Proposed international trade organization
In: World affairs: a journal of ideas and debate, Band 110, S. 3-11
ISSN: 0043-8200
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In: World affairs: a journal of ideas and debate, Band 110, S. 3-11
ISSN: 0043-8200
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, S. 91-95
ISSN: 0002-7162
In: World affairs: a journal of ideas and debate, Band 104, S. 80-87
ISSN: 0043-8200
World Affairs Online
In: Population: revue bimestrielle de l'Institut National d'Etudes Démographiques. French edition, Band 15, Heft 4, S. 625-654
ISSN: 0718-6568, 1957-7966
Résumé Au cours du dernier siècle, l'évolution démographique a été marquée par la rapidité de l'accroissement de la population du monde et l'ampleur des migrations internationales. Les mouvements démographiques ont grandement modifié la puissance relative des Etats, au point de vue économique comme dans le domaine politique, et c'est là un aspect important de l'étude des relations internationales. Les déplacements de populations n'ont pas eu, à cet égard, un moindre rôle, mais ils ont été, en outre, tantôt la cause et tantôt l'occasion de litiges ou de conflits entre les Etats.
In: Business issues, competition and entrepreneurship
In: Business Issues, Competition and Entrepreneurship Ser.
Intro -- Contents -- Abstract -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 -- Technology Management in Global Environment -- 1.1. Concepts of Technology Management, Principles, Methods, Objectives -- 1.2. Evolution of Technological Structures -- 1.3. Prospects of Technological Civilization -- Chapter 2 -- Modern Trends in Technology Development -- 2.1. Technology Policy in Global Environment -- 2.2. Types and Forms of Technology Policy -- 2.3. Internationalization of Technology Policy -- Chapter 3 -- Global Environment for Innovations -- 3.1. Structure and Levels of Global Environment -- 3.2. Risk Management in International Business -- 3.3. External Innovative Environment Analysis -- Chapter 4 -- Innovative Entrepreneurship in Global Markets -- 4.1. International Industrial Markets -- 4.2. Technology Transferring in Global Markets -- 4.3. Innovative Entrepreneurship in Global Environment -- Chapter 5 -- Planning and Organization of International Research and Development -- 5.1. Models of R& -- D Placement -- 5.2. International Integration and Business Cooperation -- 5.3. Protection Mechanism in Transferring of Innovations -- Chapter 6 -- Innovative Development of Technology Entrepreneurship in International Business -- 6.1. Global Leadership Through Innovations -- 1. Incubator. -- 2. Hackathon. -- 3. Open innovation platforms. -- 4. Corporate venture capital. -- 6.2. Core Competence-Based Approach in Global Environment -- 6.3. Customization of Innovations in Global Industrial Markets -- Appendices -- Appendix A -- Case 1 -- Drawbacks to South Korea's Chosen Innovation Path -- Appendix B -- Case 2 -- Government Leveraging of South Korea's Endowments -- References -- About the Author -- Index -- Blank Page.
In: Multinational business review, Band 16, Heft 1, S. 1-20
ISSN: 2054-1686
Based on fifteen years of data on the annual Academy of International Business (AIB) best dissertation Farmer Award finalists, we find that these dissertations were done at a range of North American universities. Interestingly, dissertation topics differed from the topics covered in the three top IB journals with five‐sixths of the topics in management, organization, economics, or finance and two‐thirds set in a single country or region (U.S., Japan, North America, and Western Europe). Survey research is the most common methodology but analysis of secondary data is growing. As expected, the finalists are on average an extraordinarily prolific group.
In: Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte: APuZ, Band 53, Heft 37, S. 15-24
ISSN: 0479-611X
World Affairs Online
In: Beck'sche Textausgaben
In: Rostocker Beiträge zur Regional- und Strukturforschung 11
Rassurons tout de suite le lecteur : cet article ne prévoit nullement, et son auteur ne souhaite pas du tout la disparition de cette excellente revue. Mais il redoute que l'étude des Relations internationales, notamment dans les Universités, ne devienne de plus en plus compliquée, voire impossible. Il y a une trentaine d'années, l'universitaire français que j'étais se réjouissait du suc-cès de l'un de ses anciens étudiants, devenu son collègue et resté toujours son ami, de l'autre côté de l'Atlantique, et qui parvenait à créer une revue dans le domaine de recher-ches qu'ils partageaient. J'en connaissais les difficultés. Mais j'étais assez optimiste, puis-que je connaissais aussi les qualités et la volonté de Norberto Consani. Il a réussi. Son mérite n'est pas mince, car les Relations internationales deviennent de plus en plus difficiles à distinguer, donc à comprendre, donc à expliquer. Quand le futur fondateur de la revue était, par force et par choix, mon étudiant à Paris, les Relations internationales étaient encore une discipline balbutiante, mineure ; certes, il avait existé de remarquables historiens de la diplomatie et de la guerre, comme Jean-Baptiste Duroselle ; tant de juris-tes internationalistes exceptionnels, dont certains pouvaient être reconnus dans nos couloirs. Dans les années 1960, à l'Université de Paris, il y avait bien un cours d'Institutions internationales, dont l'essentiel était constitué par l'étude du fonctionnement des Orga-nisations internationales. Les circonstances et les résultats de leur activité étaient prati-quement ignorés. Quant aux États, on apprenait en Droit international qu'ils étaient égaux et souverains, mais que tout ne se pasait pas toujours bien entre eux. Et, de la Science politique, on n'étudiait que l'existence de deux blocs antagonistes et d'un reste, appelé abusivement Tiers Monde. Osons le révéler : l'enseignement de Relations internationales était, pour les universités françaises, l'occasion d'accueillir des professeurs étrangers, souvent en exil. ; Instituto de Relaciones Internacionales
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Measuring International Skilled Migration: A New Database Controlling for Age of Entry Michel Beine, Frederic Docquier, and Hillel Rapoport Recent data on international migration of skilled workers define skilled migrants by education level without distinguishing whether they acquired their education in the home or the host country. Using these data and a simple gravity model to estimate the age-of-entry structure of the remaining 23 percent, alternative brain drain measures are proposed that exclude immigrants who arrived before ages 12, 18, and 22. the Belgian National Fund for Economic Research, professor of economics at the Universite Catholique de Louvain (Belgium), and a research fellow at the Institute for the Study of Labor (Bonn) and the Center for Research and Analysis of Migration at University College London; his email address is docquier ires.ucl.ac.be. Hillel Rapoport (corresponding author) is senior lecturer in economics at Bar-Ilan University, a member of EQUIPPE, Universites de Lille (EA CNRS 4018), and a research fellow at the Center for Research and Analysis of Migration at University College London; his email address is hillel mail.biu.ac.il. This article is part of the World Bank Migration and Development Program, which provided financial support. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions oxfordjournals.org 249 250 THE WORLD BANK ECONOMIC REVIEW source country, which should consider as skilled emigrants only people who received post-secondary training in their home country. After zeros and a few suspicious observations were eliminated, 1,580 observations remained for each age threshold (1990 and 2000 included). Survey data are not available for many countries, and when they are (for example, in the EU Labor Force Survey and in the European Community Household Panel), they do not provide representative cross-sectional pictures of immigrants' characteristics. Included as origin country characteristics in Zk are i democracy indicators and measures of public expenditures on primary, secondary, and tertiary education. And included as host country characteristics in Wk f are indicators of social expenditures, education expenditures,3 and degree of openness to immigration. Bringing together the census data on age of entry, which represent 77 percent of skilled immigrants to the OECD, and the estimated structure computed using the results of the parsimonious model for the remaining 23 percent5 provides alternative measures of the brain drain from which skilled immigrants who arrived before a given age are excluded.
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In: Studie der Abteilung Aussenpolitikforschung im Forschungsinstitut der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Nr. 45
World Affairs Online
In: International journal of legal information: IJLI ; the official journal of the International Association of Law Libraries, Band 47, Heft 1, S. 59-67
ISSN: 2331-4117
In: International journal of legal information: IJLI ; the official journal of the International Association of Law Libraries, Band 13, Heft 5-6, S. 57-58
ISSN: 2331-4117