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Showing 1 - 25 of
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The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) is an
effort by the United States and the European Union to reposition
themselves for a world of diffuse economic power and intensified
global competition. It is a next-generation economic negotiation
that breaks the mould of traditional trade agreements. At the heart
of the ongoing talks is the question whether and in which areas the
two major democratic actors in the global economy can address
costly frictions generated by their deep commercial integration by
aligning rules and other instruments. The aim is to reduce
duplication in various ways in areas where levels of regulatory
protection are equivalent as well as to foster wide-ranging
regulatory cooperation and set a benchmark for high-quality global
norms. In this volume, European and American experts explain the
economic context of TTIP and its geopolitical implications, and
then explore the challenges and consequences of US-EU negotiations
across numerous sensitive areas, ranging from food safety and
public procurement to economic and regulatory assessments of
technical barriers to trade, automotive, chemicals, energy,
services, investor-state dispute settlement mechanisms and
regulatory cooperation. Their insights cut through the confusion
and tremendous public controversies now swirling around TTIP, and
help decision-makers understand how the United States and the
European Union can remain rule-makers rather than rule-takers in a
globalising world in which their relative influence is waning.
This book is about understanding the differences and risks,
ownership, culture and management practices when investing,
managing or working with Chinese companies. It explores the
progression of overseas listing of Chinese companies and the
reasons behind the attitude shifts towards overseas Chinese stocks.
This is the book for anyone who wants to know what really lies
behind the scandals and disasters of global business that have
marred the first few years of the twenty-first century. This book
is not about stock market "bubbles." Nor is it about accounting
scandals and craven auditors. Rather, it examines why companies
fail. The authors postulate that the reasons companies fail are
few, and all too common. Detailed studies of eight of the most
famous recent failures identify six main causes: poor strategic
decisions; over-expansion and ill-judged acquisitions; dominant
CEOs; greed, hubris and a desire for power; failure of internal
controls, and ineffective boards. The authors also set out what the
prudent investor, board member or manager should be alert to but
often is not.
Illustrated by a detailed comparative examination of mining
regulations and environmental impact assessment (EIA) in the USA
(the second largest producer of coal in the world) and Indonesia
(the eighth largest and most rapidly growing), this book argues
that the degree of policy integration often determines the success
or failure in controlling environmental effects of mining
operations. Comparison of surface mining regulation in the two
countries provides some stark contrasts, some surprising results
concerning the diffusion of policy innovations from one country to
another, and instances of both policy success and failure. The book
provides significant new insights into international relations and
comparative environmental policy, particularly as they affect
rainforests and biodiversity. It also suggests that if mining
environmental policy were to be effectively implemented, the
environmental degradation caused need not be permanent.
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