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The sixth volume of International Perspectives on Equality,
Diversity and Inclusion addresses workplace discrimination of
ethnic minority people and migrants in Europe. Race Discrimination
and Management of Ethnic Diversity and Migration at Work analyses
perspectives from nine countries: France, Germany, the United
Kingdom, Ireland, the Netherlands, Norway, Italy, Cyprus and
Greece. Each country-focused chapter examines the historical
context surrounding diversity, equality, racism and discrimination,
along with facts and statistics about ethnicity in society and at
work. Chapters then investigate the discourse and measures deployed
at the national and organisational levels to combat race
discrimination and their effects, and each provides a
country-specific case study. The book concludes with a reflection
on the development of equality legislation in the EU and its impact
on racial equality at the workplace. This volume constitutes a
cooperative effort to shed light on the management of ethnicity,
diversity and migration within the workplace, emphasising the
opportunity for improvement within this area. It is an illuminating
book for researchers of equality and diversity within
organisations, along with stakeholders involved in finding
solutions to race and ethnic discrimination at work.
Crowdfunding as an entrepreneurial phenomenon substitutes
traditional sources of finance (banks, financial markets,
governments) for the crowd. Socially and economically, it is
challenging the traditional boundaries that have been set for
centuries between industry, the financial sector, and the public.
Though its basic principle cannot be considered as a radical
innovation, crowdfunding as a rapidly growing practice calls for
renewed management, legal, and governance patterns. Descriptive
inquiries on "how to do it" are multiplying but crowdfunding
remains a fuzzy subject for research and reflexivity. This book
gathers the best recent research outcomes on the managerial and
social impact of this new practice. The need for theory is
three-fold, for both scholars and practitioners. Positive theory is
needed to understand how projects are organised, how (and why) they
may succeed or fail and how governments consider this new practice
and try to regulate it. Normative theory can provide templates and
"recipes" to develop projects, and provide advice on which models
are more efficient. Finally, critical theory is needed to consider
the social and economic impact of crowdfunding.
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