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2. This title is unavailable for guests, please login to see more information.
- Published
- 2004
3. Whooping cough immunization in France and Britain: discussion paper.
- Author
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Ross, E. M. and Edouard, L.
- Subjects
VACCINATION of children ,WHOOPING cough vaccines ,BACTERIAL vaccines - Abstract
The article compares the administration of whooping cough immunization in France and Great Britain. It has been noted that the latter is not really active in the vaccination policy, while the former normally incorporates whooping cough vaccine with diphtheria and tetanus toxoids. However, administration of the vaccine had brought out various side effects in each of the country.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. POSTHUMOUS REPRODUCTION: LIFE AFTER DEATH?
- Author
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Barać, Ivana
- Subjects
AFTERLIFE ,LEGAL documents ,REPRODUCTIVE rights ,SERBS ,JUSTICE administration - Abstract
Copyright of Legal Records / Pravni Zapisi is the property of Union University Law School, Belgrade and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
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5. Macro-Indicators of Citation Impacts of Six Prolific Countries: InCites Data and the Statistical Significance of Trends.
- Author
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Bornmann, Lutz and Leydesdorff, Loet
- Subjects
STATISTICAL significance ,CITATION analysis ,COMPUTER science ,WEB-based user interfaces ,BIBLIOMETRICS - Abstract
Using the InCites tool of Thomson Reuters, this study compares normalized citation impact values calculated for China, Japan, France, Germany, United States, and the UK throughout the time period from 1981 to 2010. InCites offers a unique opportunity to study the normalized citation impacts of countries using (i) a long publication window (1981 to 2010), (ii) a differentiation in (broad or more narrow) subject areas, and (iii) allowing for the use of statistical procedures in order to obtain an insightful investigation of national citation trends across the years. Using four broad categories, our results show significantly increasing trends in citation impact values for France, the UK, and especially Germany across the last thirty years in all areas. The citation impact of papers from China is still at a relatively low level (mostly below the world average), but the country follows an increasing trend line. The USA exhibits a stable pattern of high citation impact values across the years. With small impact differences between the publication years, the US trend is increasing in engineering and technology but decreasing in medical and health sciences as well as in agricultural sciences. Similar to the USA, Japan follows increasing as well as decreasing trends in different subject areas, but the variability across the years is small. In most of the years, papers from Japan perform below or approximately at the world average in each subject area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Scenario Analysis of Cost-Effectiveness of Maintenance Strategies for Fixed Tidal Stream Turbines in the Atlantic Ocean.
- Author
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Kamidelivand, Mitra, Deeney, Peter, Devoy McAuliffe, Fiona, Leyne, Kevin, Togneri, Michael, and Murphy, Jimmy
- Subjects
TIDAL currents ,CORPORATE profits ,MONTE Carlo method ,TURBINES ,WEIBULL distribution ,PRODUCTION planning - Abstract
This paper has developed an operation and maintenance (O&M) model for projected 20 MW tidal stream farm case studies at two sites in the northeast Atlantic in France and at EMEC's Fall of Warness site in the UK. The annual energy production, number of incidents, and downtimes of the farms for corrective and planned (preventive) maintenance strategies are estimated using Monte Carlo simulations that vary weather windows, repair vessel availabilities, and mean annual failure rates modelled by Weibull distributions. The trade-offs between the mean annual failure rates, time availability, O&M costs, and energy income minus the variable O&M costs were analysed. For all scenarios, a 5-year planned maintenance strategy could considerably decrease the mean annual failure rates by 37% at both sites and increase the net energy income. Based on a detailed sensitivity analysis, the study has suggested a simple decision-making method that examines how the variation in the mean annual failure rate and changes in spare-part costs would reduce the effectiveness of a preventive maintenance strategy. This work provides insights into the most important parameters that affect the O&M cost of tidal stream turbines and their effect on tidal energy management. The output of the study will contribute to decision-making concerning maintenance strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
7. RESEARCH TRENDS IN THE FIELD OF GEOPHYSICS: A BIBLIOMETRIC ANALYSIS.
- Author
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Keshava and Uplaonkar, Shilpa S.
- Subjects
GEOPHYSICS ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,INFORMATION services - Abstract
The paper presents the characteristics of the literature archieved in NASA ADS consortia on a topic 'Geophysics'. The study shows that the highest (570) number of articles was published in the year 2009 which constitute 17.32% followed by lowest (311 articles) which is 9.45% was published in the year 2005. Highest number of articles contributed by single author followed by two authors. With regard to Degree of Collaboration (DC) was 0.73 during the period 2005-2012 which clearly depicts collaborative research trend. The Collaborative Index (CI = number of authors per paper : Lawani) was 0.26 whereas Collaborative Co-efficient (CC) was 0.48. USA contributed highest number of articles followed by UK and France; it may be due to infrasture available for basic and applied research among these countries which lead to highest number of research output. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
8. Intangible Assets, Goodwill and Earnings Management: Evidence from France and the Uk.
- Author
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Kimouche, Bilal
- Subjects
INTANGIBLE property ,EARNINGS management ,GOODWILL (Commerce) ,FINANCIAL statements ,DEPRECIATION - Abstract
Research background: The literature has argued that accounting for intangible assets and goodwill provides a wide range for managers to manipulate earnings. Purpose: This paper aims to investigate the impact of accounting treatment of intangible assets and goodwill on earnings management. Research methodology: The study included 115 French companies and 100 UK companies, during 2011–2019, employing multiple regression, where earnings management was measured through discretionary accruals; while accounting for intangibles and goodwill was divided into the capitalization and decapitalization of intangible assets, recognition and derecognition of goodwill, and depreciation and impairment of intangible assets and goodwill. Results: According to the results, accounting for intangible assets and goodwill has an impact on earnings management, while it is used differently between French and UK companies. In France, companies employ intangible assets capitalization to manipulate earnings, while UK companies use intangible assets capitalization and goodwill recognition. Novelty: This study provides supplementary evidence for standards setters, managers, and auditors about the contribution of accounting for intangible assets and goodwill in the quality of financial reporting and explores the new tools and practices of earnings management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Corporate debt and financial balance sheet adjustment: a comparison of the United States, the United Kingdom, France and Germany.
- Author
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Gibbard, Peter and Stevens, Ibrahim
- Subjects
CAPITAL structure ,FINANCIAL statements ,CORPORATE debt ,CASH flow ,MARKET value ,BOOK value ,INVESTMENTS - Abstract
The level of UK corporate debt directly affects financial stability in the United Kingdom because a significant amount of the exposure of the UK financial system is to UK corporates. Our paper provides a comparison of the determinants of corporate debt in the United States, the United Kingdom, France and Germany. The comparison serves to benchmark our findings about the determinants of UK corporate debt. In addition, the UK financial sector is significantly exposed to the corporate sectors in the United States, Germany and France. The model assesses the contribution of investment, acquisitions, cash flows and market-to-book values to the determination of debt, and also the tendency of debt to revert to its optimum level. Debt was found to be positively related to the financing needs of the firm, and the optimum level of debt to be negatively related to the market-to-book ratio. This casts some light on the procyclicality of debt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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10. Productivity and the pandemic: short-term disruptions and long-term implications: The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on productivity dynamics by industry.
- Author
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de Vries, Klaas, Erumban, Abdul, and van Ark, Bart
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,PANDEMICS ,WORKING hours ,LABOR market ,PRODUCTIVITY accounting - Abstract
This paper analyses quarterly estimates of productivity growth at industry level for three advanced economies, France, the UK and the US, for 2020. We use detailed industry-level data to distinguish reallocations of working hours between industries from pure within-industry productivity gains or losses. We find that all three countries showed positive growth rates of aggregate output per hour in 2020 over 2019. However, after removing the effects from the reallocation of hours between low and high productivity industries, only the US still performed positively in terms of within-industry productivity growth. In contrast, the two European economies showed negative within-industry productivity growth rates in 2020. While above-average digital-intensive industries outperformed below-average ones in both France and the UK, the US showed higher productivity growth in both groups compared to the European countries. Industries with medium-intensive levels of shares of employees working from home prior to the pandemic made larger productivity gains in 2020 than industries with the highest pre-pandemic work-from-home shares. Overall, after taking into account the productivity collapse in the hospitality and culture sector during 2020, productivity growth shows no clear deviation from the slowing pre-pandemic productivity trend. Future trends in productivity growth will depend on whether the favourable productivity gains (or smaller losses) in industries with above-average digital intensity will outweigh negative effects from the pandemic, in particular scarring effects on labour markets and business dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. This title is unavailable for guests, please login to see more information.
- Published
- 2021
12. Civic Intelligence Oversight: Practitioners’ Perspectives in France, Germany, and the UK.
- Author
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Roller, Sarah Naima, Wetzling, Thorsten, Kniep, Ronja, and Richter, Felix
- Subjects
CIVIL society ,JOURNALISTS - Abstract
In recent years, various revelations about government malfeasances have highlighted the vulnerability of civil society actors who work on surveillance by intelligence agencies. Simultaneously, new technologies and overburdened state oversight bodies clarify how relevant citizen scrutiny of intelligence is. Both of these factors have led to the emergence of scrutiny by civil society actors as a research subject. This paper contributes to such scholarship by presenting data collected through surveys addressed at journalists and professionals from civil society organisations (CSOs) in France, Germany, and the UK to comparatively characterize the forms, scope, and constraints of the scrutiny they perform. Indicated differences across countries highlight variances in the practices of civic intelligence oversight. These variances indicate that there is room to manoeuvre for civic forms of holding intelligence agencies to account, counteracting the primacy of security and the secrecy of intelligence. Yet, similarities of civic oversight practitioners’ perspectives across all three countries are also distinct and informative; in particular, across all three countries, journalists and CSO professionals who work on surveillance by intelligence agencies worry they are under surveillance themselves and express dissatisfaction with safeguards at work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Evaluation of a health-related intervention to reduce overweight, obesity and increase employment in France and the United Kingdom: a mixed-methods realist evaluation protocol.
- Author
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Amenyah, Sophia D., Murphy, Jane, and Fenge, Lee-Ann
- Subjects
PREVENTION of obesity ,OBESITY complications ,QUALITY of life ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,SOCIAL capital ,PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Background: Obesity, overweight and unemployment are interlinked, with debilitating effects on mortality, health, wellbeing and quality of life. Existing interventions to reduce overweight, obesity and unemployment have addressed these challenges independent of each other with limited success. The Adding to Social capital and individual Potential In disadvantaged REgions (ASPIRE) project will develop an innovative model using a combination of skills training and health and wellbeing interventions to improve health, wellbeing, quality of life and reduce overweight, obesity and unemployment in England and France. The aim of this paper is to outline the protocol for evaluating the ASPIRE project to examine the effectiveness of the intervention and clarify the mechanisms and contextual factors which interact to achieve outcomes.Methods: A mixed-method realist evaluation using a single-group before-and-after design will be used. The evaluation will consist of development of an initial programme theory, theory validation and refinement using quantitative and qualitative data to understand the causal mechanisms, contexts of implementation and their interactions that result in outcomes observed in ASPIRE. Primary outcomes that will be assessed are change in body weight and body mass index, reemployment and a rise on the ASPIRE participation ladder. The ASPIRE participation ladders consists of a series of 5 steps to engage participants in the project. The first step on the ladder is joining an ASPIRE hub with paid employment as the final step on the ladder. Secondary outcomes will be physical activity, diet quality, self-efficacy and health-related quality of life. Both quantitative and qualitative approaches are appropriate in this study because the use of validated questionnaires and objective measures will demonstrate how much the intervention addressed outcomes related to weight loss and reemployment and the qualitative data (photovoice) will provide insights into the contexts and experiences that are unique to participants in the project.Discussion: The results from this evaluation will provide an understanding of how a model of health-related interventions which improve health, wellbeing and maintenance of a healthy lifestyle could reduce overweight, obesity and unemployment. The findings will enable the adaptation of this model for effective implementation in different contexts and circumstances.Trial Registration: ISRCTN registry: Study ID: ISRCTN17609001 , 24th February 2021 (Retrospectively registered). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
14. This title is unavailable for guests, please login to see more information.
- Published
- 2020
15. This title is unavailable for guests, please login to see more information.
- Published
- 2019
16. MEASURING ASYMMETRIC VOLATILITY OF UK, FRANCE, AND GERMAN STOCK MARKETS.
- Author
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SPULBAR, CRISTI, BIRAU, RAMONA, HAWALDAR, IQBAL THONSE, TRIVEDI, JATIN, and IACOB (TROTO), ANCA IOANA
- Subjects
VOLATILITY (Securities) ,COVID-19 pandemic ,STOCKS (Finance) ,VALUE at risk ,EMERGING markets - Abstract
The recent global pandemic impacted stock markets worldwide, including developed and emerging markets. This paper investigates changes in volatility from a sample of daily returns of FTSE100, DAX and CAC for the UK, Germany, and France, respectively. We test the fitness of GARCH (1, 1) to model the volatility, measure the interrelationship between selected samples, and abstract the changes in volatility before and during the pandemic period. Used and analysed daily closing returns from 2000-01-01 to 2022-31-01 with Generalised Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity (GARCH 1, 1) and Value-at-Risk (VaR) with Normal and Mills approach. Data has been divided into three phasesbefore, during, and after the Covid 19 pandemic. The finding confirms persistent volatility for selected samples, the strong interrelationship among the German stock market and UK stock market than in France and German markets, dynamic changes in volatility patterns before, during and after the pandemic. The study results confirm the increase in normal volatility patterns after the pandemic. Further, finding exhibits the dynamics of volatility and response during the different four-phases, changing the degree of risk and prospective returns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
17. Law, finance and development: further analyses of longitudinal data.
- Author
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Sarkar, Prabirjit and Singh, Ajit
- Subjects
STOCKHOLDERS ,FINANCIAL markets - Abstract
This paper analyses a longitudinal dataset on legal protection of shareholders over a 36 year period, 1970–2005, for four advanced countries, the UK, France, Germany and the USA. It examines two aspects of the legal origin hypothesis—whether shareholder protection is higher in the common law countries (UK and USA) than in the civil law countries (France and Germany) and whether shareholder protection matters for stock market development in the short and long runs. It also examines the ‘causation’ issue and the ‘endogeneity’ problem—whether greater shareholder protection leads to stock market development or whether stock market development leads to changes in law. The paper casts serious doubt on the validity of the basic theses of the Anglo Saxon legal and developmental model. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Pragmatism and rationalism in the development of management science methodologies in the UK and France.
- Author
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Paucar-Caceres, Alberto
- Subjects
PRAGMATISM ,RATIONALISM ,SCHOOL administration ,OPERATIONS research ,METHODOLOGY ,MANAGEMENT science ,CORPORATE culture - Abstract
The development of a range of management science methodologies (MSMs) such as ‘soft’ operational research (OR) has been a feature of the UK OR practice over the last decades. This paper suggests that the increasing number of soft approaches developed in the UK is a direct consequence of the pragmatism in management education and management practice in Britain; and of the development of a robust British systems movement that has been engaged with the British OR community. Rationalism prevalent in French management education has kept OR/MS practice biased towards the hard end of MSM. We explore the usage of hard and soft methods and present results of a mailed survey administered to a small sample of British and French MBA graduates working in consultancy. Results reflect features of British and French business culture and management education; and indicate the different directions taken by the MS/OR movements in these two countries. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Standardization in EU education and training policy: findings from a European research network.
- Author
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Ertl, Hubert and Phillips, David
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL standards ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,TRAINING ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION research ,TEACHING - Abstract
This paper describes an EU-funded project under the Training and Mobility of Researchers (TMR) Programme, with a particular emphasis on the Oxford-based part. Involving six European universities, the overarching investigation was concerned with the tensions between standardization and tradition in education. In Oxford the focus was on aspects of EU education and training policy in four Member States: the United Kingdom, German, Sweden, and France. The paper describes the research undertaken and its outcomes, using the project as an example of EU funding programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. This title is unavailable for guests, please login to see more information.
- Published
- 2012
21. Characterizing barriers to care in migraine: multicountry results from the Chronic Migraine Epidemiology and Outcomes – International (CaMEO-I) study.
- Author
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Lanteri-Minet, Michel, Leroux, Elizabeth, Katsarava, Zaza, Lipton, Richard B., Sakai, Fumihiko, Matharu, Manjit, Fanning, Kristina, Manack Adams, Aubrey, Sommer, Katherine, Seminerio, Michael, and Buse, Dawn C.
- Subjects
MIGRAINE diagnosis ,MEDICAL care use ,HEALTH services accessibility ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,POPULATION geography ,PROFESSIONS ,PHYSICIANS ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,MIGRAINE ,MEDICAL referrals - Abstract
Objective: To assess rates of traversing barriers to care to access optimal clinical outcomes in people with migraine internationally. Background: People in need of medical care for migraine should consult a health care professional knowledgeable in migraine management, obtain an accurate diagnosis, and receive an individualized treatment plan, which includes scientific society guideline-recommended treatments where appropriate. Methods: The Chronic Migraine Epidemiology and Outcomes-International (CaMEO-I) Study was a cross-sectional, web-based survey conducted from July 2021 through March 2022 in Canada, France, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States (US). Respondents who met modified International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition, criteria for migraine and had Migraine Disability Assessment Scale (MIDAS) scores of ≥ 6 (i.e., mild, moderate, or severe disability) were deemed to need medical care and were included in this analysis. Minimally effective treatment required that participants were currently consulting a health care professional for headache (barrier 1), reported an accurate diagnosis (barrier 2), and reported use of minimally appropriate pharmacologic treatment (barrier 3; based on American Headache Society 2021 Consensus Statement recommendations). Proportions of respondents who successfully traversed each barrier were calculated, and chi-square tests were used to assess overall difference among countries. Results: Among 14,492 respondents with migraine, 8,330 had MIDAS scores of ≥ 6, were deemed in need of medical care, and were included in this analysis. Current headache consultation was reported by 35.1% (2926/8330) of respondents. Compared with the US, consultation rates and diagnosis rates were statistically significantly lower in all other countries except France where they were statistically significantly higher. Total appropriate treatment rates were also statistically significantly lower in all other countries compared with the US except France, which did not differ from the US. All 3 barriers were traversed by only 11.5% (955/8330) of respondents, with differences among countries (P < 0.001). Conclusions: Of people with migraine in need of medical care for migraine, less than 15% traverse all 3 barriers to care. Although rates of consultation, diagnosis, and treatment differed among countries, improvements are needed in all countries studied to reduce the global burden of migraine. Trial registration: NA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Making hay while the sun shines.
- Author
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Szymanski, Stefan
- Subjects
ACCESS roads to ferries ,TRANSPORTATION rates ,CHANNEL Tunnel (Coquelles, France, & Folkestone, England) ,FRANCHISE clause (Marine insurance) ,UNDERWATER tunnels ,RETAIL franchises - Abstract
This paper analyses the pricing behaviour of cross channel ferry companies in the eight year period between awarding the Channel Tunnel franchise and the completion of the construction of the Tunnel. The ferry companies appear to have ‘made hay’ by significantly increasing some published prices for car ferry journeys in real terms over the period. The paper presents a model of regulatory intervention which can account for increasing prices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. A Novel Planar Antenna Array for a Ground-Based Synthetic Aperture Radar.
- Author
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Vincent, Shweta, Francis, Sharmila Anand John, Raimond, Kumudha, Ali, Tanweer, and Kumar, Om Prakash
- Subjects
PLANAR antenna arrays ,SYNTHETIC aperture radar ,SYNTHETIC apertures ,HORN antennas ,ANTENNA arrays ,CRUISE ships - Abstract
A MIMO GB-SAR system called MELISSA was put in place to monitor landslides in Italy and the sinking of the Costa Concordia cruise liner in France. It comprises 12 pyramidal horn antennas placed in a linear geometry for transmission, and these are used in the detection of the motion of a target (for example a landslide or other terrestrial deformation). The low half power beam width (19.76° at θ = 90°) of the transmitting radiation pattern of MELISSA results in low coverage area of the target. This paper proposes two alternative types of horn antenna for the current transmitter module of MELISSA, namely the cantenna and coaxial cavity horn antenna, for installation in a 2×6 planar antenna array. A higher value of the 3 dB beamwidth is observed using these arrays (38.320 at θ = 90° and 104.80 at φ = 0° for the cantenna array and 410 at θ = 90° and 140.40 at φ = 0° for the coaxial cavity horn antenna array). The overall gain of the proposed systems is around 10 dBi, and the efficiencies are between 85% and 90%. Using the Dolph Chebyshev beamforming technique on the proposed antenna arrays yields a zero sidelobe level, which improves the overall peak sidelobe ratio of the system and in turn the quality of the images obtained. Our proposed design for the transmitting section of the MELISSA system has applications terrestrial deformation monitoring with higher area coverage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. RETHINKING THE EUROPEAN MODEL LAW OF SET-OFF IN THE ERA OF BREXIT AND THE RECENT REFORM OF THE FRENCH CIVIL CODE.
- Author
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Šimunović, Lidija
- Subjects
- *
BRITISH withdrawal from the European Union, 2016-2020 , *BREXIT Referendum, 2016 , *CONTRACTS , *SOFT law , *CIVIL law ,EUROPEAN law - Abstract
In 2003 the Commission on European Contract Law (hereinafter: CECL) published the Principles of European Contract Law Part III (hereinafter: PECL III) which contained the provisions on EU set-off (hereinafter: EU model law of set-off). These are soft law provisions whose text was the result of the work of the most prominent academics from EU Member States. Considering that the Germanic, Romanic, and English set-off models coexist on the territory of the EU, the EU model law of set-off represents a reconciliation of the different private law traditions and models of set-off. During the 25 years since the adoption of the EU model law of set-off, several significant changes have occurred in the EU, which relate to its set-off law directly and indirectly. The most significant change is certainly the issue of Brexit and the possibility of Great Britain leaving the EU. Furthermore, it is important to note that automatic set-off was abandoned in France, which means it has replaced the Romanic set-off model with the German model. This paper starts with the context in which the European set-off rules were adopted. Then, the author identifies the nomotechnical and practical deficiencies in the EU model law of set-off in the context of the changed circumstances in the EU. The final part of the paper presents propositions for the change of the existing EU model law of set-off, which would help overcome the identified deficiencies and gaps. Consideration is also given to the question of whether, after Brexit and the change in the French set-off rules, the provisions of the EU model law of set-off which were influenced by English and French set-off laws should be removed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. An International Comparison of Production Functions: The Coal-Fired Electricity Generating Industry.
- Author
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Hart, P. E. and Chawla, R. K.
- Subjects
COAL-fired power plants ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,CAPITAL productivity ,PRODUCTION (Economic theory) ,PRODUCTION functions (Economic theory) - Abstract
This article compares the efficiency of the coal-fired steam-generated electricity in Great Britain, the U.S. and France in 1970. The authors selected this industry for close examination because it had experienced rapid technological progress, its output is homogeneous and the data available are comparatively good. They found that the average level and rate of growth of fuel productivity in Great Britain industry were less than in France and in the U.S. The authors were careful to state, however, that technological backwardness was not the only interpretation of this result. They were aware that partial productivity measures could be very misleading because the contribution of other inputs, particularly capital, is ignored. Furthermore, this paper shows that the percentage increase in output in Great Britain from 1949-63 was higher than that in France and in the U.S., while the percentage increase in capital, measured by generating capacity, was much lower than in France or the US. This difference could be interpreted as implying that the productivity of capital in Great Britain industry was rising relatively to that in France and in the U.S. and thus that the industry in Great Britain was technologically forward. However, there are other interpretations, because capital productivity is also a partial measure of productivity. Thus, this paper suggests that there is a need a measure of productivity which reflects the simultaneous influence of all inputs and output and a production function provides such a measure. This article also estimates production functions for this industry.
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Discussion of The Effects of Accounting Diversity: Evidence from the European Union.
- Author
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Frost, Carol A.
- Subjects
ACCOUNTING ,ACCOUNTING methods ,ACCOUNTING standards ,CORPORATE finance ,FINANCIAL statements - Abstract
The article reports on the effects of accounting diversity on the financial ratios and stock market valuation of the accounting data given by companies in France, Germany, and Great Britain. Also, the effectiveness of the European Union's efforts to lower diversity in accounting standards is looked at. Using a capital markets strategy and creating capital-markets-based measures for diversity in the accounting measurement practices the effects of measurement differences are discussed. The EU directives include minimizing the choices in accounting measurement principles, requirement of a specified set of annual report disclosures, and emphasis of the true and fair view in comparability and transparency.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Overheating calculation methods, criteria, and indicators in European regulation for residential buildings.
- Author
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Attia, Shady, Benzidane, Caroline, Rahif, Ramin, Amaripadath, Deepak, Hamdy, Mohamed, Holzer, Peter, Koch, Annekatrin, Maas, Anton, Moosberger, Sven, Petersen, Steffen, Mavrogianni, Anna, Maria Hidalgo-Betanzos, Juan, Almeida, Manuela, Akander, Jan, Khosravi Bakhtiari, Hossein, Kinnane, Olivier, Kosonen, Risto, and Carlucci, Salvatore
- Subjects
- *
DWELLINGS , *BUILDING performance , *ENERGY consumption , *THERMAL comfort - Abstract
• Overheating regulations and calculation methods in 26 European countries were compared. • Most of the existing calculation methods are outdated and do not fit climate-proof buildings. • France requires a mixed-mode operation of naturally ventilated households. • The UK developed a heatwave-based calculation approach. • Comfort-based, multi-zonal, and time-integrated calculation approaches are needed. With the ongoing significance of overheating calculations in the residential building sector, building codes such as the European Energy Performance of Building Directive (EPBD) are essential for harmonizing the indicators and performance thresholds. This paper investigates Europe's overheating calculation methods, indicators, and thresholds and evaluates their ability to address climate change and heat events. e study aims to identify the suitability of existing overheating calculation methods and propose recommendations for the EPBD. The study results provide a cross-sectional overview of twenty-six European countries. The most influential overheating calculation criteria are listed the best approaches are ranked. The paper provides a thorough comparative assessment and recommendations to align current calculations with climate-sensitive metrics. The results suggest a framework and key performance indicators that are comfort-based, multi-zonal, and time-integrated to calculate overheating and modify the EU's next building energy efficiency regulations. The results can help policymakers and building professionals to develop the next overheating calculation framework and approach for the future development of climate-proof and resilient residential buildings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Analyzing the violation of drone regulations in three VGI drone portals across the US, the UK, and France.
- Author
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Mandourah, Ammar and Hochmair, Hartwig
- Subjects
REGULATORY compliance ,PUBLIC service advertising ,DRONE aircraft pilots ,STATE regulation ,FEDERAL regulation - Abstract
Drone technology opens the door to major changes and opportunities in our society. But this technology, like many others, needs to be administered and regulated to prevent potential harm to the public. Therefore, national and local governments around the world established regulations for operating drones, which bans drone use from specific locations or limits their operation to qualified drone pilots only. This study reviews the types of restrictions on drone use that are specified in federal drone regulations for the US, the UK, and France, and in state regulations for the US. The study also maps restricted areas and assesses compliance with these regulations by analyzing the spatial contribution patterns to three crowd-sourced drone portals, namely SkyPixel, Flickr, and DroneSpot, relative to restricted areas. The analysis is performed both at the national level and at the state/regional level within each of the three countries, where statistical tests are conducted to compare compliance rates between the three drone portals. This study provides new insight into drone users' awareness of and compliance with drone regulations. This can help governments to tailor information campaigns for increased awareness of drone regulations among drone users and to determine where increased control and enforcement of drone regulations is necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Public or Private Orientation of Pension Systems in the Light of the Recent Financial Crisis.
- Author
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Lagoutte, Christine and Reimat, Anne
- Subjects
PENSIONS ,PENSION costs ,FINANCIAL crises ,INSTITUTIONAL economics ,LABOR supply - Abstract
This paper studies the appropriateness of a public or private orientation of pension systems in the light of the recent financial crisis, which has underscored the difficulties and contradictions associated with each system. The different institutional arrangements, in which public or private pension systems are embedded, are key components when assessing their responses to the crisis. Particularly, private pension systems are intertwined with financial markets, while social insurance-based pension systems are linked to the labour market mechanisms. This paper compares the British and French pension systems, as “archetypes” of private-oriented and public-oriented systems, respectively, the first relying on the market and private pension schemes, and the second on mandatory social insurance. This paper shows that the crisis has upheld the founding principles of the public (French) and private (British) pension systems to maintain the existing institutional configurations. At the same time, both systems have strengthened the role played by means-tested benefits and minimum pensions for low-income groups to offset the weaknesses of one or the other system, as emphasised by the crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. DIMENSIONS OF NATIONALISM AND RELIGION IN FRANCE, POLAND AND THE UNITED KINGDOM: TOWARDS A RENEWED SYNCRETISM?
- Author
-
SAYEGH, PASCAL-YAN
- Subjects
NATIONALISM & religion ,SYNCRETISM (Religion) ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,PATRIOTISM - Abstract
In the past decades, we have witnessed the global re-emergence of the political meaning of both nationalism and religion. This paper explores contemporary fragments of this trend across three European countries: France, Poland and the United Kingdom. The discursive occurrences brought into the analysis are taken from state-centered political arenas as well as from more diffused or marginal sociological elements. While the approach is primarily set in the perspective of nationalism studies, the final aim of the paper is to nourish the reflection on the negotiations of political and social significations between religion and nationalism. To what extent are religious discourses inherent to the resurgence of nationalist discourses and social practices? Reversely, are nationalistic phenomena inherently religious in nature, hence favorable to combinations between religious and nationalist discursive elements? Are the contemporary dimensions of the relationship between religion and nationalism, such as those presented in this paper, tokens of a new (or renewed) syncretism of a reactionary grid of social significations? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
31. Regulatory change and work-life integration in France and the UK.
- Author
-
Sanséau, Pierre-Yves and Smith, Mark
- Subjects
WORK-life balance ,FLEXIBLE work arrangements ,QUALITY of work life - Abstract
Purpose – In this paper the authors aim to consider the impact of regulatory changes on work-life integration outcomes. Using the cases of France and the UK they seek to explore changes in objective and subjective measures of work-family conflict. Design/methodology/approach – The authors use data from the European Foundation's European Working Conditions Survey (EWCS) to analyse trends in employees' working time and work-life integration outcomes. Findings – The authors observe an increase in reported satisfaction with work-life integration in the UK in contrast to a slight fall in France. The authors also find a reinforcement of the working time norms in France and something of a tentative re-emergence in the UK. However, against these trends evidence is also found of an enhanced flexibility in the scheduling of hours in both countries with French employees more at risk of changeable schedules. Practical implications – Downward trends in working time do not necessarily translate into satisfaction with work-life integration and may create their own tensions and conflicts for employees where there is reduced autonomy. While regulatory change may help shape the working time experiences of employees, the underlying tension between employee and employer-friendly flexibility highlights the challenges for working time regulation and work-life integration in different societal contexts. Originality/value – The paper makes a contribution to the analysis of work-life integration outcomes by examining both objective and subjective measures using comparable data. The authors underline the need to contextualise the regulation and experiences of work-life integration in different societal settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. AGGREGATE EMPLOYMENT DYNAMICS AND (PARTIAL) LABOUR MARKET REFORMS.
- Author
-
Jiménez-Rodríguez, Rebeca and Russo, Giuseppe
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,LABOR market - Abstract
ABSTRACT European labour markets have undergone several important innovations over the last three decades. Most countries have reformed their labour markets since the mid-1990s, with the liberalization of fixed-term contracts and temporary work agencies being the common elements to such reforms. This paper investigates the existence of a change in the dynamic behaviour of the aggregate employment for major European Union countries - France, Germany, Italy and Spain. According to our results, partial labour market reforms have made the response of the aggregate employment to output shocks larger and quite comparable to that found for the UK - the most flexible labour market in Europe since the Thatcher reforms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Des concepts à la pratique de l'innovation responsable : à propos d'un séminaire franco-britannique.
- Author
-
Barré, Rémi
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,INTERDISCIPLINARY research ,THEORY of knowledge - Abstract
Copyright of Natures Sciences Sociétés is the property of EDP Sciences and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The Historical Fertility Transition: A Guide for Economists.
- Author
-
Guinnane, Timothy W
- Subjects
FERTILITY -- Social aspects ,BIRTH rate ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,DEMOGRAPHIC transition ,TREND analysis - Abstract
The historical fertility transition is the process by which much of Europe and North America went from high to low fertility in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This transformation is central to recent accounts of long-run economic growth. Prior to the transition, women bore as many as eight children each, and the elasticity of fertility with respect to incomes was positive. Today, many women have no children at all, and the elasticity of fertility with respect to incomes is zero or even negative. This paper discusses the large literature on the historical fertility transition, focusing on what we do and do not know about the process. I stress some possible misunderstandings of the demographic literature, and discuss an agenda for future work. (JEL I12, J13, N30) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Reforming Voting Practices in a Global Age: The Making and Remaking of the Modern Secret Ballot in Britain, France and the United States, c.1600–c.1950*.
- Author
-
Crook, Malcolm and Crook, Tom
- Subjects
SECRET ballot ,VOTING ,PRACTICAL politics -- History ,ELECTION law ,ELECTIONS ,UNITED States elections - Abstract
The article presents an examination into the history of election law, voting procedure and the secret ballot in the United States, France, and Great Britain. The author notes earlier studies which suggest the origin of the secret ballot technique are in 19th century Australia, but contextualises the need for a larger globalization paradigm-centered historical methodology. An overview of election law in the three countries is then given, discussing their divergent developments of secure ballot counting.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Labor Supply and the Extensive Margin.
- Author
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Blundell, Richard, Bozio, Antoine, and Laroque, Guy
- Subjects
LABOR supply ,WORKING hours ,LABOR time ,ECONOMIC history -- 1971-1990 ,ECONOMIC history, 1990- - Abstract
In this paper we propose a systematic way of examining the importance of the extensive and the intensive margins of labor supply in order to explain the overall movements in total hours of work over time. We show how informative bounds can be developed on each of these margins. We apply this analysis to the evolution of hours of work in the US, the UK, and France and show that both the extensive and intensive margins matter in explaining changes in total hours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Consuming Sex: Socio-legal Shifts in the Space and Place of Sex Shops.
- Author
-
Coulmont, Baptiste and Hubbard, Phil
- Subjects
PORNOGRAPHY ,SEX industry ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Materials defined as pornographic have always been subject to regulation because of the potential of such items to ‘corrupt and deprave’. Yet the state and law has rarely sought to ban such materials, attempting instead to restrict their accessibility. The outcomes of such interventions have, however, rarely been predictable, an issue we explore with reference to the changing regulation of sex shops in Britain and France since the 1970s. Noting ambiguities in the legal definitions of spaces of sex retailing, this paper traces how diverse forms of control have combined to restrict the location of sex shops, simultaneously shaping their design, management, and marketing. Describing the emergence of gentrified and ‘designer’ stores, this paper demonstrates that regulation has been complicit in a process of neo-liberalization that has favoured more corporate sex shops – without this having ever been an explicit aim of those who have argued for the regulation of sex retailing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Has there been any structural convergence in the transmission of European monetary policies?
- Author
-
Hallett, Andrew Hughes and Richter, Christian
- Subjects
ECONOMIC convergence ,MONETARY policy ,FINANCIAL crises ,TIME-frequency analysis ,EUROZONE - Abstract
This paper makes three contributions. First we present a technique by which the monetary transmission mechanism of Germany, France, the UK and the Eurozone can be decomposed into its component cycles, compared across economies and across time. As a result, we found that the individual data generating processes have varied over time. Second we show that Germany has now converged on the rest of Europe and not vice versa, although Germany had dominated monetary policy making in Europe for many years. Third, we show that the UK as an outsider has behaved like a peripheral EMU country, even when EMU was not in place. In other words, the transmission mechanisms of Germany and the UK were fundamentally different. Hence, when that German monetary policy dominated Europe in a way that was not in line with the rest of Europe, never mind the UK, it is no surprise that the UK eventually left the ERM (1992). The current financial crisis may enforce the trend of convergence of the transmission mechanism. But there have been signs of a divergence between core and periphery, to some extent involving the UK, so this general convergence, as opposed to tighter convergence in the core, may not last. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Fiscal policy is back in France and the United Kingdom!
- Author
-
Creel, Jérôme, Monperrus-Veroni, Paola, and Saraceno, Francesco
- Subjects
FISCAL policy ,MONETARY policy ,MACROECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC models ,KEYNESIAN economics ,FRENCH economy ,ECONOMIC conditions in Great Britain - Abstract
In this paper, we analyze the resurgence of discretionary fiscal policy in the fiscal theory of the price level (FTPL) framework. Despite its reliance on the new consensus macroeconomic (NCM) framework, the FTPL concludes that fiscal policy may lead monetary policy without hampering macroeconomic stability. We show that an empirical model deriving from this theory gives very interesting results: in France and the United Kingdom, fiscal policy has positive long-run effects. This is at odds with the orthodox nature of FTPL promoters who usually advocate fiscal rules and sanctions. We interpret our results as being consistent with Post Keynesian economic thinking. We conclude that the move of some economists from the NCM school of thought in favor of discretionary fiscal policy has promoted the visibility of Post Keynesian ideas on this topic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Never the same after the first time: the satisfaction of the second-generation self-employed.
- Author
-
Clark, Andrew, Colombier, Nathalie, and Masciet, David
- Subjects
JOB satisfaction ,FREELANCERS ,CHILDREN of immigrants ,SELF-employment - Abstract
Purpose — It is known that the self-employed are generally more satisfied than salaried workers. The aim of this paper is to test whether this phenomenon is particularly found for the first-generation self-employed. Design/methodology/approach — French and British panel data are analysed, which include information on various measures of job satisfaction, and the respondent's parents' occupation. Job satisfaction regressions were run in which the first-and second-generation self-employed were distinguished between. Findings — The study finds that first-generation self-employed (those whose parents were not. self-employed) are more satisfied overall than are the second-generation self-employed. The findings are consistent between the British and French data. Research limitations/implications — While the results are the same in the two countries considered, further validation work should extend the analysis across countries. While the authors are fairly sure that the second-generation self-employed do worse, they cannot precisely distinguish between comparison to one's parents, constrained occupational choice, and selection effects due to lower barriers to self-employment entry. Originality/value — The authors believe that this is one of the first papers to distinguish between types of self-employed in terms of their higher satisfaction. The finding that parents' labour force status continues to have a significant impact on their children's job satisfaction argues for a more systematic consideration of intergenerational factors in the analysis of labour markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
41. TECHNOLOGY, INFORMATION, AND THE DECENTRALIZATION OF THE FIRM.
- Author
-
Acemoglu, Daron, Aghion, Philippe, Lelarge, Claire, Reenen, John Van, and Zilibotti, Fabrizio
- Subjects
INFORMATION technology ,DECENTRALIZATION in management ,MANAGEMENT ,INDUSTRIAL management ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper analyzes the relationship between the diffusion of new technologies and the decentralization of firms. Centralized control relies on the information of the principal, which we equate with publicly available information. Decentralized control, on the other hand, delegates authority to a manager with superior information. However, the manager can use his informational advantage to make choices that are not in the best interest of the principal. As the available public information about the specific technology increases, the tradeoff shifts in favor of centralization. We show that firms closer to the technological frontier, firms in more heterogeneous environments, and younger firms are more likely to choose decentralization. Using three data sets on French and British firms in the 1990s, we report robust correlations consistent with these predictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. War and welfare: Britain, France, and the United States 1807-14.
- Author
-
O'Rourke, Kevin H.
- Subjects
WELFARE economics ,EMBARGO ,BLOCKADE ,WAR ,ECONOMIC conditions in Great Britain ,FRENCH economy ,UNITED States economy ,ECONOMIC indicators - Abstract
This paper assesses the relative welfare costs of the various embargos and blockades of the years 1807-1814 in three countries: Britain, France, and the United States. Relative price evidence indicates that these blockades and embargos did restrict trade, and that Britain was less severely affected than her rivals. Benchmark welfare estimates for the United States are particularly high, at roughly 4-5% per annum. While absolute welfare estimates depend on elasticity assumptions, the US unambiguously came out worst in these disputes, and Britain almost surely suffered lower losses than France as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. REGULATION AND PRODUCTIVITY PERFORMANCE.
- Author
-
Crafts, Nicholas
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL productivity ,COST ,EMPLOYMENT ,ENDOGENOUS growth (Economics) - Abstract
The paper reviews theory and evidence on the ways in which regulation affects productivity outcomes. In a context of endogenous growth, it is argued that traditional measures of compliance costs miss the potentially most important impacts of regulation on productivity which occur through changes in incentives to invest and to innovate. Recent attempts to measure cross-country variations in the strength of product-market and employment regulation are considered and some weaknesses are highlighted. Nevertheless, consistent with endogenous growth models, there appears to be quite strong evidence that regulations which inhibit entry into product markets have an adverse effect on TFP growth in OECD countries. Although there are some discrepancies in the evidence, on most measures the UK appears lightly regulated relative to France and Germany, and this may have contributed to a reduction in the recent past in the UK's TFP gap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. In Fear of International Law.
- Author
-
Shearer, Ivan
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL law ,FEDERAL government - Abstract
The thesis of this paper is that governments of some otherwise enlightened states are increasingly fearful of acknowledging the restraints imposed on them by existing international law. They are also reluctant to enter into new commitments by way of international conventions that would expand the reach of international law. The paper asks whether these fears are based on a true understanding of international law or on some distorted view of it. It will draw comparisons and some contrasts between Australia and the United States in their reactions to a number of recent events as well as to some enduring situations of contemporary relevance. Had time (and the limits of my research) permitted, one might also have examined public attitudes toward international law in China, Japan, and Russia in this context, where similar fears appear to be entertained. France, Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom, also enlightened states, appear by contrast to belong to a group more dedicated to international law. As Robert Kagan has recently remarked, the experience of two world wars at close quarters, and the formation of the European Union, have made the European countries more dedicated to process, where the United States is more interested in results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The effectiveness of risk management system and firm performance in the European context.
- Author
-
Ghazieh, Louai and Chebana, Nadia
- Subjects
- *
ORGANIZATIONAL performance , *SMALL business , *MANAGEMENT committees , *VALUE creation , *STOCK exchanges - Abstract
Purpose -- The purpose of this paper is to study the effectiveness of the risk management system in the European context, especially with regard to the risk management committee, the uncertainty of the environment and company performance. In summary, it evaluates European companies listed on the stock exchange in France, Germany and the United Kingdom to determine how risk management systems influence financial companies' performance. Design/methodology/approach -- To study the effectiveness of risk management systems and their influence on performance, the large companies selected in our sample are fairly representative of the European market, according to the Dutch indices of each country (SBF 120 in France, HDAX 110 in Germany and FTSE 100 in United Kingdom).The empirical evidence is based on an international quantitative analysis, using a data set involving 320 companies listed on the stock exchange over a ten-year period from 2005 to 2014. Findings -- The results indicate that the establishment of a risk management and control system by a company positively influences its management, and its performance level and value creation also improve. The results of this study demonstrate a significant strengthening of the role of the risk management committee in the three countries. The surveillance function is reinforced, and in particular, the internal control system is accentuated. Research limitations/implications -- This study has some limitations that can form leads for future research. One of these limitations is the sample size. The authors have represented the European context by three countries that certainly constitute great European powers, but have regulations different from other countries. The company size is also a possible research element. Indeed, risk management system varies between large, small and medium-sized enterprises, so it is important to study each type of company well. Originality/value -- This study identifies the risk management committee as a mechanism of control that is highly important in the company, and it proposes an international framework that comparatively and empirically evaluates how the risk management system used in large European companies can improve their financial performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The Future Impact of Carbon Tax on Electricity Flow between Great Britain and Its Neighbors until 2030.
- Author
-
Rafiee, Ahmad, Karimi, Mehdi, Safari, Amir, and Abbasi Talabari, Fahimeh
- Subjects
CARBON taxes ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,FIXED prices ,ELECTRICITY pricing ,ELECTRIC power consumption ,ELECTRICITY - Abstract
This paper investigates the future role of cross-border electricity flow between Great Britain (GB) and its neighbors until 2030, considering high deployment of renewable energy sources (e.g., wind, solar, and biomass), enhanced interconnection capacity, and a partly electrified heating sector. It was assumed that two cross-border interconnectors links will connect GB's power system to its neighbors: (1) a one-way interconnector (IC1) that imports electricity to GB, and (2) a two-way one (IC2) between France and GB. The IC2 was allowed to transfer electricity from a cheaper power system to a more expensive one. The results show that at a fixed CO
2 price, a change in power imported via IC1 will affect the power dispatch of the CO2 emitting power plants and biomass-fired power plants, and electricity trade via IC1 and IC2. At IC1 importing of £60/MWh, by raising the CO2 price from 60 to £70/ton, the share of CCGT power plants will reduce by 75%, and the power imported via IC1 link will face 19-times growth. With a constant IC1 import price, raising the CO2 tax will reduce the total quantity of electricity being exported to France via IC2. Moreover, increasing the CO2 tax will increase the emissions cost of gas and coal-fired generators, and the power required to meet the demand will be imported via IC1. With the IC1 electricity price set to £20/MWh and the CO2 tax set to £50/ton, there may be 595 periods out of 17,520 in which GB will be used as an electricity trade corridor. GB's total CO2 emissions should drop as the CO2 tax increases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. SKILL-BIASED ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE? EVIDENCE FROM A PANEL OF BRITISH AND FRENCH ESTABLISHMENTS.
- Author
-
Caroli, Eve and Van Reenen, John
- Subjects
HUMAN capital ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,EMPLOYEE reviews ,PERSONNEL management ,CAPITAL ,LABOR economics ,ABILITY - Abstract
This paper investigates the determination and consequences of organizational changes (OC) in a panel of British and French establishments. Organizational changes include the decentralization of authority, delayering of managerial functions, and increased multitasking. We argue that OC and skills are complements. We offer support for the hypothesis of ‘skill-biased’ organizational change with three empirical findings. First, organizational changes reduce the demand for unskilled workers in both countries. Second, OC is negatively associated with increases in regional skill price differentials (a measure of the relative supply of skill). Third, OC leads to greater productivity increases in establishments with larger initial skill endowments. Technical change is also complementary with human capital, but the effects of OC is not simply due to its correlation with technological change but has an independent role. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Annotated listing of new books.
- Subjects
SOCIOECONOMICS - Abstract
This article focuses on the book "Governance at Work: The Social Regulation of Economic Relations," edited by Richard Whitley and Peer Hull Kristensen. This book consists twelve papers which shed light on the development of governance systems and work-place relations. These papers examine national systems of governance and managerial prerogatives in the evolution of work systems in England, Germany, and Denmark; the development of national governance principles in the Netherlands; the governance of interfirm relations in Britain and Germany and the social regulation of technical expertise in France and Great Britain.
- Published
- 1998
49. Scrutiny of COVID-19 response strategies among severely affected European nations.
- Author
-
Stephen, Shine, Issac, Alwin, Radhakrishnan, Rakesh Vadakkethil, Jacob, Jaison, Vijay, V. R., Jose, Sam, Azhar, S. M., Nair, Anoop S., Krishnan, Nadiya, Sharma, Rakesh, and Dhandapani, Manju
- Subjects
INFECTION control ,HEALTH policy ,STRATEGIC planning ,DECISION making ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EMERGENCY management - Abstract
Although the health care systems in Europe are considered the global benchmark, European nations were severely affected by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. This manuscript aimed to examine the strategies implemented to combat the COVID-19 pandemic by France, the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, Germany, and Russia and their outcomes in terms of the number of cases, testing, and deaths. This is the first review of its kind that extensively analyzes the preparedness, mitigation, and response strategies against the COVID-19 pandemic adopted by these nations. This paper further suggests a strategic preparedness model for future pandemics. From the analysis, we found that a decentralized approach, prompt decision-making and timely execution, coordination between local health authorities, and public participation in the implementation of strategies could substantially reduce the case fatality rate. Nations with a high percentage of gross domestic product invested in the health sector, as well as more nurses, physicians, hospital beds, intensive care unit beds, and ventilators, better managed the pandemic. Instead, nations that postponed their pandemic response by delaying tracking, tracing, testing, quarantine, and lockdown were badly affected. The lessons learned from the present pandemic could be used as a guide to prepare for further pandemics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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