Corporate Strategies Under International Terrorism and AdversityGabriele G. S. Suder Edward Elgar Publishing, 2006. jan. 1. - 238 oldal Corporate Strategies under International Terrorism and Adversity raises key issues facing international business and management in an era of global uncertainty. |
Tartalomjegyzék
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Chapter 2 Social network theory and methods as tools for helping business confront global terrorism capturing the case and contingencies presented ... | 7 |
Chapter 3 Speeding up strategic foresight in a dangerous and complex world a complexity approach | 20 |
Chapter 4 National security as a sociocomputational process | 38 |
Chapter 5 Terror incognito international business in an era of heightened geopolitical risk | 59 |
Chapter 6 Country risk spillovers in the Middle East a prelude to the road map for peace and the war on terror | 83 |
Chapter 7 Terrorism and financial management | 95 |
Chapter 8 Location decisions or modelling operational risk management under international terrorism | 111 |
Chapter 9 Global supply chain under conditions of uncertainty economic impacts corporate responses strategic lessons | 128 |
Chapter 10 Brand portfolio a new marketing competency for diminishing strategic risks | 161 |
Chapter 11 Corporate global citizenship successfully partnering with the world | 177 |
Chapter 12 Managing in an era of terrorism | 196 |
Chapter 13 Always consider problems as opportunities | 204 |
Chapter 14 Concluding remarks | 210 |
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accessed agents al-Qaeda approach assessment beeper billion Boisot brand portfolio capital central challenges companies company’s competitive complexity corporate correlated costs country risk create culture customers dark network disruption dots economic Edward Elgar emergent example external foreign Foreign Policy Centre geopolitical global supply chain human impact important increase industry infrastructure inputs intelligence international firms international terrorism inventory investment Iran Iraq Islamic Journal Kuwait logistics McKelvey Middle East multinational natural capitalism Nobel Nobel Peace Prize organizational organizations peace percent political risk port possible patterns potential Prahalad reduce region requirements RFID risk management role Saudi Arabia sector social network socio/computational strategy structure Suder suppliers Supply Chain Management supply chain security target terrorist attacks terrorist groups threat tion trade transnational transportation TTPs vulnerable Wangari Maathai XBRL York