Academic literature on the topic 'Commodity; Academics'

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Journal articles on the topic "Commodity; Academics"

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Fedyunina, Anna A., Yana Y. Gerina, and Yuliya V. Averyanova. "Academics in manufacturing companies: Empirical analysis of publication activity and export quality." Voprosy Ekonomiki, no. 2 (February 7, 2020): 125–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.32609/0042-8736-2020-2-125-140.

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This paper shows, for the first time in empirical literature, that the presence of employees from academia in the firm, regardless of their participation in the firm’s research activities, reflects the skills of the firm to learn and acquire new knowledge or, put differently, its absorptive capacity. It is assumed that the higher absorptive capacity act as a mechanism that determines the impact of scientists on the productivity of the firm. The hypothesis that there is an inter-firm diffusion of knowledge in the commodity space is also being tested: firms with similar commodity structures are more likely to hire scientists. Hypotheses are tested on the example of a sample of small and medium-sized Russian firms-exporters, for which absorptive capacity is particularly important.
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Lee, Martyn. "Flights of Fancy: Academics and Consumer Culture." Media, Culture & Society 16, no. 3 (1994): 521–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/016344379401600310.

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It is worth remarking how many theories of consumer capitalism (of which postmodernism may be one exotic variant) have come to take capitalism at its face value: as a system of circulation, exchange and consumption. In doing so, they manage to reproduce the problem of commodity fetishism: the obscuring of the conditions and relations of production. It is as if the Burger King I consumed while reading Lyotard did not rest on a whole system of capitalized agriculture, transportation systems, food processing plants as well as the service economy of cooking and exchange that takes place in the house of the Burger King itself. (Clarke, 1991: 29)
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Parker, Martin. "Becoming Editor: Or, Pinocchio finally notices the Strings." tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique. Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society 11, no. 2 (2013): 461–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.31269/triplec.v11i2.516.

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This paper uses my experience as an academic journal editor in order to reflect upon the social arrangement that brings academics, universities, states and knowledge capitalist organizations together to produce the contemporary academic journal and access paywalls. After some consideration of the history of publishing, I analyse the market for articles like this one, and considerthe consequences of the ranking and monetization of journals, papers andcitations by different agents. As I do this, I insert various biographical reflections on the relationship between ‘editing’ and being ‘edited’. The overall aim of the paper is to suggest that this set-up actually has some verynegative consequences for taxpayers, academics and students. It encourages the overproduction of academic output because it turns it into a commodity which is traded, whilst simultaneously tending to discourage forms of knowledge production that fail to fit into the boxes which have already been establishedfor them, whether in terms of content or style. I conclude with some thoughts on open access journals, and their limits.
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Parker, Martin. "Becoming Editor: Or, Pinocchio finally notices the Strings." tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique. Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society 11, no. 2 (2013): 461–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.31269/vol11iss2pp461-474.

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This paper uses my experience as an academic journal editor in order to reflect upon the social arrangement that brings academics, universities, states and knowledge capitalist organizations together to produce the contemporary academic journal and access paywalls. After some consideration of the history of publishing, I analyse the market for articles like this one, and considerthe consequences of the ranking and monetization of journals, papers andcitations by different agents. As I do this, I insert various biographical reflections on the relationship between ‘editing’ and being ‘edited’. The overall aim of the paper is to suggest that this set-up actually has some verynegative consequences for taxpayers, academics and students. It encourages the overproduction of academic output because it turns it into a commodity which is traded, whilst simultaneously tending to discourage forms of knowledge production that fail to fit into the boxes which have already been establishedfor them, whether in terms of content or style. I conclude with some thoughts on open access journals, and their limits.
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Vossen, Emma. "Publish AND Perish: On Publishing, Precarity and Poverty in Academia." Journal of Working-Class Studies 2, no. 2 (2017): 121–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.13001/jwcs.v2i2.6095.

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We have all heard the phrase ‘publish or perish’ but what does perishing actually look like? Are you publishing and still perishing? In this article, Vossen probes into the complexity of academic publishing from her perspective as both a poor PhD student and the editor-in-chief of Game Studies publication First Person Scholar. Vossen argues that academic publishing (examining both journal articles and academic manuscripts) exploits the labour of grad students and contract workers by encouraging them to publish their work without compensation in the hopes of attaining tenure-track employment in the future. This ‘work for exposure’ method is dependent on the optimism of young scholars, the majority of whom will not attain tenure-track positions. Vossen focuses specifically on how academic journal articles function as both currency and commodity, devaluing alternative forms of research sharing (such as the work published in First Person Scholar) which is seen as ‘academic waste’ that doesn't ‘count’. Academic journal articles are intrinsically linked to an academics ‘worth’ both culturally and financially and therefore, many untenured academics feel they can't take the financial risk of publishing outside of traditional venues for fear of furthering their descent into debt and poverty. Vossen and the staff of First Person Scholar have attempted to remedy the system in their field of Game Studies by both paying academics for their writing and firmly rejecting opportunities to become an academic journal to instead be considered a ‘middle state publication’. Lastly, Vossen discusses opting out of the publish or perish game as a grad student and what you lose when you decide not to play.
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Meneley, Anne. "Consumerism." Annual Review of Anthropology 47, no. 1 (2018): 117–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-anthro-102116-041518.

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The article investigates how consumerism is perceived as an unremarkable part of quotidian existence, as a patriotic duty at various moments, as an indicator of social class, and as a means of semiotic self-fashioning. In consumerism, the tension between the sumptuary restraint on conspicuous consumption, which characterized the early Protestant ethic, and the dependence of capitalism itself on boundless commodity circulation, emerges again and again. I investigate how certain forms of consumerism, relating to excess and improper storage, are reclassified in medical terms. I also investigate modes of strategic consumerism, which try to bridge the gap between producer and consumer, and how certain forms of performative labor are themselves consumed. I close with a few reflections on sites for future study: shopping as a form of underrecognized labor, and an auto-ethnographic turn for academics, inspecting the reach of consumerism into academic practices and universities themselves.
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Copelman, Dina M. "Consuming Downton Abbey: The Commodification of Heritage and Nostalgia." Journal of British Cinema and Television 16, no. 1 (2019): 61–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/jbctv.2019.0456.

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Drawing on theories of heritage, nostalgia and austerity politics addressed in Antoinette Burton's ‘When Was Britain?’ (2002) and Owen Hatherley's The Ministry of Nostalgia (2016), this article examines the commodification and merchandising of Downton Abbey. Downton spawned a plethora of tie-in merchandise available for purchase as well as exhibits and trips that extended viewers' connection with the show. This article argues that these commodities provided fans an escape from a present dominated by austerity politics. Among the things US fans desired was historians' expertise to provide context and detail. Academics were themselves turned into a commodity, and that fitted into the increasing emphasis universities are placing on creating distinctive brands and having faculty be engaged in marketing and fund-raising. The author's experiences of this phenomenon are covered at the end of the article.
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Malamud, Marina. "Climate Change and Violence in Post-Conflict Colombia." International Journal of Technoethics 11, no. 2 (2020): 52–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijt.2020070104.

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The aim is to explain the link between climate-related issues and violent patterns in Colombia after the 2016 peace agreements. The main premise is that the effects of an erratic climate has an indirect but relevant influence in the emergence of new forms of violence. In other words, the climatic change and environmental degradation act as a “stressor” in different forms of violence in this commodity-based economy recovering from more than 50 years of internal armed conflict. The qualitative approach is based on semi-structured interviews with government representatives and academics to track different perspectives. It is argued that key environmental and climate-related issues in new forms of conflict after the peace deal are linked to the fragmentary distribution and control of land, the ongoing forced migration patterns, and expansion of a new and more lucrative illicit economy.
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Bekkerman, Anton, Gary W. Brester, and Glynn T. Tonsor. "An alternative approach to measuring demand changes in meat markets." International Food and Agribusiness Management Review 22, no. 3 (2019): 397–412. http://dx.doi.org/10.22434/ifamr2018.0120.

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Commodity groups, academics, government agencies, and marketing analysts often have strong interests in understanding changes in demand for products. It is often the case, however, that only equilibrium price and quantity data are available for identifying changes in demand. But, such equilibria are the result of both changes in demand and changes in supply – the latter of which causes changes in quantity demanded. Although an existing index-based method is widely used to identify demand shifts, we consider its theoretical foundation and empirical performance against a proposed alternative. We find that when using widely available but highly aggregated annual-level price and quantity data, our alternative better characterizes demand shifts for goods such as beef, pork, poultry, and lamb. For many agribusinesses that require information about market dynamics in their industry, our method is likely to provide a more accurate, low-cost assessment of demand changes over time.
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Holmes, Andrew Gary Darwin. "An Unnecessary KIS? The UK’s Key Information Set, was it Really needed and What was its Real Purpose?" Shanlax International Journal of Education 8, no. 2 (2020): 1–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.34293/education.v8i2.1477.

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This paper provides a critical analysis of the United Kingdom’s higher education Key Information Set (KIS), which was implemented following the 2011 UK White Paper ‘Students at the Heart of the System’. It argues that one of the central tenets of the KIS – providing information that students within a free market can make an informed choice and, through this process of consumer choice improve the quality of teaching, is untenable because a central component of the KIS, the National Student Survey (NSS), is unreliable when used for comparing university courses. Further, it argues that the KIS reified a neoliberal perspective about the worth and value of higher education qualification, positioning it as a commodity of value only to the paying individual rather than being something of value to society as a whole. It will be of particular interest to academics and policy makers from outside of the United Kingdom, where governmental and regulatory agencies may be implementing similar policies.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Commodity; Academics"

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Edwards, Margaret. "Saleable or shareable knowledge experts or guardians? : a case study in the social relations of knowledge production in higher education." Thesis, Lancaster University, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.340516.

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Marshall, Richard Carel. "A state space forecasting approach to commodity futures trading." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185667.

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State space forecasting originated in the mid-1970's from engineering models based upon the Kalman filter. To date, the application of state space forecasting to commodity and financial markets has been limited. This study examines a system for trading futures contracts using state space forecasts of commodity futures prices. The system is evaluated for a speculative asset (gold) and a nonspeculative commodity (copper). Price forecasts are developed from multivariate state space models, and the variables considered in the models are those which, according to economic theory, may influence price movements. It is demonstrated that the relative importance of the different economic variables changes over time. Through simulated trading of copper and gold futures contracts, it is also shown that significant profits can be generated from the state space forecasting approach, especially when prices are trending upward or downward fairly continuously. Relaxing the position limit of one contract substantially increases profits. The results suggest that the copper and gold futures markets may be inefficient in the semistrong sense.
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Cortright, Lawrence A. "Western marxism : uncovering the deficiency of economic determinism." Honors in the Major Thesis, University of Central Florida, 2008. http://digital.library.ucf.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ETH/id/1071.

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This item is only available in print in the UCF Libraries. If this is your Honors Thesis, you can help us make it available online for use by researchers around the world by following the instructions on the distribution consent form at http://library.ucf.edu/Systems/DigitalInitiatives/DigitalCollections/InternetDistributionConsentAgreementForm.pdf You may also contact the project coordinator, Kerri Bottorff, at kerri.bottorff@ucf.edu for more information.<br>Bachelors<br>Sciences<br>Political Science
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Books on the topic "Commodity; Academics"

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Berkvens-Stevelinck, Christiane. Magna commoditas: Geschiedenis van de Leidse universiteitsbibliotheek 1575-2000. Primavera Pers, 2001.

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Berkvens-Stevelinck, Christiane. Magna commoditas: A history of Leiden University Library, 1575-2005. Primavera Pers, 2003.

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Magna commoditas: A history of Leiden University Library, 1575-2005. Primavera Pers, 2004.

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Bailey, PT, ed. Pests of Field Crops and Pastures. CSIRO Publishing, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9780643095328.

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This comprehensive handbook on economic entomology for Australian field crops and pastures is the first of its kind. It encompasses pests and beneficial insects as well as allied forms of importance in Australian agriculture.&#x0D; Organised by commodities – such as cereals, sugar and tropical pasture legumes – it examines all the pest species for a particular commodity across Australia. Identification, distribution, damage, host range, biology, risk period and monitoring techniques are described for each entry, accompanied by useful illustrations. The book also describes introduced biological control agents that effectively control crop pests.&#x0D; Pests of Field Crops and Pastures will be a useful tool in crop management for progressive farmers, agronomists, agricultural consultants and academics alike.
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Milliken, Christopher. Commodity Exchange-Traded Funds. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190656010.003.0013.

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Commodity exchange-traded funds (ETCs), which debuted in 2004, enable investors to access an asset class previously difficult or expensive to access. Although a small segment of the overall exchange-traded fund (ETF) universe, ETCs have grown in popularity with both speculators and investors looking for long-term portfolio diversification. Examples of the types of commodities that are now accessible through ETCs include gold, oil, and agricultural. The literature on ETCs is limited, but academic and industry work has centered on using futures contracts to replicate the performance of the underlying commodities spot price as well as the effect additional capital has had on the integrity of the futures market. This chapter covers this topic by reviewing the growth, investment strategies, and regulatory structure of ETCs as well as the underlying effects these funds have had on the underlying markets with which they engage.
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Fishe, Raymond P. H. High Frequency Trading of Commodities. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190656010.003.0023.

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Electronic platforms and high frequency traders (HFTs) have changed the nature of trading. Like equity markets, commodity markets have experienced an influx of algorithmic traders and a decline in “pit” or open outcry trading. Regulatory efforts to understand the effects of HFTs and to offer prudent guidelines or new rules are in their infancy. An overall hesitancy exists because academic studies have produced diverse results on liquidity, volatility, and market quality. This survey focuses on high frequency trading research in commodity derivative markets, documenting basic results and extracting inferences when warranted. Evidence indicates that HFTs act as market makers and their speed advantage has lowered transaction costs, generally during normal markets. Although not entirely conclusive, evidence also suggests that HFTs may exacerbate volatility by withdrawing liquidity in times of market stress, such as during “flash” crashes.
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Academe Master Baiter: An Academic Book. Pattern Books, 2018.

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Book chapters on the topic "Commodity; Academics"

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Li, Yining. "Rationing Equilibrium of the Commodity Market." In China Academic Library. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-39558-1_5.

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Li, Yining. "Establishing the Order of the Socialist Commodity Economy." In China Academic Library. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-39558-1_9.

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Hamilton, Mary. "Strategies of resistance in the neoliberal university." In Resisting Neoliberalism in Education. Policy Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447350057.003.0010.

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Major changes are taking place in the UK university sector as HE is transformed into a high value commodity on the international market. These changes impact strongly on the day-to-day experience, relationships and identities of academic staff. This chapter reports on an interview study of academics’ writing practices in three UK Universities and three disciplines. Despite ample and vivid evidence of stress, acceleration of work, loss of autonomy and deteriorating working conditions we found little trace in our data of organized, collective resistance. However, there were many examples of tactical and symbolic workarounds and of staff holding on to core disciplinary values and vocational commitments. The chapter suggests that the framework of "everyday resistance" as proposed and documented in many contexts by Scott and others helps us to understand these reactions and how they reflect high levels of discomfort and wider frustration with the directions in which universities are moving.
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Morrish, Liz, and Helen Sauntson. "The student as consumer and commodity." In Academic Irregularities. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315561592-3.

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"Transferable Academic Credits: Commodity or Albatross." In Totems and Taboos. Brill | Sense, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789087905675_013.

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Guhathakurta, Kousik, Sharad Nath Bhattacharya, Santo Banerjee, and Basabi Bhattacharya. "Nonlinear Correlation of Stock and Commodity Indices in Emerging and Developed Market." In Chaos and Complexity Theory for Management. IGI Global, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-2509-9.ch004.

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The interrelationship between stock and commodity markets has been an issue of interest for both the academia and practitioners in the field of investment and wealth management. Traditionally, commodity has been a popular avenue for diversification in a mixed portfolio. However, this works well as long as there is little or no correlation between the two markets. This chapter presents an empirical investigation of the daily movement of stock and commodity index of two different countries to throw some light on the interrelationship between stock and commodity market. The uniqueness of this study lies in the choice of markets as also the methodology. The authors have chosen a developed market, viz., the US market, and an emerging market, viz., the Indian market. This study uses the major stock and commodity indices respectively for both countries for a period of three years. For analysis the authors have used the tools from nonlinear dynamics like recurrence analysis, power spectrum analysis, and delay based cross-correlation function. The investigation revealed that the dynamics of the time path of daily movement of Indian stock and commodity exchanges are much similar in nature while those of the US market are quite different. This chapter also models the respective time series using Geometric Brownian Motion and finds that the Indian data set performed much better than the US ones. This has a strong impact on strategy for designing mixed portfolios in Indian market.
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Dasgupta, Hirak. "Data Mining Techniques in Knowledge Management." In Enhancing Academic Research With Knowledge Management Principles. IGI Global, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-2489-2.ch008.

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The ability to manage knowledge is becoming increasingly more crucial in today's knowledge economy. The creation and diffusion of knowledge have become ever more important factors in competitiveness. More and more, knowledge is being regarded as a valuable commodity that is embedded in products (especially high-technology products) and in the tacit knowledge of highly mobile employees. Data mining is an essential tool, which is used to predict and classify the data collected from the customers. Data mining can be applied for classifying and clustering student characteristics based on demographic, psychographic and behavioural variables. Data mining can also be applied by using if-then rule. In addition, it can describe the profile of successful and unsuccessful students based of GPA achieved during the semesters. This chapter aims to study the role of data mining in the education sector and emphasizes on the role of knowledge management in educational institutions.
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Ladyga, Zuzanna. "Epilogue." In The Labour of Laziness in Twentieth-Century American Literature. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474442923.003.0009.

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Writing The Labour of Laziness was my response to a cultural tendency to overvalue productivity in every area of human life at the cost of private freedom. I was troubled by the cross-dressing of this biopolitical, economy-based norm in ethical frills of self-improvement, self-management or political quasi-activism. And I saw this drag everywhere. I saw it in the Fitbit fad and Quantitative Movement’s encouragement to monitor my sleep-patterns and step ratio, so that I become the healthiest and most productive version of myself. I saw it in the organised leisure activities in the lives of my children’s friends, whose birthday parties would be orchestrated by skilled animators, and whose summer camps offered so many fun games that there would be no free time to do nothing. Finally, I saw it in my work place, academia. And I am not just talking about the injunction to publish more and more – the dreadful ‘publish or perish’ doctrine – or to translate individual, free thoughts into grant parlance. After all, it is not breaking news that the neoliberal academic system treats intellectual effort as a commodity....
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Yao, Christina W. "9 ◆ GLOBAL POSITIONAL COMPETITION AND INTEREST CONVERGENCE Student Mobility as a Commodity for U.S. Academic Imperialism." In U.S. Power in International Higher Education. Rutgers University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36019/9781978820814-009.

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Yap, Nonita T., and Kerry E. Ground. "Socially Responsible Mining Corporations." In Comparative Perspectives on Global Corporate Social Responsibility. IGI Global, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-0720-8.ch009.

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Mining is impact intensive regardless of commodity and scale. A socially responsible mining company, at a minimum, does not knowingly irreparably harm the community's ability to sustain itself after the mine closes. This chapter examines the mining sector in the Philippines: the public concerns, CSR responses and the challenges mining companies face in the country. Information was gathered through a review of academic and grey literature, key informant interviews and content analysis of Sustainability / CSR Reports. Many of the companies invest in the community as well as minimise their environmental impacts. A few invest in the community but appear to ignore people's right to a healthy environment. The chapter argues that mining can become an instrument for inclusive growth in the Philippines only if there is social peace, and that a streamlined and transparent mining policy regime, equitable benefits sharing and demilitarisation of mining areas will help bring this about.
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Conference papers on the topic "Commodity; Academics"

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Zavadska, Miroslava, Lucía Morales, and Joseph Coughlan. "THE IMPORTANCE OF INTEGRATING QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS TO UNDERSTAND COMMODITY BUSINESS FINANCE." In 34th International Academic Conference, Florence. International Institute of Social and Economic Sciences, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.20472/iac.2017.034.062.

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Just, Małgorzata, and Aleksandra Łuczak. "ASSESSMENT OF CONDITIONAL DEPENDENCE STRUCTURE IN COMMODITY FUTURES MARKETS USING COPULA-GARCH MODELS AND FUZZY CLUSTERING METHODS." In 52nd International Academic Conference, Barcelona. International Institute of Social and Economic Sciences, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.20472/iac.2019.052.027.

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Nie, Hongmei, and Jiaqing Zhou. "Commodity feature extraction for Chinese online comments based on semantic." In 2017 32nd Youth Academic Annual Conference of Chinese Association of Automation (YAC). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/yac.2017.7967605.

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Yılmaz, Durmuş. "Global Economy and Turkey: 2016 and Beyond." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c07.01815.

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Irrespective of whether advanced economies (AEs) or emerging market economies (EMEs), the number one problem of the global economy is not being able to generate a satisfactory growth. Income levels is in some countries are barely above the per-crisis level. Despite ample liquidity due to quantitative monetary policies, consumption and investment demands are weak. Because high level of indebtedness deter economic agents from using credit. Credit markets still do not function well either.&#x0D; Quantitative easing policies have been successful in containing further deterioration. Despite ample liquidity inflation has not risen, but it did delivered the expected growth. Because banking system in AEs is weak and monetary transmission mechanisms are not functioning well. As for EMEs, commodity prices and World trade appears to be weak; economic growth are slowing down, capex is visibly falling in heavy industrial sectors due to already existing excess capacity.&#x0D; The academia as well as the business community are worried about the appropriateness of the present policies in case another recession comes, central banks will have little ammunition to deal with it. The option being talked of now is what is dubbed as “helicopter Money”.&#x0D; Turkey being an open economy, has been and will be effected by the developments in the global economy through trade, capital flows and expectation channels.&#x0D; By international standards, Turkey have a reasonable growth rate of 3 to 4 %, implying a new growth era where high growth cycle ended due to changing global financial conditions and its structural problems. Future growth performance will depend on the level of investments and savings to finance it. As her own saving is low, foreign capital flows is crucial. &#x0D; High inflation and interest rate are the two negatives, but it has a strong fiscal position, debt / GDP is 32.3%, the budget is almost balanced, producing primary surplus which proved it is resilience in the face of recent failed coup and the negative attitudes displayed by the rating agencies.
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