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... globalization, the rise of transnational political regimes in which corporations, civil soc.... These examples give some sense of what citizens have done to try ...
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... of interdependences, regimes, and transnational organizations are on the ascendency, states (at le..., let alone nonstate actors such as corporations. If this idea suffers deficits even among European..., particularly in the cases and examples explored above. My points do not assume the world ...
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Perspectives on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), Mining, and Sustainable Development Taking Harper's and the World Bank's positions together as representative of the current dominant view of the role of foreign direct investment in mining in Latin America, we must ask under what conditions mining activity might contribute to poverty alleviation and sustainable development. Harper points to the world-class corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives of Canadian mining companies, along with the Canadian government's National Roundtable report on CSR and the Extractive Sector in Developing Nations (Interview, 2007) and the World Bank's Extractive Industries Review (EIR) points to the enabling conditions of "pro-poor public and corporate governance," "effective social and envir...
... organization representing leading corporations in the mining and metals sectors, since its incept... International Finance Corporate are all examples of supra-national actors/institutions. Public Acto...-General on human rights and transnational corporations and other business enterprises. In hi...
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...With transnational corporations now controlling food production, dist...They also provide examples of local and sustainable farming practices. . [ILL...
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An important operational aspect of international business is the coordination of widely dispersed resources of their networks of relationships with partners. Such interdependencies affect their ability to compete and/or create economic wealth. In order to examine the significance of network relationships in alliance capitalism and foreign direct investment (FDI), a network perspective as governance structure is used to examine the effects of resource interdependencies on relationship value. The article provides insights into alliance capitalism of interfirm relations for understanding implications for relationship value and increasing FDI between firms in industrial clusters of small and medium sized firms. On the basis that flows of local and foreign investment could be from internal o...
... and medium sized firms to develop transnational business to increase competitiveness and compete i... organizational capacity are excellent examples of intangible assets. The attractiveness of a loca...
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... Justice Blais, as he then was, gave some examples of material support at para. 54:. The information ...False passports for terrorism mean transnational operations. Financial material support for clandes... are not organized states or corporations where the niceties of agency law are applicable. T...
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...(1) The increasingly transnational nature of capital investment and business operatio...For other examples of alleged corporate complicity, see also Wiwa v. ...
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... (5) and Keck and Sikkink's model of transnational advocacy networks.(6) Social movement theory has b... movements, multinational corporations (MNCs), intergovernmental organizations (IGOs) and... this paragraph is noted "these are some examples of progress in the global battle against HIV/AIDS....
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... person and the outlawing of genocide as examples of obligations erga omnes. . According to Pauwelyn.... (15) United Nations Centre on Transnational Corporations, "Relations Between Host Developing C...
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My principal objective in this paper is to delineate how anthropologists can understand and help solve human problems emerging from the global change. In this paper I will focus on three major anthropological domains. Firstly, following a brief overview on epistemology and foundations of anthropological knowledge (i.e. scientific methodological tradition), I will discuss contemporary human problems emerging from global change and assess how sociocultural anthropology can contribute to understandings of gender and health issues in development. Secondly, I will assess emerging development problems in Bangladesh with a critical anthropological lens, considering how anthropological viewpoints can contribute to solving these problems. In other words, I will contextualize how anthropological ...
... the spread of consumer culture, and transnational migrations, have interconnected the world economic...By drawing examples from anthropologists' collaborative working experi..., and international transnational corporations in Ecuador, Baba and Hill argue that such collabor...