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Search: AMNE:(SOCIAL SCIENCES Economics and Business Business Administration) > Södertörn University

  • Result 1-10 of 678
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1.
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2.
  • Oghazi, Pejvak (author)
  • Social responsible supply chain and packaging strategy : a conceptual framework
  • 2014
  • In: International Journal of Strategic Business Alliances. - 1756-6444 .- 1756-6452. ; 3:2-3, s. 121-139
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • This paper provides a framework by developing a conceptual model of socially responsible supply chain-based orientation (SRSC) and the incorporation of this orientation to the socially responsible packaging. Strategic alliance in the form of inter-firm and supply chain relationships are highlighted in this paper. By reviewing the literature in SCM, packaging, marketing, strategic alliances and CSR, appropriate constructs and related scale items were identified. Then, a panel of experts from academia and industry were consulted due to further improvements of the design of the study. To this point, resources and capabilities as driving factors have been largely left unexplored and the effect of these forces on socially responsible supply chain-based orientation, packaging and competitive advantage are brought to surface as further fruitful perspectives for future research. This research mainly assists industrial managers to better steer their supply chain management and packaging decisions in order to achieve a sustainable competitive advantage.
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3.
  • Pashkevich, Natallia, 1983-, et al. (author)
  • Methodological Insights From two Experimental Studies Into Complementarities of Productive IT use
  • 2018
  • In: ECRM 2018  - Proceedings of the 17th European Conference on Research Methodology for Business and Management Studies. - UK : Academic Conferences Limited. - 9781911218920 - 9781911218937 ; , s. 303-309
  • Conference paper (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Numerous studies have attempted to determine factors that condition the IT-enabled productivity of information workers but have not yet arrived at a comprehensive conclusion. A so-called complementarity systems approach has been proposed recently, holding that a number of factors need to be managed in a deliberately synchronized manner in order to generate productivity gains from such workers. However, this proposal does not provide specifications for how such synchronization must be conducted and researched. To remedy this gap, this research conducts two parallel and differently designed studies: a longitudinal quasi-randomized field experiment and a well-controlled online experiment. Regarded jointly, each study offers insights into the investigated phenomenon that the other does not, indicating that both studies complement each other. In particular, these two different research approaches to study the complementarities of productive IT use help us to establish how further research design should be developed to investigate individual productivity when a new, more aligned IT system in a company is used together with complementary factors. Moreover, the results from both studies jointly demonstrate that a mandatory context of IT use might provide better access to individuals with both adaptive and innovative cognitive styles than a voluntary working environment. Finally, both studies demonstrate that more detailed research is needed to understand how the productivity of individuals differs when inappropriate cognitive styles are included in complementarity set-ups. Therefore, the two studies offer new insights into the interplay between the studied factors that condition the productivity of information workers and show the importance of analysing a complex phenomenon with multiple, different, and complementary research designs, as each design has inherent conditions with opportunities and limitations, in order to reveal characteristics about the phenomenon being investigated.
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4.
  • Konrad, Maria Theresia, et al. (author)
  • Drivers of Farmers' Investments in Nutrient Abatement Technologies in Five Baltic Sea Countries
  • 2019
  • In: Ecological Economics. - : Elsevier. - 0921-8009 .- 1873-6106. ; 159, s. 91-100
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Adoption of new manure and fertiliser technology is considered an effective tool to reduce diffuse nutrient pollution from agriculture, and policy instruments to encourage technology uptake are therefore widespread. But policy makers need to understand farmers' reasons for adoption of such technologies to design policies that actually work. Using data from a survey with responses from 2439 farmers in five countries around the Baltic Sea, we identify the drivers of technology adoption for three different abatement technologies: manure spreading equipment, slurry tanks, and precision technology for fertiliser application. We compare drivers for technology investments across technologies with a particular focus on the role of the scale of farm operations, neighbour relations, environmental concerns and innovation readiness. The results show that the scale of farm operation is important for the uptake of all three technologies, while we find no evidence that neighbour relations are important for technology investments. Environmental concerns for soil quality and other on-farm environmental qualities do drive investment; however, the impact of environmental concerns differs across technologies. Innovation readiness is a driver of investments in relation to some technologies, suggesting that the novelty or sophistication of the technology matters to the investing farmers.
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5.
  • Bergman, Mats A., et al. (author)
  • Privatization and quality : evidence from elderly care in Sweden
  • 2016
  • In: Journal of Health Economics. - : Elsevier BV. - 0167-6296 .- 1879-1646. ; 49, s. 109-119
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Non-contractible quality dimensions are at risk of degradation when the provision of public services is privatized. However, privatization may increase quality by fostering performance-improving innovation, particularly if combined with increased competition. We assemble a large data set on elderly care services in Sweden between 1990 and 2009 and estimate how opening to private provision affected mortality rates – an important and not easily contractible quality dimension – using a difference-in-difference-in-difference approach. The results indicate that privatization and the associated increase in competition significantly improved non-contractible quality as measured by mortality rates. 
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6.
  • Palmås, Karl, 1976, et al. (author)
  • The liability of politicalness : Legitimacy and legality in piracy-proximate entrepreneurship
  • 2014
  • In: International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business. - : InderScience Publishers. - 1476-1297 .- 1741-8054. ; 22:4, s. 408-425
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • This article explores three entrepreneurial ventures that have evolved in proximity to online piracy. In reviewing the respective cases of Spotify, Skype, and The Pirate Bay, the argument outlines the radically divergent strategies with which the entrepreneurs have sought to legitimise their ventures and underlying technologies. The article concludes that: 1) the context of practices labelled ‘pirate’ are paradigmatic examples of fields in which entrepreneurs must work exceptionally hard to legitimise themselves; 2) in this context, it is crucial that the role of law is analytically isolated from the role of institutionalised legitimacy; 3) success in legitimisation is largely dependent upon the entrepreneur’s ability to demonstrate that the venture is governed by ‘the natural order’ of the economy. It is further argued that piracy-proximate ventures may contribute to the entrepreneurship field, inasmuch as they teeter on the border of being considered too disruptive, and thus suffer from a ‘liability of politicalness’. 
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7.
  • Millak, Jurek (author)
  • Organisatorisk kompetens : organisatorisk kompetens och inlärning vid IT-satsningar i tre sjukvårdsorganisationer
  • 1998
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • The overall purpose of the study is to analyse and to create an understanding of the phenomenon of organisational competence in conjunction with the introduction of information technology (IT) or other competence raising measures where IT plays an important part. Comparative case studies have been chosen as the method and three different organisations have been investigated. The analysis and conclusions are based on a qualitative method inspired by Strauss and Corbin.The contribution to research from this study is as follows:In addition to technical and social competence the concept of awareness is introduced, which relates both of these concepts to the environment. Without awareness or insight into the competence which is required, or where and when it is required, the organisation is unable to utilise its total competence in a suitable manner. Further dimensions, both visible and invisible, are required in order to make a more penetrating analysis of the phenomenon of organisational competence.Two new concepts, core competence and peripheral competence are introduced. Core competence has a direct bearing on the core activity of the organisation. It is established in the study that organisational competence is developed when the investment relates to this core competence.There are a number of dimensions in an organisation which are extremely important if an investment in organisational competence is to succeed. These include cooperation among different employee groups, management support which legitimises the investment and the attitudes of the individual managers and employees. The size of the organisation is also important; it is primarily the small organisations which are successful. The financial circumstances of the organisation are of course important, but to a lesser extent than expected. Investments in organisational competence, as long as they refer to core competences, take place whether or not external financing is available.The study shows clearly that investment in IT should not be regarded as a goal in itself. In the successful investments, it is apparent that IT is only one of the means available and that it should be regarded as an integral part of a greater whole.For organisational learning to take place and for changes in organisational competence to be attained, it is essential that the organisation regards and classifies IT as part of its core competence.
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8.
  • Aaboen, Lise, 1978, et al. (author)
  • Incubator performance : An efficiency frontier analysis
  • 2008
  • In: International Journal of Business Innovation and Research. - 1751-0252 .- 1751-0260. ; 2:4, s. 354-380
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Assessments and evaluations of incubators has been a topic of discussion for as long as incubators have been in existence due to the fact that there has not been an agreement on how to determine good performance. This paper demonstrates the use of Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) when studying performance of incubators. More specifically, it does so within the four dimensions of cooperation with universities, business networks, external funding and competence development on a sample of 16 Swedish incubators. We show that DEA enables us to measure non-numerical dimensions, and to simultaneously take into account the efforts made by both the incubator and the outcomes. Moreover, DEA provides benchmarks and, based on a model that divides the incubators into four different groups, illustrates the difference between the benchmark and the incubators' current situation.
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9.
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10.
  • Fyrberg, Anna, 1980-, et al. (author)
  • What about interaction? Networks and brands as integrators within service-dominant logic
  • 2009
  • In: International Journal of Service Industry Management. - UK : Emerald. - 0956-4233 .- 1758-6704 .- 1757-5818 .- 1757-5826. ; 20:4, s. 420-432
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The paper conceptualizes the key actors involved in the co-creation process as Brand Governor, Providers and Customers. In addition, it proposes an advancement of the service brand-relationship-value triangle introduced by Brodie et al. by linking the key processes and actors in the triangle. It is found that the network approach provides a deeper understanding of how actors integrate with one another and how this interaction leads to co-created outcomes that can be translated into value
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  • Result 1-10 of 678
Type of publication
journal article (313)
book chapter (147)
conference paper (61)
reports (59)
doctoral thesis (33)
book (25)
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editorial collection (18)
research review (8)
review (6)
licentiate thesis (4)
other publication (3)
editorial proceedings (1)
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Type of content
peer-reviewed (354)
other academic/artistic (275)
pop. science, debate, etc. (49)
Author/Editor
Oghazi, Pejvak, 1979 ... (90)
Kostera, Monika, 196 ... (52)
Wagué, Cheick (25)
Winroth, Karin (22)
Gullberg, Cecilia (22)
Lindelöf, Peter (21)
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Gawell, Malin, 1964- (20)
Rytkönen, Paulina, 1 ... (18)
Pashkevich, Natallia ... (18)
Larsson Segerlind, T ... (16)
Ivarsson Westerberg, ... (16)
Dobers, Peter, 1966 (15)
Mostaghel, Rana, 198 ... (14)
Gratzer, Karl, 1946- (13)
Haftor, Darek, 1969- (13)
Schultz Nybacka, Pam ... (13)
Löfsten, Hans (12)
Nandakumar, Paramesw ... (12)
Kordestani, Arash (12)
Hultman, Magnus (12)
Tesfaye, Besrat (12)
Kociatkiewicz, Jerzy (11)
Batavia, Bala (11)
Gratzer, Karl (11)
Parida, Vinit, 1983- (10)
Patel, P. C. (10)
Box, Marcus (9)
Gawell, Malin (9)
Borg, Erik A. (9)
Borg, Erik, 1961- (9)
Patel, Pankaj C. (9)
Jacobsson, Bengt (8)
Parida, Vinit (8)
Lönnborg, Mikael, 19 ... (8)
Borg, Erik A., 1961- (8)
Box, Marcus, 1972- (8)
Weinryb, Noomi (8)
Hellström, Daniel (7)
Wincent, Joakim (7)
Karabag, Solmaz Fili ... (7)
Sattari, Setayesh (7)
Dahlström, Karin (7)
Löfsten, Hans, 1963 (6)
Abbasian, Saeid (6)
Blomberg, Eva (6)
Karlsson, Stefan (6)
Mostaghel, Rana (6)
Hultman, M (6)
Köping, Ann-Sofie (6)
Rydback, Michelle, D ... (6)
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University
Linnaeus University (52)
Mälardalen University (47)
Stockholm University (46)
Uppsala University (38)
Luleå University of Technology (26)
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Stockholm School of Economics (17)
Lund University (15)
Linköping University (12)
Mid Sweden University (11)
Royal Institute of Technology (10)
University of Gothenburg (9)
Örebro University (9)
University of Gävle (7)
Jönköping University (7)
Chalmers University of Technology (7)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (7)
Umeå University (4)
Halmstad University (2)
Högskolan Dalarna (2)
University West (1)
University of Skövde (1)
University of Borås (1)
Karlstad University (1)
VTI - The Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute (1)
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Language
English (468)
Swedish (147)
Polish (26)
Russian (25)
Turkish (4)
German (2)
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Norwegian (1)
Italian (1)
Greek, Ancient (1)
Japanese (1)
Greek, Modern (1)
Korean (1)
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Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Social Sciences (678)
Engineering and Technology (34)
Humanities (12)
Natural sciences (10)
Medical and Health Sciences (4)
Agricultural Sciences (4)

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