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1
Market revenue and the scope and scale of SME networks in Europe's vulnerable regions
Published 2004Subjects:Journal article -
2
Market revenue and the scope and scale of SME networks in Europe's vulnerable regions
Published 2004Journal article -
3
Market Revenue and the Scope and Scale of SME Networks in Europe's Vulnerable Regions.
Published 2004Journal article -
4
How and where should we invest in Europe? An economic geography of global finance.
Published 2002“…In this case, the growth of advanced electronic communications coupled with top-down investment strategies has provided institutional investors entry into even the most sheltered of capital markets including those of continental Europe. By contrast, many economic geographers find this view of the world both simplistic with respect to the persistence of nation-state's very different regulatory traditions and highly misleading as to the most successful strategies for investing in continental Europe. …”
Working paper -
5
Fire, boycott, threat and harm: social and political violence within the local community. A study of three Munster counties during the Irish Civil War, 1922-23.
Published 2011Subjects: “…History of Britain and Europe…”
Thesis -
6
Pension fund capitalism in Europe: institutional organisation and governance of Finnish pension insurance companies
Published 2011Subjects: “…Europe…”
Thesis -
7
European pensions and global finance: continuity or convergence?
Published 2002Subjects: “…Europe…”
Journal article -
8
Globalization and Competitive Strategy in Europe's Vulnerable Regions: Firm, Industry and Country Effects in Labour-Intensive Industries.
Published 2004“…Relying upon the results of a detailed survey of small- and medium-sized firm competitive strategies in selected vulnerable regions across Europe, the paper focuses upon firm adjustment strategies in four labour-intensive industries vulnerable to international competition. …”
Journal article -
9
Globalization and competitive strategy in Europe's vulnerable regions: firm, industry and country effects in labour-intensive industries
Published 2004“…Relying upon the results of a detailed survey of small- and medium-sized firm competitive strategies in selected vulnerable regions across Europe, the paper focuses upon firm adjustment strategies in four labour-intensive industries vulnerable to international competition. …”
Journal article -
10
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11
The emerging market for European corporate governance: the relationship between governance and capital expenditures, 1997-2005
Published 2008“…We examine European corporate governance with respect to the relationship between shareholder value and capital investment. Based upon Europe's largest listed companies, it is shown that Anglo-American conceptions of shareholder value are increasingly important for European firms whatever their home jurisdictions and inherited traditions. …”
Journal article -
12
Constructing an international market for carbon trading: an institutional perspective
Published 2009“…This thesis examines the construction of carbon markets in the United States and Europe to understand what role these markets play in mitigating climate change. …”
Thesis -
13
The Components of Talent: Company Size and Financial Centres in the European Investment Management Industry
Published 2015“…As the centre for advanced financial services, and the complex array of services needed to invest beyond Europe’s borders, London dominates the European financial services industry. …”
Journal article -
14
The finance of climate change
Published 2010“…The first is an empirical examination of how carbon markets have influenced publicly listed markets in energy stocks within Europe (Chapter 5). The second is an empirical examination of direct investment (venture capital and private equity) in clean technologies in Europe and North America (Chapter 6). …”
Thesis -
15
Geographically dispersed ownership and inter-market stock price arbitrage—Ahold's crisis of corporate governance and its implications for global standards.
Published 2006“…Scandals of corporate governance in the United States and Europe in the aftermath of the TMT bubble captured the public imagination. …”
Journal article -
16
Governing Finance: Global Imperatives and the Challenge of Reconciling Community Representation with Expertise.
Published 2008“…I then present criteria for well-governed financial institutions, specifically public and private pension funds, with implications for best practice as illustrated by four case studies of funds from Canada, Europe, and the United States. The final section considers the lessons of these case studies for the design of sovereign wealth funds and raises questions as to whether there are limits to reconciliation, given the acceleration of global financial integration.…”
Journal article -
17
Geographically dispersed ownership and inter-market stock price arbitrage - Ahold's crisis of corporate governance and its implications for global standards
Published 2006“…Scandals of corporate governance in the United States and Europe in the aftermath of the TMT bubble captured the public imagination. …”
Journal article -
18
Corporate governance and cross-listing: evidence from European companies.
Published 2004“…In contrast to the importance of cross-listing in the U.S., there is no significant relationship between corporate governance and cross-listing within Europe. Implications are drawn for the debate on bonding and the future of European stock markets. …”
Working paper -
19
Path dependence and financial markets: the economic geography of the German model, 1997-2003
Published 2005“…In doing so, we focus on recent developments in continental Europe and particularly in Germany. In contrast with Anglo-American expectations, we argue that the German model is hardly a model at all; it has a distinctive economic geography apparent in capital market structure and performance. …”
Journal article -
20
Path Dependence and Financial Markets: The Economic Geography of the German Model, 1997-2003.
Published 2005“…In doing so, we focus on recent developments in continental Europe and particularly in Germany. In contrast with Anglo-American expectations, we argue that the German model is hardly a model at all; it has a distinctive economic geography apparent in capital market structure and performance. …”
Journal article