International student security
In: The SAGE handbook of international higher education., p. 207-221
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In: The SAGE handbook of international higher education., p. 207-221
In: Scientific research in the XXI Century: Proceedings of the I International Scientific Conference on Eurasian scientific cooperation, p. 127-129
The authors analyze international experience of microcredit development and made appropriate conclusions about the advantages and disadvantages of microcredit organization. Microcredit organizations are self-sufficient and stable institutions which are regulated by bank and state legislation.
In: Stabilization and progress in the Western Balkans: proceedings of the symposium 2010, Basel, Switzerland September 17 - 19, p. 95-108
In: Studies in international relations and politics: new Europe and beyond, p. 138-149
"This paper attempts to assess international regimes and some of the problems that appear with them, namely environmental regimes and security regimes. The paper assesses these problems through prisms of two of the major theories of international relations: Realism and Liberalism. It looks into aspects such as how these theories differ in comparison, while addressing the issues under discussion? First and foremost, what are international regimes and how do we categorize them? Analyzing the task of international regimes and explaining to some extent the significance of international environmental and security regimes for today's world is the subject of this paper." (author's abstract)
In: Education - identity - globalization., p. 142-151
In: The SAGE handbook of international higher education., p. 113-130
In: Perspectives and limits of democracy: proceedings of the 3rd Vienna Workshop on International Constitutional Law, p. 71-90
In: Brasilien: auf dem Sprung zur Weltwirtschaftsmacht?, p. 107-121
In: Studying 'effectiveness' in International Relations: a guide for students and scholars, p. 15-32
In: Rechtsextremismus in Deutschland und Europa: rechts außen - rechts "Mitte"?, p. 103-114
In: The SAGE handbook of international higher education., p. 191-206
In: Internationale Interventionen: Kongo, Irak, Ruanda, Afghanistan, Entwicklungspolitik, Völkerrecht, p. 137-164
In: Legal and political theory in the post-national age: selected papers presented at the Second Central and Eastern European Forum for Legal, Political and Social Theorists (Budapest, 21-22 May 2010), p. 181-194
In: Immigration in the 21st century: Political, social and economic issues, p. 85-104
"One of the key questions on international migration concerns its benefits and costs for the receiving economies. Assessing the overall net gain or loss to the economy from immigration is a challenging task both from a theoretical and an empirical point of view. Immigration can affect the receiving economy through several channels: wages or employment effects on native workers, changes in output structure, fiscal effects, effects on house prices, and so on. In this chapter, we concentrate on one of the most important channel: the impact on wage and employment of natives. We consider the impact of immigration on a subgroup of the population that could particularly benefits from it, the female population. Since international migration may change the prevailing wage rates in the sectors where a large number of migrants looks for a job, we focus on immigrants working in the household service sector. The underlying idea is that migrants could increase the availability of services to households, like childcare, housekeeping, or caring for elderly, reducing their market prices. This effect could induce women to change their decision on participation to the labour market. In the empirical analysis, we use data of countries with quite different institutions (Australia, Germany, Switzerland, the UK, and the US). This gives us the opportunity to understand whether the effect of migrants on female labour supply is relevant in countries where policies are more or less supportive to families." (Text excerpt, IAB-Doku) ((en))
In: Globalization and environmental challenges: reconceptualizing security in the 21st century, p. 495-502