Studierendenmigration und Entwicklung: eine Fallstudie am Beispiel des KAAD
In: Springer eBook Collection
In: Springer eBook Collection
In: Routledge critical studies in urbanism and the city
In: TemaNord, 2015:553
Abstract: The creative and cultural industries (CCIs) have recently been debated widely, and access to finance has been at the forefront. This KreaNord report, created in 2012, maps the Nordic CCIs@0394@03C3 financial environment, and shows that the environment is facilitating the same access to corporate finance for CCIs as for other sectors. However, the supply of project finance requested by CCIs, is rare/non-existing, and mostly provided as debt. This report concludes the findings as market failure in supply of debt instruments for CCIs, and recommends a development process be initiated. Republished in 2015 following the end of KreaNord, the Nordic Council of Ministers@0394@03C3 initiative on cultural and creative industries (2008@0394@03BC2015).
This book examines three bipolar relationships that have emerged as a result of the Eurasian energy triangle Russia-Former Soviet Union region, Russia-EU, and Russia-China and the ways in which they, along with Putin's foreign energy policy, relate to the debate between neorealism and neoliberal institutionalism
In: FP, Heft 109, S. 34-69
ISSN: 0015-7228
World Affairs Online
In: https://doi.org/10.7916/7cqq-ar94
The social and economic performance in South America continues to presence of some powerful values inimical to individual success and innovative pursuits has given rise to corporatism, lag behind most of the world. What accounts for the widespread governance failures in South America? At bottom, the problems in South America lie in the institutions and the values that led to those institutions. There has been a rise throughout the continent of the social and economic system known as corporatism. The system operates to prevent political and economic competition in the name of social harmony and national unity. A result is an economy in which the business sector is enmeshed with the public sector and tied down by state restrictions. Yet, there is more to be said. The institutions and practices there derive from the presence of some powerful values inimical to individual success and innovative pursuits. In the near-absence of the modernist values that sparked massive, grassroots innovation in Britain, America, Germany, France, and Sweden from the mid-nineteenth into the twentieth century, South Americans have remained wedded to a loosely defined traditionalism. A result is a continent in which only a minority of people are oriented toward engaging careers of creating or venturing and thus flourishing.
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In: IMF Working Paper No. 17/106
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Working paper
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