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Books > Business & Economics > Finance & accounting
One of the integral parts of determining business success directly
correlates to how well a company interacts with their customers.
This increased demand for direct communication has evolved how
companies cooperate with their patrons and examines how essential
ethics is related to these communications. Ethical Consumerism and
Comparative Studies Across Different Cultures: Emerging Research
and Opportunities provides emerging research exploring the
theoretical and practical aspects of the fundamental issues related
to ethical consumerism and applications within business, science,
engineering, and technology and examines the impact Arab and global
cultures have on consumerism. Featuring coverage on a broad range
of topics such as business ethics, data management, and global
business, this book is ideally designed for managers, executives,
advertisers, marketers, sales directors, practitioners,
researchers, academicians, and students.
Black money and financial crime are emerging global phenomena.
During the last few decades, corrupt financial practices were
increasingly being monitored in many countries around the globe.
Among a large number of problems is a lack of general awareness
about all these issues among various stakeholders including
researchers and practitioners. Theories, Practices, and Cases of
Illicit Money and Financial Crime is a critical scholarly research
publication that provides comprehensive research on all aspects of
black money and financial crime in individual, organizational, and
societal experiences. The book further examines the implications of
white-collar crime and practices to enhance forensic audits on
financial fraud and the effects on tax enforcement. Featuring a
wide range of topics such as ethical leadership, cybercrime, and
blockchain, this book is ideal for policymakers, academicians,
business professionals, managers, IT specialists, researchers, and
students.
This book covers three topics that have dominated financial market
regulation and supervision debates: digital finance, sustainable
finance, and the Banking and Capital Markets Union. Within the
first part, seven chapters will tackle specific questions arising
in digital finance, including but not limited to artificial
intelligence, tokenisation, and international regulatory
cooperation in digital financial services. The second part
addresses one of humanity's most pressing issues today: the climate
crisis. The quest for sustainable finance is driven by political
actors and a common understanding that climate change is a severe
threat. As financial institutions are a cornerstone of human
interaction, they are in the regulatory spotlight. The chapters
explore sustainability in EU banking and insurance regulation, the
interrelationship between systemic risk and sustainability, and the
'greening' of EU monetary policy. The third part analyses two
projects that have led to huge structural changes in the European
financial market architecture over the last decade: the European
Banking Union and Capital Markets Union. This transformation has
raised numerous legal questions that can only gradually be answered
in all their intricacies. In four chapters, this book examines
composite procedures, property rights of depositors in banking
resolution, preemptive financing arrangements and the phenomenon of
subsidiarisation in the context of Brexit. Of interest to
academics, policymakers, practitioners, and students in the field
of EU financial regulation, banking law, securities law, and
regulatory law, this book offers a compilation of analyses on
pressing banking and capital markets law problems.
The history of the Rio Grande since the late nineteenth century
reflects the evolution of water-resource management in the West. It
was here that the earliest interstate and international
water-allocation problems pitted irrigators in southern New Mexico
against farmers downstream in El Paso and Juarez, with the
voluntary resolution of that conflict setting important precedents
for national and international water law.
In this first scholarly treatment of the politics of water law
along the Rio Grande, Douglas R. Littlefield describes those early
interstate and international water- apportionment conflicts and
explains how they relate to the development of western water law
and policy and to international relations with Mexico. Littlefield
embraces environmental, legal, and social history to offer clear
analyses of appropriation and riparian water rights doctrines,
along with lucid accounts of court cases and laws. Examining events
that led up to the 1904 settlement among U.S. and Mexican
communities and the formation of the Rio Grande Compact in 1938,
Littlefield describes how communities grappled over water issues as
much with one another as with governmental authorities.
"Conflict on the Rio Grande" reveals the transformation of
nineteenth- and early twentieth-century law, traces changing
attitudes about the role of government, and examines the ways these
changes affected the use and eventual protection of natural
resources. Rio Grande water policy, Littlefield shows, represents
federalism at work--and shows the West, in one locale at least,
coming to grips with its unique problems through negotiation and
compromise.
Finance and insurance companies are facing a wide range of
parametric statistical problems. Statistical experiments generated
by a sample of independent and identically distributed random
variables are frequent and well understood, especially those
consisting of probability measures of an exponential type. However,
the aforementioned applications also offer non-classical
experiments implying observation samples of independent but not
identically distributed random variables or even dependent random
variables. Three examples of such experiments are treated in this
book. First, the Generalized Linear Models are studied. They extend
the standard regression model to non-Gaussian distributions.
Statistical experiments with Markov chains are considered next.
Finally, various statistical experiments generated by fractional
Gaussian noise are also described. In this book, asymptotic
properties of several sequences of estimators are detailed. The
notion of asymptotical efficiency is discussed for the different
statistical experiments considered in order to give the proper
sense of estimation risk. Eighty examples and computations with R
software are given throughout the text.
This 25th edition of Research on Professional Responsibility and
Ethics in Accounting includes articles from a diverse group of
expert authors. Subjects covered explore many aspects across
professional responsibility and ethics in accounting, including
balancing values vs profits, whistleblowing, earnings management,
ethical financial reporting, and moral identity.
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