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... increased by 4% year on year over this time period (Economist 2009). . One feature of the offs..., Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, ...
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.... Third, what role does time play in the shaping of this relationship? Longitud.... Sirmon, D. G., Hitt, M. A., & Ireland, R. D. (2007). Managing firm resources in dynamic ...
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... jurisdictions such as England, Scotland, Ireland,. Bermuda, Australia and New Zealand. Although... thirty year time span, there is a very good chance that they. c...
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... range of distance measures explain 2.6 times as much variance as the Hofstedebased Kogut and Si...
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... democratic personal choice and at the same time provokes some changes in the perception of borders..., Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Luxembourg, Malta, N...
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...At the same time, HQ needs to ensure that lateral transfers initiat...Sharon Loane, University of Ulster, Ireland . Silvia Massini, Manchester Business School, UK ....
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This paper commences with a survey of international trends in union membership, union density and collective bargaining, while focusing on the comparative position of trade unions in Germany. The author considers three hypotheses concerning the development of unionism in recent decades. The first one is that globalisation and structural change in the economy and labour market pull all countries towards a neo-liberal convergence of which union decline is one manifestation. The second predicts that resilient national institutions of collective bargaining and union-employer cooperation enable continued divergence in unionization levels across Western economies. The third one, which seems particularly relevant for Germany, states that feedback mechanisms from internal diversity among both e...
...'s trade unions a special case? In recent times, there is more uncertainty about the future of Ger..., South Korea, Spain, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, the Netherlands, and Norway. In many countries - ...
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.... We use pooled, cross-sectional time-series data to test the hypotheses. Given that som... (1995), France, Germany, Greece (1981), Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal (1986), Spain (1986)...
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... most immediate political challenge at that time was the German unification. Nevertheless, there wa... in 1973 when Great Britain, Denmark and Ireland entered the European Community. The British attemp...
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This paper proposes that multinational firms that are more capable in developing new managerial resources are less vulnerable to the Penrose effect in the process of international expansion. The paper hypothesizes that firms were more capable to achieve growth in consecutive time periods when they send more expatriates to the local operations and when they have greater home experience before entering into the local market. The empirical results based on a sample of Japanese investments in the US support the arguments.
... (Chang/Rosenzweig 2001, Zahra/Ireland/Hitt 2000). As a result, such learning allows the ...