Multinational banking in China: theory and practice
In: New horizones in international business
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In: New horizones in international business
In: The Pacific review, Band 34, Heft 3, S. 469-489
ISSN: 1470-1332
In: International Journal of Conflict Management, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 40-57
PurposeThis paper aims to evaluate the effectiveness of the reforming Chinese arbitration judicial review process and supplement the corresponding suggestions and analyze the practical trends of Chinese arbitration.Design/methodology/approachThis paper presents considerable evidence that includes the latest empirical data and iconic cases to demonstrate the Chinese judicial system's acts of internationalizing Chinese arbitration. This paper then elaborates the Chinese Supreme People's Court (hereinafter SPC) recent reforms of the mechanisms of arbitration judicial review.FindingsThe SPC's efforts to coordinate Chinese arbitration practice with international standards are effective and fruitful. However, even after recent reforms, there are still inherent deficiencies and important omissions that hinder the efficiency of Chinese arbitration.Originality/valueThe major contributions of this paper are providing latest empirical data to evaluate effectiveness of current Chinese arbitration judicial review and analyzing latest SPC's legal interpretations.
This article introduces and examines Chinese arbitration institutions' recent movements to expand non-ICSID investment arbitration services, which could potentially contravene existing relevant Chinese laws and judicial practice, and it explores the prospects for non-ICSID investment arbitration in China. The article first compares ICSID and non-ICSID investment arbitration to determine the differences between them and their respective selling points for stakeholders in investment disputes. Next, the article examines the diverse mechanisms involved and highlights the different rules that govern non-ICSID arbitration, including the rules established by Chinese arbitration institutions in recent years. The article then further analyzes the obstacles in existing Chinese legislation and judicial practice that have impeded the use of non-ICSID investment arbitration in China. Finally, after briefly introducing proposals to remove these obstacles, the article examines the future prospects for Chinese non-ICSID investment arbitration.
BASE
SSRN
Working paper
In: Contemporary Asia Arbitration Journal, Band 6, Heft 1, S. 107-132
SSRN
In: Harvard international review, Band 32, Heft 4
ISSN: 0739-1854
The parliamentary republic of Singapore has been under international scrutiny for its stringent one-party rule by the Peoples Action Party (PAP) and suppression of the media and minority parties that oppose its control of the government. Many attribute Singapore's rapid rise to first-world status and economic prosperity to the same set of ideologies the PAP used to build the state following independence from the UK. As Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew approaches 87 and shows signs of a worsening heart condition, many around the world have begun to question the nation's future, specifically its path to succession. This article discusses Singapore's future after Lee and whether or not it will embrace sociopolitical reform. Adapted from the source document.
In: Harvard international review, Band 32, Heft 4, S. 28-32
ISSN: 0739-1854
In: Computers in human behavior, Band 158, S. 108276
ISSN: 0747-5632
In: Communication research
ISSN: 1552-3810
Risk information avoidance (RIA) has become an increasingly ubiquitous behavior for people to deal with massive volumes of information. Given its detrimental impact, abundant studies were conducted to explore its antecedents. Nevertheless, the results are scattered and, in some cases, inconsistent. We thereby conducted a meta-analysis to present a synthesis of the current findings by identifying the most relevant antecedents and moderators. Guided by the framework of Planned Risk Information Avoidance, we examined 11 antecedents along cognitive, emotional, and sociocultural dimensions. Based on 52 articles across various contexts, the results indicated that information overload ( r = .30), efficacy belief ( r = −.11), fatalism ( r = .18), information insufficiency ( r = −.09), anxiety ( r = .26), worry ( r = −.08) and information avoiding norms ( r = .50) were significant predictors of RIA. Furthermore, uncertainty avoidance and information type were identified as moderators.
In: Social media + society, Band 10, Heft 2
ISSN: 2056-3051
This study seeks to advance the scholarship on the phenomenon of social media platform-swinging in the context of the polymedia environment in China. Specifically, drawing on the theoretical frameworks of uses and gratifications and channel complementarity theory, we propose that the platform-swinging behavior is driven by users' various complementary and supplementary needs. Drawing on 32 semi-structured interviews, we identify four distinct types of platform-swinging behavior: social connecting, impression managing, information seeking, and aimless swinging. We further reveal that, depending on various complementary and supplementary needs, each type of platform-swinging behavior has distinct media affordance preferences. By profiling the distinct platform-swinging behaviors and examining their preferred affordances, the study advances our theoretical understanding of the dynamics between the polymedia ecology and users' gratifications.
In: Communication research, Band 51, Heft 1, S. 56-82
ISSN: 1552-3810
This meta-analysis synthesized 19 empirical articles reporting 123 effect sizes of character-recipient similarity on narrative processing and persuasion outcomes across different contexts, including health, environmental, and social issues. We also aimed to investigate whether the effect magnitude varies depending on how the similarity is operationalized, which perspective is adopted, and what context the narrative persuasion is placed in. The results indicated that, compared to a dissimilar counterpart, a similar character leads to stronger identification ( k = 34, d = 0.14, p < .01) and self-referencing ( k = 12, d = 0.16, p < .01). The effects on transportation ( k = 22, d = 0.13, p = .05) and resistance ( k = 12, d = −0.16, p = .05) were marginally significant. It was also found that the similarity manipulated on chosen demographic and biographic variables like occupation and living place yields the strongest impact among other variables (i.e., innate demographic and biographic variables like age and sex, psychological and behavioral variables like beliefs and behaviors). Furthermore, the similarity effect in narrative persuasion becomes intensified when combined with a first-person perspective and placed in a social issue context. By presenting a synthesis of the existing research, this meta-analytical study sought to identify areas in need of further refinement and outline future investigation directions for narrative persuasion.
In: China economic review, Band 77, S. 101900
ISSN: 1043-951X
In: International journal of operations & production management, Band 42, Heft 12, S. 1905-1936
ISSN: 1758-6593
PurposeFirms are increasingly depending on supplier portfolios in the quest for firm innovation. However, whether concentrated supplier portfolios are beneficial to innovation remains highly disputed. This study aims to investigate the effect of supplier portfolio concentration on firm innovation and the contingencies that shape this effect.Design/methodology/approachThe authors build on the knowledge search view to theorize a U-shaped effect of supplier portfolio concentration on firm innovation and further propose that the U-shaped effect is contingent on financial slack and growth opportunities. The authors collected panel data from 1,320 manufacturing firms in China. The negative binomial regression analyses were performed to test the hypotheses.FindingsSupplier portfolio concentration has a U-shaped effect on firm innovation. This U-shaped effect is weakened and flipped by financial slack but strengthened by growth opportunities.Originality/valueThe findings extend current understandings of the influence of supplier portfolio on firm innovation by clarifying the U-shaped effect of supplier portfolio concentration on innovation and the circumstances under which supplier portfolio concentration is more effective for firm innovation.