The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Alternatively, you can try to access the desired document yourself via your local library catalog.
If you have access problems, please contact us.
61 results
Sort by:
World Affairs Online
In a world increasingly shaped by displacement and migration, refuge is both a coveted right and an elusive promise for millions. While conventionally understood as legal protection, it also transcends judicial definitions. In Lived Refuge, Vinh Nguyen reconceptualizes refuge as an ongoing affective experience and lived relation rather than a fixed category with legitimacy derived from the state.
Focusing on Southeast Asian diasporas in the wake of the Vietnam War, Nguyen examines three affective experiences—gratitude, resentment, and resilience—to reveal the actively lived dimensions of refuge. Through multifaceted analyses of literary and cultural productions, Nguyen argues that the meaning of refuge emerges from how displaced people negotiate the kinds of safety and protection that are offered to (and withheld from) them. In so doing, he lays the framework for an original and compelling understanding of contemporary refugee subjectivity.
"Lived Refuge allows us to see refugees in a new way. Vinh Nguyen's engagement with the experiments, negotiations, and refusals of refuge provides a unique window into understanding how refugee subjectivity is enacted today." — PETER NYERS, McMaster University
"In haunting, lyrical prose with Walter Benjamin's urgency and Raymond Williams' political deftness, Nguyen's illuminating study marks a milestone in migration studies at large." — B. VENKAT MANI, author of Cosmopolitical Claims and Recoding World Literature
"Nguyen offers a masterful, unrelenting rebuttal to state-sanctioned narratives of 'deserving' refugees. After reading Lived Refuge, you'll realize that we need refugees more than they need us." — ERIC TANG, author of Unsettled: Cambodian Refugees in the NYC Hyperghetto
SSRN
SSRN
In: Social text, Volume 37, Issue 2, p. 109-131
ISSN: 1527-1951
In: Diaspora: a journal of transnational studies, Volume 20, Issue 2, p. 252-257
ISSN: 1911-1568
In: Business strategy and development, Volume 7, Issue 1
ISSN: 2572-3170
AbstractThe purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between organizational performance (OP) in Vietnam and market competition (MC), enterprise risk management (ERM), management accounting system (MAS), and organizational innovation performance (OIP). We surveyed 397 individuals working in the company to elucidate the link between these variables. Data from the multiple factor survey were analyzed using PLS‐SEM software to illustrate the link between MC, MAS, ERM, OIP, and OP. The findings demonstrate a favorable association between direct and intermediary variables to OP, as predicted. Additionally, the intermediary factors have beneficial effects that help businesses in developing effective strategies in a competitive market, generating revenues, and achieving their objectives. The research results of the study show that, in a highly competitive market, organizational innovation efficiency is the top priority of organizations. To achieve this, companies must continuously adapt to the demands of the market.
In: Social responsibility journal: the official journal of the Social Responsibility Research Network (SRRNet), Volume 19, Issue 5, p. 949-969
ISSN: 1758-857X
Purpose
This study aims to examine the relationship between corporate social responsibility (CSR) and firm value (FV) with the moderating role of the organizational life cycle (OLC).
Design/methodology/approach
To fill the missing link of the CSR–FV relationship in the life cycle of the firms, this study divided the firm life cycle into five stages and tested the impact of FV on CSR in each phase. This study uses the ordinary least squares, generalized method of moments method with the dynamic panel data model of 225 Vietnamese listed companies for the period from 2014 to 2018.
Findings
This study's findings confirm the positive effect of CSR on FV. Besides, in most of the stages of the firm life cycle, FV positively affects CSR practices, and this effect is highest in the growth stage. In the decline phase, the relationship between FV and CSR is complex depending on the resources and ability of companies. This study's results are trusted through many robustness tests.
Research limitations/implications
This research does not include all financial, insurance and investment firms to measure the CSR–FV relationship with OLC as moderating role. Further research might conduct in the larger sample or using data in cross countries enhance the evidence for the given relationship.
Originality/value
This research contributes empirical evidence to the scientific literature on CSR, FV and OLC, which would be tremendously helpful for policymakers and business owners to enhance company efficiency.
In: Business strategy and development, Volume 5, Issue 4, p. 375-389
ISSN: 2572-3170
AbstractThe study examined the relationship between organization life cycle (OLC) and financial reporting quality (FRQ) in the Vietnamese context with the mediating role of earnings management (EM). We used estimation OLS, fixed effects model, and other robustness tests to validate the results on a sample of 408 Vietnamese listed companies over the period 2010–2017. In addition, we compare the regression results with a recently established approach is, fuzzy‐set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA). The multiple regression analysis results suggest that firms with low profits or poor financial performance have low‐quality financial statements. On the other hand, when firms mature or have significant retained earnings, the quality of financial information improves and peaks. Besides, throughout the OLC, real earnings management behaviors are less likely to be used than accruals earnings management. Finally, because of the mediating effect of EM, the influence of OLC on FRQ is increased. The fsQCA findings indicate complex configurations between OLC, EM and other controls factors to the outcome of FRQ. This research contributes empirical evidence to the scientific literature on accounting and corporate governance. Next, the main contribution of our study is the examination of mediating role of EM on OLC‐FRQ association through both regression analysis and the fsQCA approach. Additionally, we conducted this study in Vietnam, where the legal framework in protecting the investors is still not complete; this will significantly contribute to the literature overview of OLC and FRQ.
In: Current anthropology, Volume 58, Issue 6, p. 819-821
ISSN: 1537-5382
In: BioSocieties: an interdisciplinary journal for social studies of life sciences, Volume 11, Issue 1, p. 124-127
ISSN: 1745-8560
In: Transcultural Psychiatric Research Review, Volume 32, Issue 4, p. 385-393
In: Global Assemblages, p. 124-144
In: Cultural spaces
Shifting Grounds of Asylum in Canadian Public Discourse and Policy / Johanna Reynolds and Jennifer Hyndman -- Untangling the Strands of Memory: Historicizing the 1914 Komagata Maru Incident and the Concept of Refugeeness / Alia Somani -- Erasing Exclusion: Adrienne Clarkson and the Promise of the Refugee Experience / Laura Madokoro -- Petitions and Protest: Refugees and the Haunting of Canadian Citizenship / Peter Nyers -- Where Are We From? Decolonizing Indigenous and Refugee Relations / Jennifer Adese and Malissa Phung -- Queer and Trans Migrants, Colonial Logics, and the Politics of Refusal / Edward Ou Jin Lee -- Producing the Figure of the "Super-Refugee" through Discourses of Success, Exceptionalism, Ableism, and Inspiration / Gada Mahrouse -- Cross-Racial Refugee Fiction: Dionne Brand's What We All Long For / Donald Goellnicht.
Exploring "refuge" and "refugee" as concepts that shape Canadian nation-building both within and beyond national borders, Refugee States takes an interdisciplinary and critical approach to describing how refugees articulate their relation to and defiance of official discourses. Through close examinations of refugee movements, contexts, and subjectivities, this collection reveals how Canada has relied upon the rejection and inclusion of refugees as a crucial means of statecraft. Bringing together renowned and emerging scholars from multiple disciplines, Nguyen and Phu illuminate the historical, political, and cultural conditions that produce refugees as well as the narrative of humanitarian benevolence that persists nationally and internationally. Highlighting landmark cases, the editors and contributors together develop critical refugee studies as a framework for understanding, nuancing, and critiquing the production of Canadian humanitarian exceptionalism – the international image and discourse of Canada as a liberal, tolerant, and welcoming haven for people fleeing oppression, persecution, and unfreedom. In doing so, Refugee States offers alternative modes of understanding past and present refugee passages to and within Canada, and brings to light the many ways in which refugee subjects navigate displacement, migration, and resettlement. ; This book has been published with the support in part by funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.
BASE