeatedly denied. They set out a list of demands that Doha refused to meet
Highly Non-Linear Optical (NLO) organic crystals and films. Electrooptical organic materials
Devices employing nonlinear optics (NLO) hold great promise for important applications in integrated optics, optical information processing and telecommunications. Properly designed organics possess outstanding optical and electrooptical properties which will substantially advance many technologies including electrooptical switching, optical amplification for communications, and parallel processing for hybrid optical computers. A brief comparison of organic and inorganic materials is given
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