Academic literature on the topic 'New Haven Chamber of Commerce'

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Journal articles on the topic "New Haven Chamber of Commerce"

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Kantor, Mark. "New Arbitration Rules of the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce." International Legal Materials 46, no. 4 (2007): 677–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020782900005179.

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Сюй, Xu W., Янь, and Yan H. "The Realization of China Chamber of Commerce Rule by Law Modernization Under the Market Economy." Economics 3, no. 6 (2015): 21–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/16672.

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China chamber of commerce rule by law modernization is a great and systematic project. To fully understand and grasp the overall strategic deployment of rule by law modernization, highlight the fundamental properties and the existence value of chamber of commerce, we should put it on the important position of social member management system, clear its independent and important position in the construction of rule by law society. Only each part of society coordinated including chamber of commerce, it could achieve a new level of highly civilized norms and coordinated rule by law modernization. Primary task in the field of chamber of commerce in rule by law modernization, should accurately clarify chamber of commerce organization self-discipline function, specific legal connotation, refined the form of self-discipline, clarify the objective standard of responsibility, improve the standard safeguard measures. Selfdiscipline management and constraint is the core value of chamber of commerce as social composition department, reflects the essential claims of modern sociology of law. Discipline more reflects the respect, trust and tolerance of society to main market players, looking forward to them really realize social self-management based on recognizing national law and trade practice. The self-discipline of Chamber of commerce, still need to establish the boundaries between the market and non-market organization, correctly handle the relationship between serving members and market main body. To keep the target of core value realized, and get the purpose of maintain the fundamental interests of main market players, improve the professional quality of businessman, we should strength its service function. The basic sign of rule by law modernization is that legal system of the chamber of commerce scientific planned and strictly carried out. So achieve modernization of rule by law must focus on perfecting corporate governance structure of chamber of commerce, and standardize the duty system. Perfecting the unified mutual aid system of organization, running in accordance with the law, under the powerful supervision and constraint system. Among them, the chamber of commerce legislation system is very important.
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Verbist, Herman. "New mediation rules of the International Chamber of Commerce of 2014." Tijdschrift voor mediation en conflictmanagement 19, no. 4 (2015): 26–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.5553/tmd/138638782015019004004.

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Schroer, Bernard J., M. Carl Ziemke, Phillip A. Farrington, and Robert J. Sampson. "The chamber of commerce: A new proactive factor in technology transfer." Journal of Technology Transfer 19, no. 2 (1994): 34–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02371410.

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Hober, K., and W. Mckechnie. "New Rules of the Arbitration Institute of the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce." Arbitration International 23, no. 2 (2007): 261–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/arbitration/23.2.261.

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Verplanck, A. "Picturing Power: Portraiture and Its Uses in the New York Chamber of Commerce." Journal of American History 101, no. 1 (2014): 276–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jahist/jau329.

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Гайдаенко Шер, Наталья, and Natalia Gaidaenko Schaer. "New Rules of Conciliation of the International Chamber of Commerce: Awaiting Demand for Mediation." Journal of Russian Law 2, no. 9 (2014): 116–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/5507.

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Russian businessmen are used to include arbitration clauses in their foreign trade agreements. Some of these clauses refer the disputes for settlement under the rules of the foreign arbitration centers, including Rules of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce. While arbitration is one of the best known and widely applicable dispute resolution method, recent trend consists in the growing use of conciliation and mediation procedures for settlement of complex disputes arising between the participants of international commercial turnover. Mediation clauses together with multilayer and combined dispute resolution clauses become part of commercial reality where success and economy depends on the ability of the party to a commercial contract to quickly and correctly analyze the available solutions, consciously chose, correctly formulate and apply the dispute resolution method suitable for the particular dispute. In many cases mediation procedure allows the parties to settle their commercial dispute in the most efficient way. From this prospective awareness of the recent practices and new rules of the leading ADR centers becomes one of the key factors for successful activities on the field of international commercial relations. The ICC Mediation Rules are in force since January 1, 2014. This document replaces the ADR Rules which were in force from 2001. Author analyses the provisions of the new document from the prospective of its use for settlement of international commercial conflicts.
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Taheri, Shila, and Hassan Soleimani. "A Comparative Study of Executive Guaranty of Arbitration at International Law (International Court of Arbitration and the New York Convention) and Iranian Law." Journal of Politics and Law 9, no. 5 (2016): 145. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/jpl.v9n5p145.

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The present study is an attempt to analyze the executive guaranty of arbitration at international law within internal Iranian law and the international law. The present research findings show that within internal law in case the arbitration verdict is not carried out voluntarily then its obligatory administration is under the support of law and has legal executive guaranty. But arbitration privilege at administration stage is not limited to the fact that any arbitration verdict is to be performed without any questioning but a significant aspect of this privilege is to prevent the administration of a verdict which is altered or creased and openly against the facts or the law. In international law the international commerce chamber arbitration system is the most important international trade arbitration system in contemporary period and has always been the influential forerunner in international arbitration and has had a significant role in the development and expansion of arbitration method of settling international trade disputes. Both the chamber arbitration rules and arbitration verdicts which are issued under the chamber arbitration framework are among the most important legal resources in terms of international arbitration and are considered as the constructive and formative factors of international arbitration procedure. It should be mentioned that commerce chamber arbitration organization lacks the executive tools to execute the arbitration verdicts. But in spite of that on the basis of arbitration rules article 35 the arbitration authority and the chamber arbitration court makes attempts to execute the verdict and the purpose is mostly the official measures rather than judicial or administrative. Principally, the execution of arbitration verdicts depend on state rules and regulations where from the identification and administration of verdict is requested.
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Tubishat, Bassam Mustafa, and Khaldon Fawzi Qandah. "The Role of Emergency Arbitrator in Commercial Arbitration (Comparative Study)." Journal of Politics and Law 11, no. 4 (2018): 94. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/jpl.v11n4p94.

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This study dealt with the arbitrator of emergency in commercial arbitration and this development is the most innovative in the rules of commercial arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce in Paris in 1912, where a new trend was adopted with regard to interim and urgent measures before the final form of the arbitral tribunal. The International Chamber of Commerce has already adopted the rules of this system before the Arbitration Institute of the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce. The emergence of new systems in commercial arbitration needs to be examined in order to understand, interpret and check its suitability to the needs of the parties to the dispute in the framework of commercial arbitration. Among the most important new systems are the rules of emergency arbitrator, which have been taken by many commercial arbitration centers because of the advantages of one or both parties when it needs urgent and incidental measures that cannot wait until the formation of the arbitral tribunal. Therefore, the appointment of an emergency arbitrator may be requested for such measures. Many of the centers have organized such rules as Stockholm Rules of Arbitration in Sweden and ICC in Paris and others. The study concluded with a set of results, the most important of which was that the emergency arbitrator is one of the modern rules that serve commercial arbitration, which began by relying on Western legal systems not Arab laws.
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Ferrandino, Vittoria, and Valentina Sgro. "Associazionismo industriale e corporativismo: l’American Chamber of Commerce in Italy nell’epoca fascista = Industrial association and corporatism: The American chamber of commerce in Italy during the fascism age." Pecvnia : Revista de la Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Empresariales, Universidad de León, no. 19 (February 2, 2016): 103. http://dx.doi.org/10.18002/pec.v0i19.3584.

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<p>Il contributo in oggetto si propone di approfondire i rapporti tra le corporazioni e i gruppi industriali italiani da un’ottica particolare, quella dell’associazionismo che si concretizza con l’American Chamber of Commerce in Italy, instituita nel 1915 per agevolare le relazioni commerciali tra Italia e Stati Uniti. La grave crisi economica del 1930 e del 1931 e, poco dopo, le gravissime restrizioni portate agli scambi con l’estero dal programma autarchico del Governo fascista, influirono notevolmente sullo sviluppo della Camera. L’autorità dell’istituzione venne a diminuire, i rapporti con gli Stati Uniti si fecero più rari e il numero dei soci diminuì notevolmente.<strong> </strong>Alle corporazioni furono affidate le autorizzazioni sui nuovi impianti, la costituzione delle compagnie per la valorizzazione dell’Africa orientale italiana, il controllo sulle iniziative economiche nelle colonie, la collaborazione col fisco nella determinazione e nell’applicazione dei tributi ed infine il controllo sul commercio estero e sulle valute. Di conseguenza, la funzione che lo Stato avrebbe dovuto esercitare servendosi delle corporazioni finì col ricadere nelle mani dei grandi industriali, che le dominavano attraverso i loro rappresentanti. Da un lato, quindi, vi erano le corporazioni, che garantivano piena libertà ai gruppi industriali, avallandone le scelte; dall’altro lato, invece, vi erano le autorità governative che riconoscevano i limiti di competenza e d’intervento di quelle istituzioni e la necessità di una migliore definizione degli obiettivi.</p><p>This contribution aims to examine the relationship between corporations and the Italian industrial groups from a particular perspective, which is that of associations through the American Chamber of Commerce in Italy, established in 1915 to facilitate the commercial relations between Italy and the United States. The economic crisis of 1930 and 1931 and, shortly after, the very serious restrictions on foreign trade of the Fascist government program influenced significantly on the Chamber’s development. The authority of the institution was to decline, the relations with the United States became more and more rare and the number of members decreased considerably. Corporations obtained the authorizations on new systems, the establishment of companies for the development of the Italian East Africa, the control on economic initiatives in the colonies, the cooperation with the tax authorities in the determination and application of taxes, and finally control over foreign trade and currencies. So the function that the State should have exercised using the corporations ended up falling into the hands of big businessmen, who ruled through their representatives. Therefore, Corporations guaranteed full freedom to industry groups supporting them, and government authorities recognized the competence and intervention limits of those institutions and the need for a better definition of the objectives.</p>
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "New Haven Chamber of Commerce"

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Minty, Christopher. "Mobilization and voluntarism : the political origins of Loyalism in New York, c. 1768-1778." Thesis, University of Stirling, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/1893/21423.

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This dissertation examines the political origins of Loyalism in New York City between 1768 and 1778. Anchored by an analysis of political mobilization, this dissertation is structured into two parts. Part I has two chapters. Using a variety of private and public sources, the first chapter analyses how 9,338 mostly white male Loyalists in New York City and the counties of Kings, Queens, Suffolk and Westchester were mobilized. Chapter 1 argues that elites and British forces played a fundamental role in the broad-based mobilization of Loyalists in the province of New York. It also recognises that colonists signed Loyalist documents for many different reasons. The second chapter of Part I is a large-scale prosopographical analysis of the 9,338 identified Loyalists. This analysis was based on a diverse range of sources. This analysis shows that a majority of the province’s Loyalist population were artisans aged between 22 and 56 years of age. Part II of this dissertation examines political mobilization in New York City between 1768 and 1775. In three chapters, Part II illustrates how elite and non-elite white male New Yorkers coalesced into two distinct groups. Chapter 3 concentrates on the emergence of the DeLanceys as a political force in New York, Chapter 4 on their mobilization and coalescence into ‘the Friends to Liberty and Trade’, or ‘the Club’, and Chapter 5 examines the political origins of what became Loyalism by studying the social networks of three members of ‘the Club’. By incorporating an interdisciplinary methodology, Part II illustrates that members of ‘the Club’ developed ties with one another that transcended their political origins. It argues that the partisanship of New York City led members of ‘the Club’ to adopt inward-looking characteristics that affected who they interacted with on an everyday basis. A large proportion of ‘the Club’’s members became Loyalists in the American Revolution. This dissertation argues that it was the partisanship that they developed during the late 1760s and early 1770s that defined their allegiance.
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Books on the topic "New Haven Chamber of Commerce"

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Boyd, John. A report on New-Brunswick railways to the Chamber of Commerce, St. John, New-Brunswick. s.n.], 1986.

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1950-, Blackmar Elizabeth, Staiti Paul J, Bluestone Daniel M, and Barquist David L, eds. Picturing power: The New York Chamber of Commerce and the uses of portraiture. Columbia University Press, 2012.

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Commerce, International Chamber of. ICC Rules of Conciliation and Arbitration: New Conciliation Rules and amendedArbitration Rules in force from January 1, 1988. ICC Publishing, 1993.

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Commerce, International Chamber of. ICC Rules of Conciliation and Arbitration: New Conciliation Rules and amended Arbitration Rules in force from Jnauary 1, 1988. ICC Publishing, 1987.

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International Chamber of Commerce. Court of Arbitration. ICC rules of conciliation and arbitration: New conciliation rules and amended arbitration rules in force as from January 1, 1988. 2nd ed. ICC Publishing, 1990.

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Partnership, New York City. The Partnership. New York City Partnership, 1986.

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Canada, Bank of. Notes for remarks by John W. Crow Governor of the Bank of Canada to The Greater Moncton Chamber of Commerce Moncton, New Brunswick 24 October 1990. s.n, 1990.

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Brooks, Mary R. New and improved ?: The UNCTAD/ICC multimodial rules reviewed. Dalhousie University, 1993.

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Walker, Edmund. The industrial future of Canada: Address by B.E. Walker, at the 140th annual banquet of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York, 19th November, 1908. s.n., 1996.

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New Jersey. Legislature. Senate. Health, Human Services, and Senior Citizens Committee. Committee meeting of Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee: Testimony on the New Jersey Nursing Initiative, a project of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce Foundation : [May 28, 2009, Trenton, New Jersey]. New Jersey Office of Legislative Services, Public Information Office, Hearing Unit, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "New Haven Chamber of Commerce"

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Rosen, Richard A., and Joseph Mosnier. "Fighting the Uneven Battle." In Julius Chambers. University of North Carolina Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469628547.003.0007.

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This chapter describes Chambers's efforts to enforce Title II of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibited discrimination in restaurants, motels, and other places of public accommodation, against attempts to circumvent the new law's broad reach, confirmed by an earlier U.S. Supreme Court ruling. The Charlotte YMCA argued for a "private club" exemption under Title II, but quickly abandoned that claim and agreed to desegregate when Chambers filed suit. Chambers also sued the Raleigh YMCA, which sought to prevent desegregation of its exercise facilities on a similar claim notwithstanding that the YMCA's officers had desegregated their cafeteria and rental lodging. After a loss at trial before an unsympathetic U.S. District Court judge, Chambers and LDF won an unqualified victory on appeal before the Fourth Circuit. Chambers also prevailed in a suit to open Moore's Barbecue Restaurant in New Bern to black customers despite Moore's claim to have arranged his business affairs so as to be free of any connection to "interstate commerce," a key element of the Supreme Court's basis for upholding Title II. Here, Chambers overcame a hostile federal judge who willingly ignored a fundamental judicial canon by repeatedly communicating privately about the case with Moore's attorney.
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Ross, Andrew. "The Sun Always Rises." In Bird on Fire. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199828265.003.0011.

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Nothing has driven the growth of metro Phoenix more than the sun’s rays. For most of its residents and visitors, the chief reason for coming to the region was its 334 days of annual sunshine, yet precious little of this radiation showed up in the energy supply. Indeed, Arizona has often been held up as an object of shame for the cause of solar power. Despite the bounty of its sun cover, by 2009 the state generated only 7 watts of photovoltaic power (PV) per capita, while New Jersey, with only half the available sunlight, managed 14.6 watts per capita, and Germany, with even less, delivered 100 watts to each person. If the solar industry was to have its long-deferred day in the United States, then the Valley of the Sun had to be at, or near the top, of the location list. Surely, it should be easier to generate “clean electrons” here than almost anywhere else. Yet the dismal historical record shows that the abundance of this natural resource mattered very little in the face of a political and economic environment that has prevented the sun’s energy from being enjoyed by its liberty-loving residents, let alone developed on an industrial scale. For a metropolis in the deepest trough of the Great Recession, the prospect of developing solar industry was just about the only source of boosterism I could find among the business community. Glenn Hamer, president of the Arizona Chamber of Commerce, bragged that, with the help of federal and state incentives currently available, “the cocktail is in place for Arizona to truly be a national and international leader in solar. . . . with our incredible natural advantage, we have just about the world’s best solar resource.” Someone in his position could reasonably be expected to be gung ho about any new local market for investment, but Hamer also happened to be former national director of the Solar Energy Industries Association.
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Waterhouse, Benjamin C. "A New Life for Old Lobbies." In Lobbying America. Princeton University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691149165.003.0003.

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This chapter discusses how the institutional developments at the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce grew directly from the political and economic upheaval of the late 1960s and early 1970s and paved the way for effective pan-business lobbying in the years ahead. The tumultuous 1960s had altered the landscape of Congress and party politics, particularly through the rise of public interest liberalism and its demands for greater federal intervention with regard to employment equality, consumer and worker protection, and environmental stewardship. In this new political context, business leaders at the NAM and the Chamber refashioned their public image, refined their approaches to lobbying, and broadened their policy prescriptions.
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"Searching for New Markets: The Manchester Chamber of Commerce and Manufacturers, 1829–1833." In Breaking into the Monopoly. BRILL, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004241770_007.

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"Transnational Dispute Settlement at the International Commercial Arbitration Court at the Russian Chamber of Commerce and Industry." In The Law and Policy of New Eurasian Regionalization. Brill | Nijhoff, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004447875_012.

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Jack, Zachary Michael. "The Promise of New Blood." In The Haunt of Home. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501751790.003.0005.

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This chapter examines State Senator Bill Weber's address at the University of Minnesota Southwest Research and Outreach Center (SWROC) outside Lamberton, Minnesota. The regional development-vested folks — mayors, city managers, extension agents, educators, tourist board representatives, and chamber-of-commerce types — are all focused on a single Herculean challenge: how to bring economic development to the hinterlands. Weber brings a business lens to the conundrum of youth out-migration in southwest Minnesota and eastern South Dakota, and he is predisposed to see the problem as originating in economic opportunity. As an example he points to two long-lived businesses founded in his hometown of Luverne: Luverne Fire Apparatus and Luverne Trucking Equipment. Though they retain Luverne in their titles, both relocated across the border to Brandon, South Dakota, a suburb of Sioux Falls, decades ago, taking several hundred jobs with them.
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Snyder, Sherri. "Twenty-Seven." In Barbara La Marr. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813174259.003.0028.

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This chapter chronicles various scandals, sparked by the disclosure of Barbara’s past during Herman Roth’s trial, that signal a shift in both public attitude toward Barbara and her emotional stability. Barbara’s cross-country tour as spokesperson for Southern California (and the various chambers of commerce therein)—a publicity stunt arranged by Bert Ennis, her press agent, to promote her upcoming starring films with Sawyer and First National—founders after an interview with Louisiana reporter Meigs O. Frost. Publicly scorned for risqué comments attributed to her, Barbara, along with Ennis, Sawyer, and First National, rush to contain the uproar as Barbara’s films are banned from certain theaters. Following Barbara’s arrival in New York City to make her starring films, more scandals break out: she is alleged to have caused a murder, she is romantically linked to her White Moth (1924) costar Ben Lyon, and Jack Daugherty announces his plan to divorce her.
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Marais, Bertrand du, and Philippe Frouté. "„An analysis of the French “Chamber of Commerce” experience according to the New Institutional Economics. What can we learn for the relevance of the “economic chamber” model?”." In Jahrbuch Recht und Ökonomik des Dritten Sektors 2007/2008 (RÖDS). Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co KG, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783845210896-39.

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Singh, Balwinder, and Sorab Sadri. "Building Corporate Culture for Competitiveness in Entrepreneurial Firms." In Advances in Business Strategy and Competitive Advantage. IGI Global, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-8798-1.ch001.

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The dichotomy posed by Mandel goes to the root of every corporate plan and every CEO's concern. Professional bodies like the All India Management Association and business collectivities like the various Chambers of Commerce have been grappling with this for decades now, and with very little success too. Given that, the CEO implements the desired organisational change it remains the task of the culture to sustain this change and make the organisation vibrant. Traditionally Indian organisations are hierarchically positivist and therefore the quality of leadership determines the form and content of the internal environment of the organisation. This chapter accordingly will not deal with a treatment of leadership but refer the reader to Geometry of HR (2002) and What Every MBA Should Know about HRM (2005). Instead, it will treat corporate culture building for global competitiveness on the line of Business Ethics and Corporate Governance (2011).
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Dezalay, Sara. "Africa Against Global Justice? Stakes for Building a Political Sociology on the Future of International Criminal Justice." In The President on Trial. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198858621.003.0029.

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This chapter challenges current debates in global justice and the fight against impunity. Shifting the lens from the symbolism of global justice towards the structural conditions that have shaped international criminal justice as a field over time can help reposition the Habré success story not simply as an anomaly in a context of wider backlash against the International Criminal Court (ICC), but rather as a reflection of the structure of global justice as a weak field. The chapter then discusses the need to study systematically the evolution of legal markets on the African continent. In this, the project to institute a criminal chamber within the African Court of Justice and Human Rights has perhaps been too promptly dismissed as overly ambitious due to the lack of resources and state support within the African Union (AU). Interestingly, this project includes not only the crimes under the purview of the ICC, but also various other trans-border crimes such as trafficking, corruption, and the illicit exploitation of resources. The prominence taken in recent years by Africa as a new ‘mining frontier’—and with it, as a new haven for US and UK multinational corporate firms—underscores the timeliness of opening research paths on these ongoing transformations across the continent.
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Conference papers on the topic "New Haven Chamber of Commerce"

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Fernández, Carrasco Pedro, Carrasco Pedro Fernández, Nawel Khelil, Nawel Khelil, Rachid Bninha, and Rachid Bninha. "COASTAL ESSAOUIRA DEVELOPMENT FAIR TRADE PROJECT. MOROCCO." In Managing risks to coastal regions and communities in a changing world. Academus Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21610/conferencearticle_58b431532eece.

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The city of Essaouira on the Atlantic Coast of Morocco is actively searching for an important change in its economic model, traditionally based on artisanal fisheries and tourism since the sixties of the past century. The circumstances of Morocco, such as the high dependence of import for energy needs (fuel and gas), low development of infrastructures and population growth, have generated in 2014 the opportunity of cooperation between the Commerce Chamber of Essaouira [1] and the research study group, headed by Professor Dr. Pedro Fernández, from Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. A cooperation agreement has been signed on the 15th October 2014. Within this agreement several activities have been implemented. Among them, 5 research projects [2] have been developed during 2015: Study of a New Bus Station Terminal, Creativity Entrepreneur Area (Dermocosmetics industry, agro bio organic market, Renewable Energy, Wood artisanal and Fair Fashion), Viability of Wave Energy Station, Harbor New uses, Offshore Wind Energy Farm. Here it is summarized the outcome of these researches, measured in terms of invest needed and benefits generated, in terms of active participation of people of Essaouira, new activities and companies generated, and profits potentially gained in a short and long term under sustainable and respectful environmental, cultural and social behavior where fair trade, health, person to person business and less is more are the bones and the heart of all proposals.
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Fernández, Carrasco Pedro, Carrasco Pedro Fernández, Nawel Khelil, Nawel Khelil, Rachid Bninha, and Rachid Bninha. "COASTAL ESSAOUIRA DEVELOPMENT FAIR TRADE PROJECT. MOROCCO." In Managing risks to coastal regions and communities in a changing world. Academus Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.31519/conferencearticle_5b1b93720ce3b6.46377074.

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The city of Essaouira on the Atlantic Coast of Morocco is actively searching for an important change in its economic model, traditionally based on artisanal fisheries and tourism since the sixties of the past century. The circumstances of Morocco, such as the high dependence of import for energy needs (fuel and gas), low development of infrastructures and population growth, have generated in 2014 the opportunity of cooperation between the Commerce Chamber of Essaouira [1] and the research study group, headed by Professor Dr. Pedro Fernández, from Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. A cooperation agreement has been signed on the 15th October 2014. Within this agreement several activities have been implemented. Among them, 5 research projects [2] have been developed during 2015: Study of a New Bus Station Terminal, Creativity Entrepreneur Area (Dermocosmetics industry, agro bio organic market, Renewable Energy, Wood artisanal and Fair Fashion), Viability of Wave Energy Station, Harbor New uses, Offshore Wind Energy Farm. Here it is summarized the outcome of these researches, measured in terms of invest needed and benefits generated, in terms of active participation of people of Essaouira, new activities and companies generated, and profits potentially gained in a short and long term under sustainable and respectful environmental, cultural and social behavior where fair trade, health, person to person business and less is more are the bones and the heart of all proposals.
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