The Silver Maple (Acer Saccharinum) samaras reside in the eastern United States and undergo seed dispersal between April and July of each year. During seed dispersal these fruits are trying to disperse their seeds as far away from their tree as possible to have the highest success to produce offspring. The seeds that disperse close to the parent plant have shown less success and higher mortality rates than seeds that disperse farther from the base of the tree. Also‚ fruits with larger seeds have
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paper aims to debate whether transnational corporations are important non-state actors and in which ways they exert power over states. Transnational corporations : A theorist debate about their role as non-state actors Viewing the existing literature on the topic one identifies that different schools of thought have positioned themselves on the matter of non-state actors with diverging and many times pretty unclear opinions. In the specific case of transnational corporations neo-institutionalists
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Question: What factors have contributed to Japan ’s transnational cultural power in Asia? Do you agree that Japan ’s transnational cultural power intersects with its postcolonial ambition? Even though Japan is no longer the colonial power in Asia‚ it still has a strong presence over Asia due to its cultural power within the region. Through various forms of media and popular culture‚ Japanese culture has spread to not only Asia but also many Western societies. There are many factors contributing
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Acer‚ Inc was started in 1976 as a company originally named Multitech by Stan Shih‚ his wife‚ and three friends. He lies the foundation that was later called Acer 1-2-3 saying that above all‚ customer came first‚ employees second‚ and shareholder thirds. Acer was known by its strategy to develop joint ventures to expand sales‚ join force with commoners’ culture‚ and targeted small neighboring markets that were lesser interest to global giant. Its offshore expansion plan started in 1987 with the
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TRANSNATIONAL ADOPTION The adoption of children on a transnational basis is one of the blessings of the modern human culture. Resulting from the worries of humanity to find homes for the orphans of wars such as the World War II‚ governments established legal frameworks to expand this exercise (Masson 2001). Therefore‚ whereas there were about 30‚000 children being adopted from 50 countries in 2001 (Selmon 2000)‚ the count has now reached over five times as much. Transnational adoption has led
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A global phenomenon‚ human trafficking is the third largest crime enterprise‚ after the drug trade and arms dealing. However‚ it is the most vile transnational crime‚ as it exploits and subjects men‚ women and children to cruel‚ inhumane treatment. Victims are sold into three markets: sex trafficking‚ bonded labor‚ and organ trafficking‚ all done with the use of deception or force (Brewer‚ 2009). Human trafficking displays the inequality between equals in the sense that a person sees themselves fit
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1. How did OBI capitalize on the strengths of its multi-domestic strategy when shifting the structure to a transnational organization? 2. Why did OBI create “Centers of Competency”? 3. How does shifting from a multi-domestic to a transnational model affect the organization’s culture? 4. How did it affect HR? Overview of paper After I read many times of the case “Vignette 2.1 Integrated Recruitment Strategy in Action - Internationalization of human resources at OBI”‚ I write this paper as my
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delivering the services within the financial difficulties that many are certain to be faced with regularly. “Jackie Smith & S.P. Udayakumar (2008) reports transnational service organizations are those that aim to provide relief aid to needy populations. Among these groups are the Save the Children Federation and World Vision. While most transnational service organizations struggle to keep their work clearly within the realm of service‚ many find it difficult to avoid engaging
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Inside Unilever: The Evolving Transnational Connpany by Floris A. Maljers The story behind one worldwide company’s flexible organization-and the managers who make it so successful. These days‚ Unilever is often described as one of the foremost transnational companies. Yet our organization of diverse operations around the world is not the outcome of a conscious effort to become what is now known among academics as a transnational. When Unilever was founded in 1930 as a Dutch-British company
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Explain the pros and cons of TNCs on the developing world. TNCs‚ transnational corporations are large companies that have operations in more then one country. An example of a TNC is Coca Cola. There are many pros to TNCs such as they build infrastructure‚ bring new technology to the country and provide jobs for local people. But there are also many cons like land degrading‚ they exploit workers‚ and they avoid taxes. TNCs invest in poor countries‚ they build new infrastructure. TNCs commonly build
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