Items where Subject is "H Social Sciences > HF Commerce"
Number of items at this level: 11.
2017Piardini, Paola and Drouvelis, Michalis and Di Cagno, Daniela (2017) Gender effects and third-party punishment in social dilemma games. Discussion Paper. University of Birmingham. (Unpublished) 2015Ahmed, Jameel and Chaudhry, Sajid M and Straetmans, Stefan (2015) Business and financial cycles in the Eurozone: synchronization or decoupling. Discussion Paper. University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK. Anderson, Richard G and Binner, Jane M and Hagstromer, Bjorn and Nilsson, Birger (2015) Does commonality in illiquidity matter to investors? Discussion Paper. University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK. 2014Cressy, Robert and Farag, Hisham (2014) Stairway to heaven or gateway to hell? A competing risk analysis of delistings from Hong Kong's Growth Enterprise Market. Discussion Paper. University of Birmingham, Birmingham. Rainbird, Helen (2014) Beyond the organisation and beyond the nation state .... and the employment relationship, same as it ever was? Global value chains and the challenges for Industrial Relations Research. Discussion Paper. University of Birmingham, Birmingham. Simonyan, Iveta (2014) Brand recognition and quality inferences. Discussion Paper. University of Birmingham, Birmingham. 2013Child, John and Marinova, Svetla (2013) The Role of Context in the Globalization of Chinese Firms. Discussion Paper. University of Birmingham, Birmingham. Collinson, Simon (2013) The making of an innovative multinational firm: Chinese capability development through the acquisition of MG-Rover. Discussion Paper. University of Birmingham, Birmingham. Edwards, Paul (2013) Neuroscience and Reductionism: Some Realist Reflections. Discussion Paper. University of Birmingham, Birmingham. Pour, Elinaz Kasefi and Lasfer, Meziane (2013) Why do companies delist voluntarily from the Stock Market? Discussion Paper. University of Birmingham, Birmingham. 1972Mellor, Adrian (1972) Theories of Social Stratification: Key Concepts and Recent Developments. Discussion Paper. University of Birmingham, Birmingham. |