27,597 research outputs found
Air transport in Africa: toward sustainable business models for African airlines
Although there is a vast amount of literature on airline business models and their evolution in changing global landscapes, there is a general lack of research into the applicability of those models, traditionally defined in European and North American contexts, to the African scene. Implicit in this study is the hypothesis that the African environment is unique enough to warrant its own host of strategies, which may be distinctive enough to form part of a new strategic template, or business model. Initially, a review of existing literature is undertaken to profile the African aviation environment and evaluate existing airline business models and their evolution, both globally and in Africa. The methodology consists firstly of a cluster exercise, whereby 57 African airlines are analysed in terms of their network and size, to yield a number of heterogeneous groups which serve to identify the current business models of airlines on the continent. Following this, eight airlines (representative of the groups outlined in the cluster analysis) were subsequently selected for analysis in terms of the Product and Organisational Architecture framework. While it was evident that the traditional models are followed in Africa, in some instances variations were apparent. Full-service network carriers and regional carriers were concluded as being the most prominent and stable in the African market. The applicability of the low-cost carrier model in Africa was also examined at length, with mixed results. The analysis also raised network density and connectivity as essential components of business models for delivering profits in an African context
Vertical Structure and Strategic Environmental Trade Policy
The idea that environmental trade policy may be used to achieve competitive advantage in international markets has important implications for the way we conceive tree-trade. This paper reconsiders the issue of strategic environmental policy in a model that makes explicit the vertical structure that supports production of the traded good. We find these intranational vertical relationships to have a substantial qualitative effect on the optimal strategic environmental trade policy. We show that under both quantity and price competition in the international market, the optimal policy to levy on the polluting input when vertical contracts are allowed is a Pigouvian tax.strategic trade, vertical contracts, environmental policy
Optimal control of electromagnetic field using metallic nanoclusters
The dielectric properties of metallic nanoclusters in the presence of an
applied electromagnetic field are investigated using non-local linear response
theory. In the quantum limit we find a non-trivial dependence of the induced
field and charge distribution on the spatial separation between the clusters
and on the frequency of the driving field. Using a genetic algorithm, these
quantum functionalities are exploited to custom-design sub-wavelength lenses
with a frequency controlled switching capability.Comment: accepted for publication in New Journal of Physic
Description of GADEL
This article describes the first implementation of the GADEL system : a
Genetic Algorithm for Default Logic. The goal of GADEL is to compute extensions
in Reiter's default logic. It accepts every kind of finite propositional
default theories and is based on evolutionary principles of Genetic Algorithms.
Its first experimental results on certain instances of the problem show that
this new approach of the problem can be successful.Comment: System Descriptions and Demonstrations at Nonmonotonic Reasoning
Workshop, 2000 6 pages, 2 figures, 5 table
M\"{o}bius deconvolution on the hyperbolic plane with application to impedance density estimation
In this paper we consider a novel statistical inverse problem on the
Poincar\'{e}, or Lobachevsky, upper (complex) half plane. Here the Riemannian
structure is hyperbolic and a transitive group action comes from the space of
real matrices of determinant one via M\"{o}bius transformations. Our
approach is based on a deconvolution technique which relies on the
Helgason--Fourier calculus adapted to this hyperbolic space. This gives a
minimax nonparametric density estimator of a hyperbolic density that is
corrupted by a random M\"{o}bius transform. A motivation for this work comes
from the reconstruction of impedances of capacitors where the above scenario on
the Poincar\'{e} plane exactly describes the physical system that is of
statistical interest.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/09-AOS783 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
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