18041. |
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18042. |
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18043. |
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18044. |
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18045. |
- Petersson, Lennart, et al.
(författare)
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The EU and South Africa: Trade and Diversification
- 2007
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Ingår i: The European Union and Developing Countries. Trade, Aid and Growth in an Integrating World. ; , s. 97-119
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Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
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18046. |
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18047. |
- Petitt, Andrea, 1981-, et al.
(författare)
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Imag(in)ing 'good' Swedish meat : gender, sexuality, race and nation in the sale of higher welfare chicken
- 2018
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Ingår i: Gender, Place and Culture. - : Taylor & Francis Group. - 0966-369X .- 1360-0524. ; 25:11, s. 1622-1645
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Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
- This article attends to the ways that meat from higher welfare chicken is sold in supermarkets in Sweden. Recognising that the 'welfare-friendly chicken body is an achievement between the market, the animal and publics', this article continues these discussions to show how gender, sexuality, race and nation operate within these markets and publics by looking at how welfare is marketed in chicken meat sales, particularly higher welfare chicken, compared to other meat. By attending to the images used to sell chicken, we examine how ideas about 'the farm' and 'the family' are mobilised in the supermarket. Using images of specific families, they position chicken both in the Swedish rural landscape and in intersecting social categories. These two narratives intertwine and operate as a device in the sale of high welfare chicken meat. This, we argue, hides the dependency on global supply chains and workforce, but also (re)produces ideas about what high welfare is, who cares, and how we should care. Throughout the article, we demonstrate how the narratives of farm, family, and nation operate in relation to species and welfare, as the 'Swedish family farm' is imag(in)ed to sell high welfare chicken in ways that contrast with meat from other animals.
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18048. |
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18049. |
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18050. |
- Petreski, Aleksandar, et al.
(författare)
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Green bonds’ reputation effect and its impact on the financing costs of the real estate sector
- 2022
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Rapport (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
- This paper explores the effect of a firm's reputation of being a green bond issuer on its financing costs. Using a sample of 73 listed Swedish real estate companies issuing in total about 1500 bonds over the period from 2011 till 2021, differencein- difference analyses and instrumental variable estimations are applied to identify the causal impact of frequent green vis-à-vis frequent non-green bond issuing on a firm's cost of capital and credit rating. The paper argues that it is repetitive issuance which lowers a firm's cost of capital, while the effects from first or one-time green bond issuance is the opposite. In line with the reputation capital hypothesis, issuing green bonds even lowers the firm's cost of equity capital, while issuing non-green bonds has no effect on the cost of equity capital.
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