• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 991
  • 121
  • 75
  • 69
  • 56
  • 44
  • 44
  • 44
  • 44
  • 44
  • 44
  • 42
  • 40
  • 23
  • 7
  • Tagged with
  • 1791
  • 214
  • 154
  • 152
  • 149
  • 145
  • 133
  • 126
  • 125
  • 119
  • 118
  • 113
  • 113
  • 110
  • 102
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
751

Changing Institutional Environment and International Connections

Onuklu, Atilla, 0000-0001-9633-3456 January 2021 (has links)
In this thesis, I study subnational and supranational institutional dynamics and their effects on international connectivity. In the second and third chapters, I focus on regulative harmonization within regional integration as a proxy to the changing institutions at the supranational level. I use process of Turkey’s candidacy to full membership in the European Union (EU) as a context of regional integration. In the second chapter, I adopt a network perspective to the international connectivity and track the progress in regulative harmonization by constructing a basic composite index using EU Commission annual progress reports. I utilized social network analysis on USPTO patent data to understand the effect of regulative harmonization on the centrality, complexity and resilience of Turkey’s innovation network. In the third chapter, I adopt a team perspective to the international connectivity. Using the same context, I construct a more sophisticated composite index by utilizing a combination of content analysis, principal component analysis (PCA) and linear aggregation methods to track the regulative harmonization in a robust way. In this chapter, I investigate the relationship between regulative harmonization and international connectivity in innovation using the same patent data supplemented by additional manually parsed company and country level data. I use a classic entropy-based measure, Shannon, to analyze the international connectivity of co-inventor teams in patents. Additionally, I explore asymmetrical impact of different regulation groups as well as a possible mediatory role of MNEs conditional on their origin using a signaling theory perspective. This chapter presents insights regarding the relationship between institutional fundamentals and international connectivity of a country. Finally, in the fourth chapter, I analyze the mechanisms through which national formal institutions interact with subnational informal institutions. More specifically, I use exploratory qualitative analysis supported by the fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis to study how and under what conditions subnational informal institutional factors, that are represented by local business communities and local government-business relationships, exacerbate or ameliorate voids in national formal institutions. Export promotion programs represent the context for formal national institutions in this final chapter. My study contributes, first, to institutional theory by offering a deep analysis of how national formal and subnational informal institutions interact and result in different subnational responses to common institutional voids. Second, it contributes to the literature on economic geography and innovation by demonstrating the institutional fundamentals as antecedents of international connectivity in innovation from both network and team perspectives. My thesis also contributes to the IB literature by showing the asymmetrical effect of different groups of formal institutions on international connectivity and mediatory role of MNEs conditional on their origins in the relationship between regulative harmonization and international connectivity in innovation. I also contribute methodologically to analyses of complex social phenomenon by putting together a novel bundle that produces the Weighted Average Regulative Progress Index, WARP Index, and then combines it with Shannon’s Entropy Index and a recently published estimation method, ivmediate for Stata, that accounts both on endogeneity and mediation. / Business Administration/Strategic Management
752

Spatiotemporal Variation in Space Use by Eastern Wild Turkeys in Mississippi

Ogawa, Ryo 08 December 2017 (has links)
Spatiotemporal variation in animal space use is critical for understanding how individual animals respond to changes in resource availability across space and time. My study was aimed to: 1) determine functional responses of habitat selection by eastern wild turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo silvestris) across 7 study sites in Mississippi; and 2) determine the effect of temporal vegetation variation on order-II habitat selection by wild turkeys over 12 years. I developed resource selection functions using radio telemetry location data. Individual-specific coefficients of order-III habitat selection for forest were related inversely to forest availability in meta-regressions. Yearly coefficients of order-II habitat selection for forest were related inversely to the mean normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) in April, but the coefficients for open fields were related positively to coefficient of variation in the NDVI from March to May. Wild turkeys exhibited functional responses of habitat selection to spatiotemporal forest availability across Mississippi.
753

Armenians in the Ottoman legal system (16th-18th centuries)

Setrakian, Aida Alice. January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
754

Pre-Islamic Turkish elements in the art of the Seljuqid period (1040-1194)

Pocock, V. A. (Valerie-Anne) January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
755

Individuals and the significance of affect : foreign policy variation in the Middle East

Sasley, Brent E. January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
756

One of the last Ottoman şeyhülislâms, Mustafa Sabri Efendi (1869-1954) : his life, works and intellectual contributions

Karabela, Mehmet Kadri January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
757

The Asiatic Artemis /

Leibovici, Mirela E. (Mirela Erna) January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
758

The Dardanelles operation; the French role,

Cassar, George H. January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
759

A Botanical Survey of Turkey Point, Ontario

Soper , James H. 05 1900 (has links)
The following paper is the result of making a study of the vegetation of a selected region along Lake Erie at Turkey Point, by observations, field notes and collections of botanical specimens together with information and records acquired by examination of provincial institutional and private herbaria and by a survey of the literature. The field work was carried out during the summer of 1938. / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA)
760

"O why so eloquently speaks the maiden silence": The Armenian Genocide’s Impact on Women in Armenian Society

Sjostedt, Beck Damon January 2022 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Elizabeth Shlala / This thesis explores how the Armenian Genocide affected and changed Armenian womens’ roles in post-Ottoman society and how the national rebuilding project relied upon women in both traditional and "modern" positions; specifically, their roles as mothers, educators, nurses, workers, patriots, as well as addresses the fluidity of identity and belonging in post-genocide Armenian society. Based on their experiences during the Armenian Genocide, women received different treatment from the larger Armenian society, and had different, sometimes contradictory roles prescribed to them. Women’s different treatment based on their genocide experiences highlight the complexities, challenges, and contradictions of the Armenian national rebuilding project, as well as the centrality of gender in this project and Armenian society as a whole. / Thesis (BA) — Boston College, 2022. / Submitted to: Boston College. College of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Departmental Honors. / Discipline: History.

Page generated in 0.0375 seconds