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Books > Reference & Interdisciplinary > Encyclopaedias & reference works
This Handbook provides a comprehensive overview of how water,
energy and food are interconnected, comprising a coherent system:
the nexus. It considers the interlinkages between natural
resources, governance processes seeking coherence among water,
energy and food policies, and the adoption of transdisciplinary
approaches in the field. With contributions covering a broad range
of disciplinary perspectives and cross-cutting themes, the Handbook
has a well-balanced mix of conceptual chapters and empirical
studies. It includes a state-of-the-art analysis of the concepts
and experiences in implementing the nexus in different policy
environments, providing examples of successful integrated
decision-making across the domains of water, energy and food.
Offering a global perspective on water, energy and food security,
the Handbook contains insights into achieving both national
development goals and the Sustainable Development Goals. Chapters
further highlight how to understand the concepts of the nexus in
practice, impacts of the nexus in governance, policy and business,
and methods and tools to strengthen the nexus. Interdisciplinary
and thorough, this Handbook will be critical reading for
environmental management, public policy and human geography
scholars. It will also be a useful tool for policymakers looking
for successful examples of policy coherence towards an integrated
management of water, energy and food resources.
This insightful Handbook brings together the practical guidance of
over 50 international practitioners in sustainable tourism.
Applying strong research design principles it provides a workable
and rational toolkit for investigating practical challenges while
accounting for modest timeframes and resources. Expert contributors
illustrate how to undertake environmental, socio-cultural and
economic assessments that establish the feasibility of new tourism
ventures and ascertain their impact over time. Chapters cover
fundamentals including how to conduct feasibility studies and
business plans, and address key topics such as visitor management
and overcrowding. Offering how-to tools and step-by-step guidance,
this Handbook combines academic insight with extensive professional
experience to outline the best practices for an array of tasks to
inform sustainable tourism planning, development and operation.
Incorporating concrete solutions employed in numerous contexts,
this Handbook is crucial reading for practitioners of sustainable
tourism and agencies commissioning sustainable tourism assignments
who are in need of innovative methods and up-to-date guidance in
the field. It will also benefit tourism scholars, particularly
those investigating practical methodologies for creating
sustainable tourism experiences.
A combination text and workbook in three volumes. All areas of
music theory are covered in a concise and practical manner and each
level contains 28 lessons.
The field of artificial intelligence has made tremendous advances
in the last few decades, but as smart as AI is now, it is getting
exponentially smarter and becoming more autonomous in its actions.
This raises a host of challenges to current legal doctrine,
including whether the output of AI entities should count as
'speech', the extent to which AI should be regulated under
antitrust and criminal law statutes, and whether AI should be
considered an independent agent and responsible for its actions
under the law of tort or agency. Containing chapters written by
leading U.S., EU, and International law scholars, the Research
Handbook presents current law, statutes, and regulations on the
role of law in an age of increasingly smart AI, addressing issues
of law that are critical to the evolution of AI and its role in
society. To provide a broad coverage of the topic, the Research
Handbook draws upon free speech doctrine, criminal law, issues of
data protection and privacy, legal rights for increasingly smart AI
systems, and a discussion of jurisdiction for AI entities that will
not be 'content' to stay within the geographical boundaries of any
nation state or be tied to a particular physical location. Using
numerous examples and case studies, the chapter authors discuss the
political and jurisdictional decisions that will have to be made as
AI proliferates into society and transforms our government and
social institutions. The Research Handbook will also introduce
designers of artificially intelligent systems to the legal issues
that apply to the make-up and use of AI from the technologies,
algorithms, and analytical techniques. This essential guide to the
U.S., EU, and other International law, regulations, and statutes
which apply to the emerging field of 'law and AI' will be a
valuable reference for scholars and students interested in
information and intellectual property law, privacy, and data
protection as well as to legal theorists and social scientists who
write about the future direction and implications of AI. The
Research Handbook will also serve as an important reference for
legal practitioners in different jurisdictions who may litigate
disputes involving AI, and to computer scientists and engineers
actively involved in the design and use of the next generation of
AI systems. Contributors include: W. Barfield, S. Bayern, S.J.
Blodgett-Ford, R.G.A. Bone, T. Burri, A. Chin, J.A. Cubert, M. de
Cock Buning, S. De Conca, S-.A. Elvy, A. Ezrachi, R. Leenes, Y.
Lev-Aretz, A.R. Lodder, R.P. Loui, T.M. Massaro, L.T. McCarty, J.O.
McGinnis, F. Moslein, H. Norton, N. Packin, U. Pagallo, S.
Quattrocolo, W. Samore, F. Shimpo, M.E. Stucke, R. van den Hoven
van Genderen, L. Vertinsky, A. von Ungern-Sternberg, J.F. Weaver,
Y-.H. Weng, I. Wildhaber
This incisive Handbook offers novel theoretical and doctrinal
insights alongside practical guidance on some of the most
challenging issues in the field of artificial intelligence and
intellectual property. Featuring all original contributions from a
diverse group of international thought leaders, including top
academics, judges, regulators and eminent practitioners, it offers
timely perspectives and research on the relationship of AI to
copyright, trademark, design, patent and trade secret law. The
Handbook is divided into four thematic parts, beginning with topics
that address the intersection of IP and AI broadly before focusing
on issues associated with specific types of IP. Chapters tackle
critical legal questions, from issues with protecting AI-generated
ourput to the impact of AI on how trademarks are used, offering
valuable lessons on technology regulation and how technological
evolution will disrupt existing legal frameworks. Scholars and
students of intellectual property law and its intersections with AI
and related technologies will find this Handbook 's cutting-edge
contributions to be a crucial read. Its guidance on the practical
legal implications of technological advances will also be of
interest to IP practitioners, as well as policymakers and
regulators.
This Research Handbook highlights the importance of women as agents
of change, acknowledging women entrepreneurs' efforts and
supporting their value-creation activities. With important
implications for policymaking, contributing authors direct
attention to and provide evidence for the positive contribution of
women entrepreneurs to the economy, regardless of their businesses'
size and formal status. Challenging the underperformance hypothesis
associated with women entrepreneurs, chapters present evidence that
women do not underperform in their businesses, but that they add
value even in constrained environments. This intends to shift the
focus of research from questions like 'what do entrepreneurs do?'
to 'how do they do it?', focusing on the unique ways in which each
woman entrepreneur creates value, and 'for whom do they do it?',
looking at the multiple value outcomes women entrepreneurs create
and the beneficiaries of that value. With a global perspective on
women's entrepreneurship and their value creation, this Research
Handbook will be vital reading for researchers of entrepreneurship,
as well as government agencies and policymakers interested in
promoting entrepreneurial activity.
This Research Handbook inspires a new vision of contracts, with
practical illustrations of how they should be designed, rather than
just drafted. The contributors offer a proactive approach, merged
with innovative design, to show how contracts can be both
user-friendly and legally functional. This ground-breaking work
goes beyond the initial drafting and formation of contracts to
cover implementation and integration with business infrastructure -
including digital processes. Drawing on a multi-disciplinary
perspective, it highlights all aspects of the contract lifecycle,
using both theoretical and practical scenarios. As well as improved
design and communication, the Handbook takes a creative view of the
role of emerging technologies, including AI, and how they can
increase contract functionality and visualisation. The goals are
simplification, clarity about rights and obligations, and the
prevention of unnecessary legal problems. Providing an up-to-date
analysis of current trends in contract design thinking and
practice, this Handbook will be an excellent resource for contract
and legal professionals, scholars and practitioners. Entrepreneurs,
procurement and sales managers, information designers and
technologists will also find the forward-thinking, human-centred
approach in this book illuminating and informative.
Digital transformation continues to accelerate change in all
aspects of modern life. This book examines when, where, how, and
why artificial intelligence and digital change can boost innovation
and transform the economy, society and democracy. It provides a
holistic approach to the promotion of the knowledge economy,
knowledge society and knowledge democracy. The book is developed
based on the Cyber-D4 nexus, which is a conceptual framework of
Cyber-Defense, Cyber-Development, Cyber-Democracy, and
Cyber-Diplomacy, and it adopts a Quadruple/Quintuple Innovation
Helix (Q2IH) approach. This nexus ties new national and industrial
cyber strategies, including business strategies for smart cities
and the Internet of Things, with the local, national, regional, and
global security and economic objectives. Academics, policy makers,
practitioners, researchers and students in combined fields of
science, technology, innovation and entrepreneurship, digital
transformation, artificial intelligence and the future of industry
will appreciate the lens through which the chapter authors explore
both the minutiae and expansive influence of digital
transformation.
The Elgar Encyclopedia of Law and Data Science represents a
comprehensive mapping of the field. Comprising over 60 entries, it
features contributions from eminent global scholars, drawing on
expertise from multiple disciplines, including law and data
science, economics, computer engineering, physics, biomedical
engineering and history, philosophy, neuro-engineering, political
science, and geo-informatics. This Encyclopedia brings together
jurists, computer scientists, and data analysts to uncover the
challenges, opportunities, and fault lines that arise as these
groups are increasingly thrown together by expanding attempts to
regulate and adapt to a data-driven world. It explains the concepts
and tools at the crossroads of the many disciplines involved in
data science and law, bridging scientific and applied domains.
Entries span algorithmic fairness, consent, data protection,
ethics, healthcare, machine learning, patents, surveillance,
transparency and vulnerability. Comprehensive yet accessible, this
Encyclopedia will be an indispensable resource for scholars of law,
data science, artificial intelligence and law and technology. It
also contains practical implications for a manifold of users: from
domain experts to policy makers, from businesses to practitioners.
Key Features: The first Encyclopedic coverage of the field of Law
and Data Science Over 60 entries Entries organized alphabetically
for ease of reference Full analytical index Interrelated
multidisciplinary perspectives Unique accessibility for
non-experts.
Shareholder inspection rights form an important tool for
shareholder protection. They offer shareholders seeking information
private access to specific books and records of the company that
are otherwise not publicly available. While there has been a
discourse on the topic in some jurisdictions such as Delaware
(USA), it has not received scholarly treatment at an international
level. This Research Handbook seeks to alter that, and signifies
the first endeavor to engage in a comprehensive and comparative
analysis of shareholder inspection rights across 19 different
jurisdictions representing five continents. Themes emerging from
the study include the historical evolution of inspection rights,
the statutory design of the inspection regime, how inspection
rights interact with disclosure norms under securities regulation,
and the manner in which inspection rights are actually utilized by
shareholders. While there is some commonality among jurisdictions,
the larger story is one of divergence, which is understandable
since local needs tend to drive the design and operation of the
regime. The Research Handbook on Shareholder Inspection Rights is
invaluable to academics, scholars, and students working the area of
corporate law and governance, legal practitioners working in
corporate law and, in particular, shareholder litigation and
regulators and government bodies overseeing the corporate sector,
including corporate and securities regulators.
This Research Handbook is a one-stop resource on global capital
markets and the laws that regulate them. Focussing primarily on
‘mainstream’ capital markets, and framing them as an ecosystem
in which the market players and regulators must co-exist, the
Handbook paints a canvas on which key cross-cutting themes are
depicted, dissected and discussed. Featuring contributions from
leading global experts, the Research Handbook delves into a range
of issues including investment products such as equity finance;
sustainable finance; fintech; impact investing; private equity. It
also provides analysis on institutional and procedural issues such
as large and small companies' capital formation, the roles of
institutional shareholders and information providers, and the
practices and regulation of financial trading markets.
International in scope, this Research Handbook will be of great
value to scholars and practitioners in the field of financial law.
It will also be a go-to source of information for policy makers in
the financial markets sphere.
Providing an authoritative assessment of the current landscape of
spatial analysis in the social sciences, this cutting-edge Handbook
covers the full range of standard and emerging methods across the
social science domain areas in which these methods are typically
applied. Accessible and comprehensive, it expertly answers the key
questions regarding the dynamic intersection of spatial analysis
and the social sciences. The chapters are split into insightful
sections dedicated to foundational background material, methods,
social science applications and the challenges on the horizon,
using state-of-the-art coverage of the traditional and novel
spatial methods. Leading scholars in the field use a range of
applications to illustrate the diverse ways in which spatial
analysis methods can inform research in the field of social
sciences. Furthermore, the Handbook discusses the key challenges to
that research including uncertainty, reproducibility and
replicability. This Handbook of Spatial Analysis in the Social
Sciences will be an excellent informative resource for scholars in
the fields of geography, social sciences and public health.
Established and early career researchers of the social sciences
alike will appreciate the detailed overview of the methods and
applications as well as the ability to expand their methodological
knowledge.
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