Volunteering as a socio-economic phenomenon in the labor sphere

Author(s):  
Svetlana Gavrilovna Klimova ◽  
◽  
ivan Aleksandrovith Klimov ◽  
Keyword(s):  
2016 ◽  
pp. 128-140
Author(s):  
D. Kadochnikov

Economic theory of language policy treats a language as an economic phenomenon. A language situation is considered to be an economic, or market, situation, while language policy becomes an element of economic policies. The paper aims to systematize and to further develop theoretical and methodological aspects of this promising research field situated between economics and sociolinguistics.


2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 1101-1110
Author(s):  
Manuela Liliana Mureşan ◽  
Bogdan Cristian Chiripuci ◽  
Puiu Nistoreanu

AbstractSustainable tourism should be achieved in a balanced environment with standards that guarantee the preservation of ecological balance and prevent overuse of resources, pollution and other negative environmental impacts. In Romania, the tourism as social and economic phenomenon integrates in the unitary economy of the country having the necessary conditions for enhanced development and optimization of the tourism fund’s explotation. This paper aims to highlight different perspectives to relaunch tourism services and will be the identification of factors which contributing to the sustainability of the tourism business. In addition, there will be comparisons of competitiveness in travel and tourism sector in countries such as Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary and Romania.


Author(s):  
S. Kuregyan ◽  
G. Lepesh ◽  
I. Makarova ◽  
Yu. Meleshko ◽  
O. Ugolnikova

The article is devoted to the development of a methodology that will form the basis of the theory of industrial complexes modernization in the neo-industrialization context. The modern conditions of modernization are described, a distinctive feature of which is global economic, technological and political instability. The neo-industrialization is substantively characterized as an economic phenomenon. This made it possible to develop the following principles for determining the directions and tools for the industrial complexes modernization in the context of neo-industrialization: priority of providing employment; the priority of the economic security of the enterprise in international industrial cooperation; the possibility of selling products on the domestic market.


1999 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 237-254
Author(s):  
Chauliac Michel ◽  
Monnier Thomas ◽  
Ag Bendech Mohamed ◽  
Crost Monique
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Zoya Andreevna Pilipenko

The purpose of this chapter is connected with the rationale for the approach to understanding shock as an economic phenomenon in terms of its nature and forms of manifestation, the conditions of aging and the factors of realization, the mechanism of self-development, and the consequences for the sustainability of the national financial and economic systems. The author's interest is initially aimed at identifying the circumstances in which the system loses its ability to restore sustained structural relationships and to preserve integrity in the sphere of national finance and economy. An approach allowing the identification of the transmission mechanisms connected with market exchange that can generate marginal states of economic structural links as necessary and sufficient conditions for the destructive shocks impact on them is identified. Based on the obtained theoretical conclusions, it becomes possible to model the marginal states of different structural relationships and evaluate their impact on the sustainable state of economic systems as a whole on the base of shock theory.


Author(s):  
Fred Niederman ◽  
Sumit Kundu ◽  
Sylvia Salas

The offshoring of IT development is a significant global economic phenomenon. It influences the lives and fortunes of individuals, organizations, and nations/regions. However, because offshoring so broadly affects different stakeholders, a multi-level theory is required so that influences that may positively affect one set of stakeholders while negatively affecting another are not misinterpreted by an overly narrow analysis. This chapter discusses how IT development is differentiated from other global labor sourcing and argues that it is worthy of investigation as an offshoring domain. The chapter proposes that the study of IT development offshoring needs to recognize precursors and results as they affect individuals, organizations, and nation/regions, and presents examples and discussion in each of these areas. The chapter further argues that the domain of IT development offshoring is incomplete without consideration of interactions between the individual and nation/region as well as between the organization and nation/region. The chapter concludes by considering the complexity of presenting a complete picture in this domain and suggesting some areas for future research.


2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-52
Author(s):  
Kay F. Hildebrand ◽  
Tim A. Majchrzak

Computer games have become an influential socio-economic phenomenon. Millions of people play online games regularly. At the same time, game vendors' revenues are increasing. As a new emergence, virtual (i.e. in-game) goods are traded for real money. However, not much research has been conducted on the monetary effects of virtual economies. Therefore, the authors present the theoretical background and a study aiming to understand how game vendors' actions reflect on the monetary value of virtual goods. The study is based on a huge dataset gained from Web shops that were monitored over a period of several months. The data was analysed in order to find out whether effects known from real economies apply to their virtual counterparts. A reset of the virtual economy allowed us to exactly follow price developments. The authors present and discuss their findings, as well as derive directions for future research.


Author(s):  
Fred Niederman ◽  
Sumit Kundu ◽  
Silvia Salas

The offshoring of IT development is a significant global economic phenomenon. It influences the lives and fortunes of individuals, organizations, and nations/regions. However, because offshoring so broadly affects different stakeholders, a multi-level theory is required so that influences that may positively affect one set of stakeholders while negatively affecting another are not misinterpreted by an overly narrow analysis. This chapter discusses how IT development is differentiated from other global labor sourcing and argues that it is worthy of investigation as an offshoring domain. The chapter proposes that the study of IT development offshoring needs to recognize precursors and results as they affect individuals, organizations, and nation/regions, and presents examples and discussion in each of these areas. The chapter further argues that the domain of IT development offshoring is incomplete without consideration of interactions between the individual and nation/region as well as between the organization and nation/region. The chapter concludes by considering the complexity of presenting a complete picture in this domain and suggesting some areas for future research.


2008 ◽  
Vol 34-35 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 101-130
Author(s):  
Yannis Yannitsiotis

This article focuses on the evolution of Greek historiography since the 1970s, with an emphasis on issues of class and gender. It is argued that, in the last decades, Greek historiography has been liberated from traditional nationalistic narratives in favor of new intellectual perspectives dealing with social history and the history of “society.” During the 1970s and 1980s, the concept of class—a fundamental concern of social history in European historiography—did not find much room in Greek historiography. Debates about the socioeconomic and political system in modern Greece focused on the importance of immobile political and economic structures as main barriers to modernization and Europeanization. The 1990s were marked by the renewal of the study of the “social,” articulated around two main methodological and theoretical axes, signaling the shift from structures to agency. The first was the conceptualization of class as both a cultural and economic phenomenon. The second was the introduction of gender. The recent period is characterized by the proliferation of studies that conceptualize the “social” through the notion of culture, evoking the historical construction of human experience and talking about the unstable, malleable, and ever changing content of human identities. Cultural historians examine class, gender, ethnicity, and race in their interrelation and treat these layers of identity as processes in the making and not as coherent and consolidated systems of reference.


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