scholarly journals HR-outsourcing in Natural resources sector

2021 ◽  
Vol 244 ◽  
pp. 11026
Author(s):  
Elena Ganebnykh ◽  
Larisa Kozlova ◽  
Ekaterina Stativa

The article analyzes HR outsourcing market in the Natural resource sector. This industry is profitable, but it is characterized by a lack of staff due to the educational drop of the 1990s - 2000s and the number of young specialists in this sector has not still been restored. The rapid technological development of the Natural resource sector requires constant training of staff, which is hampered by many factors: long operating cycles of deposits without changing technologies, natural outflow of experienced employees due to aging, remoteness of locations, and a pandemic. The research underlines that today recruitment agencies are not able to satisfy the search and selection service for the Natural resource sector. The observed general trend of HR outsourcing towards process management and personnel training is relevant in the Natural resource sector even more than in other industries, especially in the area of personnel training. Thus, there is a certain process of transformation of the education system in this industry. It requires new models of training young personnel and retraining the existing personnel, probably using lifetime learning technologies.

Author(s):  
Khalil Alsaadat

<p>Technological development  have altered the way we communicate, learn, think, share, and spread information. Mobile technologies are those that make use of wireless technologies to gain some sort of data. As mobile connectedness continues to spread across the world, the value of employing mobile technologies in the arena of learning and teaching seems to be both self-evident and unavoidable The fast deployment of mobile devices and wireless networks in university campuses makes higher education a good environment  to integrate learners-centered m-learning . this paper discusses mobile learning technologies that are being used for educational purposes and the effect they have on teaching and learning methods.</p>


Author(s):  
Nicolás M. Perrone

Foreign investors and states frequently cooperate to facilitate investment projects in the natural resource sector. National elites tend to be involved in these cases, acting like partners to the foreign investors, because they often benefit economically and have an interest in the continuation of extractivism. Meanwhile, local communities are in a weak position, with limited or no public support and few legal options. They may still resist a project, sometimes forcing the state to cancel it, yet cancellation may only be a pyrrhic victory. Foreign investors can rely on investment treaties and ISDS to interpret and enforce the political signals and givings granted by the host state. The cases analysed in this chapter show how ISDS tribunals overlook investor misconduct and the context of extractivist projects while making local communities invisible.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-76
Author(s):  
RADEN ALEM JANITRA

Tax has a big role as a source of state revenue. Tax has a big role as a source of state revenue. Because taxes have an important role,then the tax sector revenue to be something that is reliable, when the natural resource sector revenue unreliable. Indonesia is one country that has problems related to the lack of awareness of taxpayers to pay taxes. The impact of a lack of public awareness in fulfilling obligations is not achieving the percentage of tax revenue in accordance with previously determined. This study aims to examine the effect of the application of the modernization of the tax administration system, knowledge of taxation and tax sanctions on taxpayer compliance.


Jurnal Akta ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 391
Author(s):  
M. Ali Mashar ◽  
Akhmad Khisni

Land is a natural resource that is essential for human survival. But this time the land is a natural resource that is finite and diminishing. Land has many proprietary someone (private) and state-owned land has been extremely limited. Based on the background mentioned above have been presented, the authors are interested to examine, discuss and review the above issues in the form of a study entitled: " Release Of The Rights On Management Of PT. Indonesian Port III, (Persero) To The Certificate Of Land And Building Connected To Marine Tourism Village In Semarang”. The results are expected to contribute ideas for the development of legal science in particular on how the waiver process management PT. Indonesian Port III, The method used is qualitative analysis. Based on the formulation of the problem it is concluded HPL release the legal basis must be based on legislation, if not yet published legislation, it can be subjected to a government regulation to replace legislation or government regulation (a regulation). HPL release law committed by PT. Pelindo on land certificates are fully controlled by people of Tambak Lorok so that the transition will not happen obstacles.Keywords: Release; Right On Management; PT. Indonesian Port III (Persero); Semarang.


2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodney Scott

The Natural Resources Framework is a new approach to policy advice developed by the multi-agency natural resource sector in New Zealand. This framework has been implemented with some success, but also some teething problems. The framework is a ‘systems’ approach to understanding the interaction between the many actors in the natural resource management system, and as such could benefit from insights and lessons from the systems sciences. This article is a rejoinder to Hearnshaw et al. (2014), and presents three suggestions for how the framework could be improved based on literature from the fields of system dynamics and systems thinking.


Author(s):  
Antonio Savoia ◽  
Kunal Sen

This article reviews the recent literature on the developmental effects of resource abundance, assessing likely effects and channels with respect to key development outcomes. To date, this area has received less analysis, although it is relevant to the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals agenda, as a significant number of the world's poor live in African resource-rich economies. We argue that the presence of a natural resource sector per se does not necessarily translate into worse development outcomes. The natural resource experience varies to a significant extent. Countries with similar levels of resource rents can end up with significantly different achievements in terms of income inequality, poverty, education, and health. The challenge is to explain the different natural resource experiences. A pivotal mechanism behind the developmental effects of the natural resources sector is the type of states and political institutions that resource-abundant economies develop. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Resource Economics, Volume 13 is October 2021. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.


Author(s):  
Victoriia Mykytenko

The scheme of interdependence and interaction between the four basic planes (material, social, factor and institutional) of the system of spatial management of natural resource assets has been developed. The structural-logical scheme of good forms and means of spatial management is improved. The methodologically important positions of using logistic design methods and taking into account the determinants of process management in the determination of the most important regressors of resource-functional, organizational-economic and regulatory-legal influence, the application of which allows the establishment of priority objects of making efforts to rationalize the processes of nature use in resource constraints.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 404-425 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean Michel Montsion

China’s recent interest and substantial investments in Canada’s natural resource sector have led some First Nations in British Columbia to undertake diplomatic activities to represent their interests to Chinese officials and investors. This article explores the interplay developing between the diplomatic activities of British Columbia’s First Nations and those of the Canadian state in the area of natural resource promotion. It does so by examining the diplomatic efforts of British Columbia’s First Nations Energy and Mining Council and the Canadian government’s Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement with China. The article argues that this interplay represents a struggle over diplomatic representation, in which British Columbia’s First Nations challenge the Canadian state’s monopoly on the representation of indigenous interests abroad, whereas the Canadian state constantly reframes indigenous perspectives on international affairs as a matter of domestic jurisdiction, in order to re-ground its control over Canadian foreign diplomatic practices.


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