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The Chinese Education MissionHiggins, Patricia Cline 25 July 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Political geographic implications of transnational resource managementWilson, Gordon January 1973 (has links)
There is a growing concern among both scholars and laymen for the diminishing resources of the world. This thesis examines the political geographic implications of transnational resource management. The hypothesis is a dual one: firstly, that man's past and present uses of transnational resources have led, in some cases, to the necessity for international political control, and secondly, that problems related to transnational resource management have been, for the most part, ignored by political geographers, but should be the subject of future research.
The use of three transnational resources is reviewed: the blue whale, the North Pacific salmon, and the polar bear. Through an examination of the past uses of the blue whale, and the International Whaling Commission's lack of legislative powers, a case is built supporting the hypothesis. This case is further supported by the past uses of the North Pacific salmon, and the on-going dispute between the American and Japanese governments. Lastly, the Federal Provincial authority established to regulate the hunting of polar bear adds further support to the hypothesis.
A brief look back into the discipline establishes this thesis as part of the environmental concerns within geography, and the material presented in the text clearly shows the political geographic implications of the problems of transnational resource management. The results of the inquiry would suggest that there is a need for further political geographic research on similar topics, and that man's past and present uses of transnational resources have, in fact, led to the necessity for international political control for these resources at least. There is, however, no claim made to the feasibility of such an international authority. The urgency for enforceable legislation is, nevertheless, clearly evident. / Arts, Faculty of / Geography, Department of / Graduate
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Essays on the management of fisheries in the presence of strategic interactionsRuseski, Gorazd 05 1900 (has links)
The following three essays present an analysis that combines well-known models of fisheries
management with contemporary theories of international trade and industrial organization.
The general theme of the thesis is that countries' fisheries management policies
can affect the strategic interaction between their fishing industries. The first essay examines
the problem of noncooperative management of international fisheries by analyzing
the strategic rent-shifting roles for such well-known national management policies as fleet
licensing and effort subsidies. It is shown that the noncooperative equilibrium in each
policy takes the form of a prisoner's dilemma with dissipated rents in the fishery. It is
also shown that strategic effort subsidies can only lead to incomplete rent dissipation but
strategic fleet licensing can lead to complete rent dissipation.
The second essay develops a theory of cooperative management of international fisheries
by considering negotiation between countries over the same fleet licensing and effort
subsidy policies considered in the first essay. The outcomes of negotiation over these policies
are compared to the corresponding noncooperative outcomes, on the one hand, and
to the efficient outcome on the other. It is shown that negotiation over effort subsidies in
the absence of side payments is efficient, but negotiation over fleet sizes in the absence of
side payments is inefficient.
The third essay develops a two-stage two-period model of a 'domestic' country and
a 'foreign' country whose respective fishing industries harvest from separate fisheries for
the same international market. The domestic country uses a harvest policy to regulate
the harvest by its fishing industry, but the harvest by the foreign fishing industry is
unregulated. Two types of fisheries are considered. In the case of schooling fisheries,
the domestic country may choose a conservative harvest policy in the first period if it
can induce the biological collapse of the foreign fishery in the second period. In the case
of search fisheries, the domestic country always chooses a conservative harvest policy in
the first period in order to induce the economic degradation of the foreign fishery in the
second period. The results suggest that international fisheries trade in the presence of
divergent national fisheries management regimes could have unexpected consequences for
world fisheries. / Arts, Faculty of / Vancouver School of Economics / Graduate
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Strategic management of offshore branch campuses in transnational higher education : global synergy versus local responsivenessShams, Farshid January 2013 (has links)
This research is at the intersection of strategic management, international business and internationalisation of higher education institutions (HEIs). It focuses on the managerial aspects of higher education institutions with offshore branch campuses. In the past couple of decades the number of offshore branch campuses established by HEIs - mainly universities - has increased dramatically, but most research carried out to date in this field has been anecdotal and the number of theoretical studies in this area is very limited. Thus, the aim of this research is to breach this gap by developing a theoretical framework that is capable of explaining the managerial aspects of foreign branch campus operations. The key research question in this study is how transnational higher education institutions (TNHEIs) strategically manage their offshore branch campuses. In order to address this question, the literature on TNHEIs with regard to managerial complexities is reviewed. By assimilating and reconceptualising this literature, a multidimensional framework is constructed, which encapsulates the most pertinent ramifications of managing an offshore branch campus. The framework has been constructed by drawing on a widely used paradigm in the international business discipline, known as the dichotomy of global integration versus local responsiveness (I-R dichotomy). It helps to portray the TNHEIs’ strategic positions and positional change strategies on three dimensions of curriculum, research activities and staffing.
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25 Years of Real Option Empirical Research in ManagementIpsmiller, Edith, Brouthers, Keith D., Dikova, Desislava January 2019 (has links) (PDF)
For several decades, management scholars have extolled the virtues of using real option logic when making
decisions under uncertainty. Real option logic suggests that in such situations, firms might be better off deferring
or staging investments, reducing potential financial losses, while at the same time securing an option to grow (or
abandon) the investment when uncertainty abates. Our analysis of the empirical research published in
leading management journals over the past 25 years suggests that while some progress has been made, much
more work needs to be done. We still do not have the answers to critical questions such as: Which
entrepreneurial/managerial traits impact the identification or exploitation of real options? Do multiple types of
uncertainties interact with each other and influence real option decisions? Addressing these and other issues
identified in our study can help improve our understanding of the usefulness of real option logic in management.
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Context and HRM: Theory, Evidence, and ProposalsMayrhofer, Wolfgang, Gooderham, Paul N., Brewster, Chris January 2019 (has links) (PDF)
Human resource management (HRM) has paid insufficient attention to the impact of context. In this article, we outline the need for HRM to take full account of context, particularly national context, and to use both cultural theories and, particularly, institutional theories to do that. We use research publications that utilize the Cranet data to show how that can be done. From that evidence, we develop a series of proposals for further context-based research in HRM.
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A theoretical analysis of the Law of the Sea negotiation in the context of international relations and negotiation theoryKikugawa, Tomofumi January 1999 (has links)
The Law of the Sea negotiation, which was instigated as a response to increased human activities at sea, was an international law making process. The negotiation has been described as the longest, most techncally complex, continuous negotiation attempted in modem times. It was attended by almost all states in the world and contained a series of complex and overlapping issues. It was a remarkably successful process in that it concluded with an agreement, which protagonists with different interests and objectives succeeded in producing after 27 years. This thesis analyses international relations and negotiation theories that relate to the Law of the Sea negotiation, highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of each body of theory. The work goes on to examine the most importnt aspets of the Law of the Sea negotiation, including why the negotiation started, the core issues and principal actors of the negotiation, the process up until 1980 when the draft Treaty was devised, the American rejection of the Treaty and the process which led to the final agreement of 1994. The work then looks at these individual aspects of the negotiation in the context of the examination of international relations theory and negotiation theory that relates to the Law of the Sea. The thesis concludes by proposing a model that explains the Law of the Sea negotiation. The model questions existing theory on the meaning of the state and states' status in international society.
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Intercultural communication and conflict between American and Chinese colleagues in China-based multinational organizationsYuan, Wenli, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Kentucky, 2006. / Advisers: Joachim Knuf, Chike Anyaegbunam. Includes bibliographical references.
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Standardization of corporate environmental management : business case, multinational cement corporation /Moutchnik, Alexander. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)-University of Heidelberg, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. [235]-250) and indices.
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Managing currencies in international portfolios /Müller, Urban. January 2000 (has links)
University, Diss.--St. Gallen, 2000.
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