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December 2014
Volume 24, Issue 12
Table of Contents
In this issue
Page
LUMS News
i
Selected Articles
ii
Book Reviews
iv
National Press Review
01
Fresh Arrivals in the Library
03
Journals Table of Contents
06
Decision-making in a crisis: What every leader needs to know
Organizational Dynamics
Publicity and advertising: what matter most for sales?
European Journal of Marketing
The future of survey research
International Journal of Market Research
Are social media posts protected? What all employers need to know about the NLRB
and social media
Journal of Accountancy
Who trades with whom? Individuals, institutions, and returns
Journal of Financial Markets
Global Health Threats of the 21st Century
Finance & Development
Top 10 Tech Industry Megatrends of 2015
CIO Magazine
Security or Privacy? A Matter of Perspective
IEEE Computer
The War That Didn't End All Wars
Foreign Affairs
Extended Information Services|Gad & Birgit Rausing Library
Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS)
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Tel: 042-35608167, FAX: (042) 35898307
http://library.lums.edu.pk, library@lums.edu.pk
Table of Contents
LUMS News Corner
Selected Article
 Winning Negotiations: Why ‘Women Don’t Ask’ -------------------------------------------------------------------- ii
Book Reviews ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ iv
National Press Review ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1
Fresh Arrivals in the Library ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 03
Current Journal Contents
Business
1. Family Business Review ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 06
2. International Small Business Journal -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 07
3. Journal of Business Research ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 08
4. Journal of Business Venturing ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10
5. Journal of Retailing ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11
Management
6. Administrative Science Quarterly ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12
7. Human Performance ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 13
8. Human Resource Management Review ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14
9. Journal of Change Management -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15
10. Journal of Management Development ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 16
11. Organizational Dynamics ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 17
12. The Academy of Management Perspectives ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 18
Marketing
13. European Journal of Marketing --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 19
14. International Journal of Market Research --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 21
15. International Journal of Research in Marketing -------------------------------------------------------------------- 23
16. Journal of Consumer Research --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 24
17. Journal of International Marketing ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 26
Finance
18. Journal of Accountancy -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 27
19. Journal of Accounting Education ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 28
20. Journal of Financial Economics --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 29
21. Journal of Financial Markets ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 30
Economics
22. Finance & Development ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 31
23. International Tax and Public Finance -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 33
24. The American Economic Review -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 34
Table of Contents
25. The Journal of Development Studies --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 36
26. The World Bank Economic Review ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 37
Humanities &Social Sciences
27. Cognition and Emotion --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 38
28. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology ------------------------------------------------------- 39
29. Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 40
Sciences & Engineering
30. CIO Magazine -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 41
31. IEEE Computer ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 42
32. IEEE IT Professional ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 44
33. IEEE Software ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 45
General
34. Foreign Affairs -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 47
35. National Geographic Magazine --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 50
Service Request Form
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
LUMS NEWS CORNER
NEWS CORNER
David Miliband Visits LUMS
On Monday, November 18, 2014, the LUMS Model United Nations Society (LUMUN) hosted a talk
by President and CEO of the International Rescue Committee (IRC), David Miliband. He has had a
distinguished political career in the United Kingdom over the last 15 years. The session started
with Mr. Miliband talking about the humanitarian sector and IRC’s projects. He said that though
unfortunate to report, but the crises incidents across the globe keep increasing over the years.
There is a growing need to provide basics in the form of health infrastructure, education
infrastructure, protect women and young people and others displaced by natural and political
conflicts/calamities.
This is Mr. Miliband's tenth visit to Pakistan and the fourth to Lahore. IRC works in nearly 40
countries on various humanitarian projects. In Pakistan they are more focused towards the
western areas such as FATA and North Waziristan. After the short brief, there was an extensive
Q&A session with students.The event was held at LUMS, with nearly 200 students attending
amongst faculty, staff and members of the management. It was chaired by Dr. S. Sohail H. Naqvi,
Vice-Chancellor, LUMS, and moderated by Ambassador Shaharyar Mohammad Khan, Humanities
Faculty at LUMS.
Celebration of Iqbal Day at LUMS
Library and Gurmani Centre for Languages and Literature celebrated Iqbal Day with a theme “Iqbal
and the Contemporary Age” the guest speakers were Mian Iqbal Salahuddin grandson of Allama
Iqbal and Dr. Atiya Syed a renowned philosopher, while Vice Chancellor LUMS Prof Dr. Sohail
Naqvi was the chief guest. Documentary on Iqbal was shown, stamps, Coins and letters of Iqbal
were exhibited, Book stall by Iqbal Academy on discounted price was there and exhibition of books
on and by Allama Iqbal were available on discounted price for LUMS community.
LUMS Service Awards Ceremony Held For Employees
In recognition of the dedication and longstanding affiliation of the university's employees with
LUMS, the university management announced a service awards ceremony for those who have
completed their 10 and 20 years at LUMS. The ceremony was held on Friday, November 14, 2014.
46 employees, who have been a part of an incredible journey in overcoming numerous challenges
over the years and have played a part in the recognition enjoyed by LUMS as the pre-eminent
institution of higher learning in Pakistan, were given awards for their association with LUMS. The
passion and perseverance put in by them is evident in their devotion and hard work during their
association with LUMS.
LUMS Career Services Office Organises Mega Education Fair 2014
The 5th Annual Education Fair, organised by Career Services Office, took place on November 14,
2014. University representatives and international officers participated from across the globe. The
aim was to provide a platform for LUMS students where they can make contacts with university
representatives can discuss degree programmes and course options and understand the admission
criteria so that they can be better equipped to make the most important decision of their lives for
further studies.
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MLB Vol. 24, No.12,December 2014
SELECTED ARTICLE
Winning Negotiations: Why ‘Women Don’t Ask’
Do men and women approach negotiations differently? That question fueled a panel discussion
about women and negotiation at the recent Wharton Women in Business conference.
“Women don’t ask,” stated Jean Clemons, a lecturer at Wharton who teaches management
communication. “Men ask for things — whether it’s jobs, raises, projects, engagements — two
to three times more than women.” According to Clemons, women are afraid that asking for
what they want will make them appear negative, aggressive or pushy. But she emphasized the
fundamental importance of asking for what you want: When going for your first job, not asking
for the pay you think you deserve can set you back salary-wise for the rest of your career, she
noted.
Michelle Madhok, founder and CEO of She Finds Media, an online media company that
publishes editorial websites about shopping for busy professional women, pointed out that
women’s concern that they will appear in a negative light is somewhat justified. Research
shows that women tend to get labeled “arrogant” or “abrasive” much more readily than men,
she said. Formerly a successful group director of online content at AOL, Madhok recalled that
after having watched twelve bosses come and go over five years, her last supervisor
commented in her review, ‘You’re arrogant, and people don’t like you.’ “And I think that was
because I had been asking for things — I’d been saying, ‘No I want this; I want that.’”
Multitaskers vs. File Cabinets
Many of the panelists said they felt that women and men do negotiate differently, identifying
cultural and even biological distinctions. Citing the book Cracking the Boy’s Club Code: The
Woman’s Guide to Being Heard and Valued in the Workplace, Deborah Rubin, a senior vice
president of pension sales and distribution at Transamerica, said that in a woman’s brain,
“everything’s connecting all the time; that’s why we can multitask.” By comparison, men’s
brains “work like file cabinets. They’re dealing with one topic at a time, and nothing touches
anything else.” Where negotiations are concerned, Rubin sees this quality as an advantage for
men since “when the file drawer closes, [the interaction is] done, and they can go out and
have a drink and be best friends afterward.”
“Men ask for things — whether it’s jobs, raises, projects, engagements — two to three times
more than women.” –Jean Clemons
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MLB Vol. 24, No.12,December 2014
SELECTED ARTICLE
Jenna McNeill, a vice president of strategic planning at Prudential, agreed. “I think not holding
a grudge — not letting past negotiations dictate the way future negotiations will go — is
something men are particularly good at.” She gave the example that a man might say to
another, “Bob, that’s just the dumbest idea I ever heard.” Bob might think, “Well, that was
kind of a dumb idea, let’s move on,” whereas “if Bob were Sheila,” she might agonize over the
incident, worrying about how to interact with that person in the future.
Networking, the panelists said, is something that men do often but women don’t do enough of.
“Women are not great networkers; we’re great at getting the job done Twitter ,” noted Rubin,
saying that when she looks at her own career, she feels she “spends so much time doing the
work” that she hasn’t “built in the pure networking time within my industry…. [Often] you find
that the most successful men in corporate America … consciously spend time connecting with
people…. It helps them down the road when they need it.”
Never Let Them See You Cry
Madhok believes in building relationships with her clients because “if you come in [to the
negotiation] warm, you get a much better reception, and you’ll feel more open.” Once, during
negotiations of her annual rates with a major advertiser, “some guy I didn’t really know was
being a real pain … but I had met the CFO a while back and he kind of liked me.” Madhok said
the CFO asked her, “What do you want?” and then stated, “OK, just give it to her.”
When going for your first job, not asking for the pay you think you deserve can set you back
salary-wise for the rest of your career.
Another piece of advice the panelists had for the audience of businesswomen is: Never let
them see you cry. “I cry all the time…. I cry at the Olympics, at commercials for the
Olympics,” Prudential’s McNeill joked. “But I will never let someone see me cry at work.” Men
can’t handle it, she said, and as a result “it becomes a story about, ‘Be careful with her,
because she cries.’” Rubin noted that as a younger female professional, she had to gain control
over her emotions and get into the right frame of mind when going into a negotiation.
For women who are tired of “having to continually
in the boardroom” — to use Rubin’s phrase —
business, as Madhok did. “I said to myself that if
own club,” commented Madhok. She pointed out
women-owned and that the trend is growing. “The
demonstrate to the world that we do belong
one alternate route is to start your own
I don’t like this club, I’m going to start my
that most small businesses in the U.S. are
power is in freedom and money.”
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/winning-negotiations-women-dont-ask/
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MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
Book Reviews
Book Reviews
The Reckoning: Financial Accountability and the Rise and Fall of Nations.
By Jacob Soll
New York: Basic Books, 2014. viii + 276 pp. Photographs, bibliography, notes, index. Cloth, $28.99.
ISBN: 978-465-03152-8
Reviewed by Sophus A. Reinert
This most recent offering from MacArthur Grant winner Jacob Soll is a finely wrought and compelling work
that combines impressive breadth and learning with remarkable brevity and crisply resonant prose. After years
chiseling an erudite niche for himself at the intersection of early modern cultural and intellectual history,
producing influential monographs on the reception of Machiavelli and the information management system of
Louis XIV’s great administrator Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Soll presents a clear, if not entirely unexpected, change
of pace in The Reckoning. Though drawing on his earlier achievements and increasing interest in the history of
political economy, Soll enters a consciously new venture into the lands of economic and financial history, and
more specifically that of the history of accounting, a terroir that, to the possible surprise of some readers, has
more in common with a battlefield than a dust bowl. And where he based his previous works largely on the
careful reading of old texts, The Reckoning is a deviously concise millennial history of financial accounting, not
only as a theoretical endeavor but also as a principal cause of the rise and fall of great powers. And, gee, have
there been many of those? Soll begins by following the history of accounting since its origins on Middle
Eastern clay tablets in the fourth millennium BCE, and tracing its nature and influence through Biblical allegory
with divine judgment, to its apotheosis in Renaissance Italy. Subsequently, he traces its inflection under
Neoplatonism and its simultaneously empowering and disastrous role in Colbertism, the South Sea Bubble, and
the Age of Revolutions—before turning to nineteenth-century Britain and America, the Gilded Age, and our
tumultuous recent century all the way to Enron and Bear Stearns. This tragic duality—that accounting has the
power to do great good and, when abused, prodigious harm—runs through The Reckoning like a red thread.
For—in offering an intellectual history of financial, ethical, and political reckonings, from stone tablets tallying
livestock through the codification of double-entry bookkeeping to ever more sophisticated ways of dealing
with depreciation to the Glass-Steagall Act and beyond—Soll also offers the grim history of how good
techniques were forgotten, valuable advice ignored, and personal accountability sacrificed to seductive profit
and vainglory. The book makes for sobering, if not harrowing, reading. Soll has a good eye for memorable
characters—from the financially literate apostle St. Matthew to the Norwegian-American accounting guru,
Arthur Andersen. He invites readers to witness the dramatic decline of one of history’s greatest banks, as
managers and descendants strayed from the more disciplined path paved by the great Cosimo de’ Medici; to
squirm as the brothers de Witt, businessmen and former leaders of the Dutch Republic, are gutted and
lynched when French armies invade Holland, their internal organs eaten by a marauding mob; to marvel as
Colbert successfully teaches Louis XIV double-entry bookkeeping, only for the Sun King to disastrously put his
accounts aside later in life. And, ultimately, readers can sigh, as David Duncan, the Andersen partner in charge
of the Enron account, gives the fateful order, resonant through the ages, to destroy all evidence of their vast
fraud. The underlying challenge of accountability is timeless, though technological developments have made
malfeasance ever easier. Not only have financial innovations made states and institutions more complicated to
audit, but, where seventeenth-century Dutchmen had their account books “smeared with bacon” and fed to
the dogs to get rid of incriminating evidence, every office today seems equipped with a shredder (p. 70). The
Reckoning’s recurring theme—“the historical lessons to be learned”—is that societies succeed as long as they
have the will and discipline to respect the rules of accounting and accountability, not merely among select
experts but as an intrinsic part of their respective cultures. But there is also a darker argument lurking between
the lines of Soll’s book. Countries decline and capitalism falters not because of lack of knowledge or
information, but because businessmen and state leaders systemically, transculturally, and transhistorically
eventually fail to resist the temptation of short-term gain at the expense of long-term solvency, often against
their own better judgments.
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MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
Book Reviews
Book Reviews
And, as history has shown time and time again, even the best and most principled auditors and accountants,
whether in Golden Age Spain or at Arthur Andersen, eventually proved unable to penetrate the bulwarks of
vested interests. Financial crises are not aberrations or the result of bad luck; they are the inescapable
consequence of our human frailty. Although written for a general audience in vibrant prose and based upon a
vast body of previous scholarship, The Reckoning is not without original archival research, which marks the
book’s most innovative chapters, and does not fail to make important arguments with respect to method and
content. Where historiography, for example, in recent decades has aimed to emphasize the otherness of late
medieval and Early Modern Europe, Soll boldly makes the case for its deep connection to, and relevance for,
our own times. His past may still be a foreign country, but it lies right there across the border, well in sight, and
we would learn much from venturing there more often. His account similarly takes the Weberian
interpretation of the rise of capitalism head on, using the case of the meticulous merchant Francesco Datini of
Prato to “show that, in spite of his taste for slave girls, partridges, and fine clothes, the original capitalist work
ethic of Western Europe grew from this disciplined, fearful, saint-loving, Catholic, Italian world of trade, with
its connections to Byzantium and the Ottoman Empire” (p. 19).Capitalism, in short, emerged in medieval and
Renaissance Italy, and it is there, and particularly in Florence, that Soll’s heart seems to lie, in a learned
merchant republic, fond of art and the good life. Capitalism as it developed there would change the course of
history, and Soll rightly believes that we still have much to learn from its origins and eventual collapse. It
succeeded for so long, and so gloriously, because Italy’s merchants and politicians enjoyed a deep grounding,
not merely in accounting, but also in history, politics, and ethics, a disciplined model since emulated by
successful countries from the Dutch Republic through the British Empire to the United States during the “the
golden age for accountants” in the wake of World War II (p. 194). The Reckoning is, in the final instance, an
eloquent and essential argument for the importance of the humanities, not to mention humanity, to
capitalism; only the moral virtue and contextual affinity born from historical and cultural awareness, Soll
argues, can keep an exponentially complex economic system afloat. It is a sentiment well worth taking into
account as we face the tribulations of our own time.
Sophus A. Reinert is assistant professor of business administration in the Business, Government and the
International Economy Unit at Harvard Business School. He is author of Translating Empire: Emulation and the
Origins of Political Economy (2011).
Business History Review 88 (3) 602-605, http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007680514000683
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MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
Book Reviews
Book Reviews
Punjabi immigrant mobility in the United States: adaptation through race and class
New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 2012, 226 pp., US$85.00 (hardcover), ISBN 9781137032867
Reviewed by: Diditi Mitra
American media in the twentieth century transformed a commonplace taxi cab into an icon of a city that
purportedly never sleeps. While taxi cabs have become an indispensable part of New York City’s landscape in
the popular imaginary, very little is known about the individuals who drive them in real life. The people behind
the wheels are mostly immigrants from Punjab living in oblivion of the American dream promised by the
fleeting yellow blobs on screen. Diditi Mitra’s book tells a compelling story of the Punjabi immigrants who
come to find themselves driving shift after shift in complete anonymity despite the over-determined
representation of their livelihood in American popular culture. Through her extensive interviews with taxi
drivers in New York City, Mitra traces the race and class dynamics of the immigrant experience of Punjabis
working in nonwhite- collar jobs. What emerges from this investigation is an unprecedented study of ethnic
relations and social stratification in the South Asian diasporic community as it resists, negotiates, and adapts to
life in America. On the basis of intensive fieldwork and thoughtful analysis of data, Mitra raises a pertinent
question in this book: does the non-white and working-class background of most Punjabi taxi drivers put them
in the ‘undesirable’ category of immigrants reaching American shores in the past few decades? By placing the
evolution of American immigration laws and New York Taxi and Limousine Commission’s policies alongside taxi
drivers’ narratives about daily occurrences of racism and classism in the New York metropolitan area, Mitra
conducts a simultaneous analysis of the micro- (individual) and macro- (societal) level factors that shaped
Punjabi diasporic identity amongst working-class population groups. Mitra begins her inquiry into taxi drivers’
lives with a genealogical overview of emigration patterns from colonial times to the present in order to analyse
the shifts in identity formation and patterns of settlement amongst Punjabis in North America. The book
weaves together seamlessly the social and historical reasons for emigration from Punjab with the occupational
trajectory of Punjabis on their arrival as immigrants. While the British colonial government played a vital role in
the Punjabi decision to emigrate, Mitra shows how the colonial perception of Punjabis, especially Sikhs, as a
‘hardworking’ population group led most of them in a direction whereby they developed an identifiable
working-class consciousness in North America. The racialization processes of American immigration policy and
laws further impacted these immigrant lives and determined the chequered history of their integration in
American society. Punjabi Immigrant Mobility is divided into six chapters including the introduction. Together,
these chapters methodically build the central argument of the book about how the occupational ‘choices’ of a
non-white-collar Punjabi immigrant need to be located. at the interstices of race and class in order to fully
comprehend the systemic constraints placed on economic mobility and cultural assimilation of immigrants in
North America. The introductory chapter situates the story of immigrant Punjabi taxi drivers within a
comprehensive theoretical framework to investigate how the working-class Punjabi diaspora defines itself
racially and economically within the race and class organization of American society. Chapter 2 looks at the
legal anatomy of contact between a new Punjabi immigrant and the nation-state, while Chapter 3 shows how
race and class inflected the lives of Punjabi immigrants as they searched for work after their arrival in America.
Chapter 4 turns to empirical data and historical evidence to showcase the multidimensional manifestations of
the race/class question in the lives of Punjabi taxi drivers. Chapter 5 focuses on different strategies employed
by these individuals to counter racial and class subordination in order to adapt in society and at workplace. The
concluding chapter provides crucial insights into the significance of the Punjabi experience to the overall study
of immigration and social stratification in America. While working-class Punjabis tend to inhabit the margins of
both American and South Asian imagination, Mitra takes great care to not reduce her informants into unidimensional objects of sociological research. Mitra combines academic rigour with a compelling writing style
to give us a glimpse, albeit momentary, into the lives of an invisible immigrant population – many amongst
them undocumented – as real individuals with histories and experiences to share. Each chapter begins with an
engrossing narrative about the life of a taxi driver which steers the discussion into the multifold construction
of diasporic identities. By occupying the driver’s seat as it were of each analytical frame, these voices work as
affective devices for opening up questions of race, class, and social mobility from multiple subject positions.
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MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
Book Reviews
Book Reviews
This study is the first to fill a glaring lacuna in studies on South Asian diaspora and socio-economic mobility by
taking an in-depth look at the non-middle-class immigration experience. As Mitra acutely observes, the
absence of any systematic study of Punjabi taxi drivers in spite of their visibility in the everyday life of
metropolitan New York is ‘symptomatic of a general neglect of the non-middle-class segment of South Asian
Americans’ (p. 2). In order to understand intra-group socio-economic variations in the South Asian diasporic
community, the book carefully maps the construction of South Asian Americans as a ‘model minority’ and its
implications for the newer wave of immigrants from South Asia who do not belong to or get integrated into
the American middle class. A significant contribution of this book is the critical attention given to the dialectic
between the social hierarchies South Asian communities bring with them and the race/ class dynamics of their
new location. Mitra shows how working-class Punjabis often seek ideological security in the ‘model minority’
status of their South Asian identity and use it concurrently to counter racial and economic subordination and
to establish their cultural superiority over other ethnic groups and immigrants. By contextualizing taxi drivers’
attempts at assimilation, Mitra’s research intervenes in the on-going debate surrounding narratives of social
equality and deflates the popular myth that American society, irrespective of race and class, facilitates socioeconomic mobility for all new immigrants. Punjabi Immigrant Mobility is a welcome addition to the burgeoning
area of diaspora studies as it provides critical insights into a hitherto neglected immigrant population within
the South Asian community. Since Mitra’s analysis of the experiences of Punjabi taxi drivers is located at the
intersection of macro-level politics and micro-level interactions, the book cuts across disciplinary boundaries
and would be of interest to anyone interested in investigating the double binds of racial and economic
inequality in America.
South Asian Diaspora, 06(02), 239–241, DOI:10.1080/19438192.2014.922297
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MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
Book Reviews
Book Reviews
Ruíz Viñals C and Parra Rodríguez C (eds), Social Innovation: New Forms of Organisation in
Knowledge-based Societies
London: Routledge, 2013; 246 pp, ISBN: 9780415640145, £75.00 (hbk).
Reviewed by: Jonathan M Scott, Teesside University, UK
Defined as the design, implementation and diffusion of new social practice and public policies to promote
change in the social organisation of people to achieve economic ends (Ruíz Viñals, 2013: 4)
Or as
the process of collective idea generation, selection and implementation by people who participate
collaboratively to meet social challenges … owned by people who work together in pursuing social goals that
may – but need not – service other organisational, technical, commercial or scientific goals (Dawson and
Daniel, 2010: 16),
Social innovation (SI) can be conceptualized largely as a societal and/or team process distinct from, but
potentially related to, other forms of innovation. Hence, the relational aspects of SI and its wider links with
innovation are emphasized in this book. This edited book is a new volume bringing together various
contributions on SI and is organized into four parts – concepts of SI (Part I, Chapters 1 and 2), SI in non-profits
(Part II, Chapters 3–5), SI’s Internet use (Part III, Chapters 6–8) and social entrepreneurship (Part IV, Chapters
9–11) – by taking a multidisciplinary approach to the topic. In terms of strengths, the book has wide
geographical, conceptual and disciplinary spreads. Lacunae include Maple and Murdock’s chapter on
fundraising which seems to be misplaced and fails to engage with SI literature or theory (a problem in some
other chapters too). The editors rightly highlight the major research gap concerning, and indeed ‘complex
relationship’ between, innovation and social policy (and specifically in terms of innovative solutions to social
problems) that their volume seeks to bridge. Ruíz Viñals (pp. 3–11), in particular, points out the role of actors
and actors and actions (practice), processes (e.g. citizenship and technical innovation), networks, social
diffusion, and the ‘glocal’ focus of the book. Part I of the book conceptualizes SI in terms of knowledge being
transformed into action (Hochgerner), and technological innovation (Pyka and Hanusch). Indeed, Hochgerner’s
chapter (p. 13) conceptualizes SI as an ‘extension of the innovation concept itself on the way to a new
innovation paradigm’ and not an ‘antithesis to technical and economic innovations’ (p. 13) and applies his 4-i
process (idea invention–implementation–impact) to the idea, as a ‘wider concept of innovation’. This is
followed by Pyka and Hanusch’s chapter, with a comparative perspective of SI and technical innovation, based
on Neo-Schumpeterian Economics with its focus on the industrial, financial and public sectors. Given its
reliance upon classical literature and lack of engagement with recent SI literature and theory, this is a weaker
chapter. Interestingly, however, the authors suggest that the ‘discovery mechanism of competition is
transformed or implemented to the public sector’, which is becoming less bureaucratic and provides a context
for some creativity. Part II (Palankai, Maple and Murdock, Teixeira Santos), which considers non-profit
organizations, explores knowledge as a resource, fundraising and their outcomes, and provides a successful
exemplar (the Santa Casa de Misericórdia de Lisboa (SCML) – the Holy Houses of Mary of Lisbon). Palankai’s
chapter does not engage with the SI literature, nor does that by Maple and Murdock. Nonetheless, Palankai’s
provides a fascinating account of non-profits, in the context of the ‘rapid opening of [the] economies’ of
Central and Eastern European countries post-1989 and their European Union (EU) membership. Teixeira
Santos’ chapter on the SCML, which was established in 1498, subsequently funded through gambling (a
lottery) and then nationalized, highlights how a socially innovative organization can change over time. The final
two parts of the book investigate SI and its relationship with the Internet and social entrepreneurship,
respectively. Part III (Fondevila, Sancho, Kuusisto et al.), focusing on information and communication
technology, examines the use of the Internet in SI with a particular emphasis upon ‘social cloud
innovation’, Web 2.0 and public data access. For example, Kuusisto et al.’s chapter, grounded in a
clear conceptualization of SI, examines SI in public data by non-governmental entities in the United
Kingdom and Finland, highlighting how open access, rather than ‘owned’, data can be utilized in a
socially innovative manner.
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MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
Book Reviews
Book Reviews
Part IV (Kengyel, Rubalcaba et al., Wilczynski) takes a more explicit look at SI in the context of social
entrepreneurship with a particular emphasis on EU cohesion policy, services and financial solidarity
(such as employment). Finally, and of particular interest to the International Small Business Journal
readership, Kengyel’s chapter focuses on Hungary and how European funds can be used to finance
the social economy and, therefore, SI. Rubalcaba et al. examine SI and networks in services, while
Wilczynski’s chapter explores the issue of financial sustainability in the EU. Parra Rodríguez’s
concluding chapter reconceptualizes SI by focusing on its relationship to innovation more generally
in addition to social transformation. She then focuses on different organizational contexts as well as
the features and processes of SI (the latter being intellectual, social and instrumental processes).
This chapter, however, is insufficiently integrative and could have synthesized some of the key
points from other chapters in the volume. Despite its initial promise and some gems, due to its lack
of engagement with the SI literature and a conclusion which falls rather flat, the book is somewhat
disappointing. However, while the book does not really address the extent to which SI is relevant in a
small or medium enterprise context, the social enterprise section is informative in this regard.
Furthermore, the book has a completely European focus (indeed, four chapters from Iberia, three
from Central and Eastern Europe, two from Germanic countries, one from the United Kingdom and
one from Finland) and addresses different types of organizations, including non-profits and social
enterprises. Nevertheless, the book is a welcome starting point for a wider consideration of SI in
various contexts and will hopefully spark interest in further more academically rigorous, focused
research into this topic.
Reference
Dawson P and Daniel L (2010) Understanding social innovation: A provisional framework.
International Journal of Technology Management 51(1): 9–21.
International Small Business Journal, 32(08), 1019–1020, DOI: 10.1177/0266242614523360
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MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
National Press Review
NATIONAL PRESS REVIEW
Agricultural Crops
1.
Raise in wheat support price to provide relief to farmers: The Nation, Tuesday, November 04, 2014.
2.
Cost of farm inputs and wheat support price / By Ahmed Faraz khan: Dawn, Monday, November 10,
2014.
3.
'Hybrid seed increases corn production: The News International, Saturday, November 15, 2014.
Auto and Allied
4.
Tractor sales soar: Dawn, Saturday, November 01, 2014.
5.
Used cars import thriving: Dawn, Saturday, November 01, 2014.
6.
Used hybrid cars rates going up despite tax relief / By Salman Abduhu : The Nation, Saturday,
November 01, 2014.
7.
Auto sector basks in yen fall / By Aamir Shafaat Khan: Dawn, Friday, November 07, 2014.
8.
Auto makers taking buyers for a ride / By Aamir Shafaat Khan : Dawn, Sunday, November 09, 2014.
Banking International
9.
WB for more coordination between private sector technical institutes: The Nation, Saturday,
November 08, 2014.
Cement and Construction Industry
10. Cement sales grow by 8.87pc first four months: The Nation, Monday, November 10, 2014.
Economic Conditions
11. Inflation falls to 18-month low of 5.8pc / By Imran Ali Kundi: The Nation, Thursday, November 06,
2014.
Economic Planning
12. Govt plans to generate $4b through privatization / By Imran Ali Kundi: The Nation, Saturday,
November 29, 2014.
Energy
13. Lukewarm response to Gadani power projects / By Khaleeq Kiani: Dawn, Saturday, November 01,
2014.
14. Six firms submit Eols against 6,600MW coal-based Gadani IPPs / By Atif Khan: The Nation, Saturday,
November 01, 2014.
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MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
National Press Review
15. Progress on solar power projects / By Muhammad Bashir Chaudhary: Dawn, Monday, November 03,
2014.
16. Rs 36b collected from power consumers: The Nation, Tuesday, November 04, 2014.
17. Coal-fired power projects / By Saida Fazal : Business Recorder, Thursday, November 06, 2014.
18. Agreements with China to help eliminate power crisis: Shahbaz: The Nation, Monday, November 10,
2014.
19. Gadani power project: Challenges / By Hussain Ahmad Siddiqui: Dawn, Monday, November 10, 2014.
20. PakGen mulling to convert 365MW power plant into coal-fired / By Atif Khan : The Nation, Monday,
November 10, 2014.
21. Lol for 590MW power project signed with Chinese firm / By Khaleeq Kiani : Dawn, Wednesday,
November 12, 2014.
22. PPIB issues Lol for 590MW MahL Hydropower Project: The Nation, Wednesday, November 12, 2014.
Textile Industry
23. Textile policy delayed / By Nasir Jamal: Dawn, Monday, November 03, 2014.
24. Textile troubles / By Israr Khan: The News International, Monday, November 03, 2014.
25. Efforts on to boost textile exports to Turkey: The Nation, Saturday, November 08, 2014.
26. Sindh govt allots land to establish 49.5MW wind energy project: The Nation, Wednesday, November
12, 2014.
27. Textile industry wins gas supply, other sectors deprived of: The Nation, Wednesday, November 12,
2014.
28. Non-textile exports dip 17pc / By Mubarak Zeb Khan: Dawn, Saturday, November 29, 2014.
Trade
29. Afghanistan-Iran annual trade value hits $4 billion: The Nation, Monday, November 03, 2014.
30. Swelling food trade deficit: Dawn, Monday, November 03, 2014.
31. Pakistan takes EU to WTO over PET trade: The Nation, Thursday, November 06, 2014.
32. Cattle trade between Pakistan, Netherlands restored: The Nation, Saturday, November 08, 2014.
33. China wins support for Asia-Pacific trade proposal: Dawn, Wednesday, November 12, 2014.
34. Enhancing Pak-Afgan trade to $5b in 3 years agreed: The Nation, Friday, November 14, 2014.
35. Pakistan eyes $5bn trade with Afghanistan: Dawn, Friday, November 14, 2014.
36. Shahbaz for opening new avenues of trade with Kabul: The Nation, Friday, November 14, 2014.
2
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Business Administration
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Good to great : why some companies make the leap--and others don't
Collins, Jim C.
New York, NY : HarperBusiness, 2001.
658 C712G 2001
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
Spreadsheet modeling & decision analysis : a practical introduction…
Ragsdale, Cliff T.,
Mason, Ohio: ThomsonSouth Western, 2008.
658.403028553 R144S 2008
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
Jugaad innovation : think frugal, be flexible, generate breakthrough…
Radjou, Navi.
San Francisco, C. A. : Jossey-Bass, 2012.
658.4063 R129J 2012
Title
Experience-driven leader development : models, tools, best practices…
Publisher San Francisco, C. A. : Jossey-Bass & Pfeiffer, [2014]
Call No
658.4092 E964 [2014]
Economics
Title
Author
Publisher
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Analyzing the global political economy
Walter, Andrew,
Princeton, N. J. : Princeton University Press, 2009.
337 W231A 2009
Title
Title
Author
Publisher
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Capital in the twenty-first century
Capital au XXIe siecle.
Piketty, Thomas,
Cambridge Massachusetts : The Belknap Press of Harvard University…
332.041 P636C 2014
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
Truth Always Prevails A Memoir
Sadruddin Hashwani
India : Penguin Books, 2014.
338.092 S126T 2014
History & Geography
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
A history of medieval Europe from Constantine to Saint Louis
Davis, R. H. C.
Harlow, England ; New York : Longman, 2005.
KIC 940.1 D261H 2005
Title
Author
Publisher
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Europe : a cultural history
Rietbergen, P. J. A. N.
Abingdon, [England] ; New York : Routledge, 2006.
KIC 940 R563E 2006
3
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Ottoman wars, 1700-1870 : an empire besieged
Aksan, Virginia H.
England : LongmanPearson, 2007.
KIC 956.015 A315O 2007
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
Online
A history of Eastern Europe : crisis and change
Bideleux, Robert.
New York : Routledge, 2007.
KIC 947 B585H 2007
Table of contents only
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
The French Wars of Religion, 1559-1598
Knecht, R. J.
Harlow, England ; New York : Longman, 2010.
KIC 944.029 K682F 2010
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
Bismarck and Germany, 1862-1890
Williamson, D. G.
Harlow, Eng. ; N.Y. : Longman, an imprint of Pearson, 2011.
KIC 943.08 W729B 2011
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
The Third Reich
Williamson, D. G.
Harlow, England ; New York : LongmanPearson, 2011.
KIC 943.086 W729T 2011
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
The global Seven Years War, 1754-1763 : Britain and France in a great…
Baugh, Daniel A.
New York : Longman, 2011.
KIC 940.2534 B346G 2011
Title
Twentieth century Russia reader
Publisher London ; New York : Routledge, 2011.
Call No
KIC 947.084 T971 2011
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
Spain, 1469-1714 : a society of conflict
Kamen, Henry.
London ; New York : Routledge, 2014.
KIC 946.04 K153S 2014
Law
Title
Author
Publisher
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The origins and development of the European Union 1945-2008…
Dedman, Martin,
London ; New York : Routledge, 2010.
KIC 341.242209045 D299O 2010
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
The European Union since 1945
Blair, Alasdair,
Harlow, England ; New York : Pearson Longman, c2010.
KIC 341.2422 B635E 2010
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Publisher
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Solomon's knot : how law can end the poverty of nations
Cooter, Robert.
Princeton : Princeton University Press, 2012.
KIC 343.07 C779S 2012
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World order : reflections on the character of nations and the course…
Kissinger, Henry
London : Allen Lane, 2014.
KIC 341.2 K618W 2014
Social Sciences
Title
Author
Publisher
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The great powers and the European states system 1814-1914
Bridge, F. R.
New York : Pearson Longman, 2005.
KIC 327.17094 B851G 2005
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
Hitler and the Rise of the Nazi Party
McDonough, Frank,
Harlow, England : Pearson, 2012.
KIC 324.2430238 M136H 2012
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
A social history of twentieth- century Europe
Tomka, Bela.
New York : Routledge, 2013.
KIC 306.094 T658S 2013
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
Wrestlers, Pigeon Fanciers, and Kite Flyers : traditional sports and …
Frembgen, Jurgen Wasim.
New Delhi : Oxford University Press, 2014.
KIC 306.48309549143 F869W 2014
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
Education for development in Northern Pakistan : opportunities…
Benz, Andreas.
Karachi : Oxford University Press, 2014.
KIC 370.9549132 B479E 2014
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
This changes everything : capitalism vs. the climate
Klein, Naomi,
New York : Simon & Schuster, 2014.
KIC 363.73874 K641T 2014
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
The Blood telegram : India's secret war in East Pakistan
Bass, Gary Jonathan,
New Dehli : Random House, 2014.
KIC 327.7305409047 B317T 2014
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
India's Afghan Muddle
Pant, Harsh V.
India : HarperCollins, 2014.
KIC 327.581054 P197I 2014
Title
Author
Publisher
Call No
Path of Blood : the history of Al Qaeda's war on the house of Saud
Small, Thomas
London : Simon and Schuster, 2014.
KIC 363.3209538 S635P 2014
5
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
BUSINESS
Family Business Review Volume 27, Issue 4 In Search of the Best of Both Worlds: Crafting a Finance Paper for the Family Business Review Wim Voordeckers, Isabelle Le Breton‐Miller, and Danny Miller 281‐286 Family Involvement and Post‐IPO Investment Policy Bharat A. Jain and Yingying Shao 287‐306 Financial Decision Making in Family Firms: An Adaptation of the Theory of Planned Behavior Christian Koropp, Franz W. Kellermanns, Dietmar Grichnik, and Laura Stanley 307‐327 Family Firms and Institutional Investors Guy D. Fernando, Richard Arthur Schneible, Jr, and SangHyun Suh 328‐345 Professionalization of Family Business and Performance Effect Yung‐Chih Lien and Shaomin Li 346‐364 Family Involvement and Dividend Policy in Closely Held Firms Maximiliano González, Alexander Guzmán, Carlos Pombo, and María‐Andrea Trujillo 365‐385 6
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
BUSINESS
International Small Business Journal Volume 32, Issue 8 Examining the effect of ‘entre‐tainment’ as a cultural influence on entrepreneurial intentions Janine Swail, Simon Down, and Teemu Kautonen 859‐875 Systems thinking and absorptive capacity in high‐tech small and medium‐sized enterprises from South Korea Young Ah Kim, Hammad Akbar, Nikolaos Tzokas, and Haya Al‐Dajani 876‐896 Realising potential: The impact of business incubation on the absorptive capacity of new technology‐based firms Dean Patton 897‐917 Entrepreneurial potential: The role of human and cultural capitals Dilani Jayawarna, Oswald Jones, and Allan Macpherson 918‐943 Friends with money? Owner’s financial network and new venture internationalization in a transition economy Tatiana S. Manolova, Ivan M. Manev, and Bojidar S. Gyoshev 944‐966 Exploring the influence of the family upon firm performance: Does strategic behaviour matter? Rodrigo Basco 967‐995 The role of intellectual resources, product innovation capability, reputational resources and marketing capability combinations in firm growth Aron O’Cass and Phyra Sok 996‐1018 7
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
BUSINESS
Journal of Business Research Volume 68, Issue 1 Applying the technology acceptance model in a two‐country study of SMS advertising Alexander Muk, Christina Chung 1‐6 (MisUsing employee volunteering for public relations: Implications for corporate volunteers' organizational commitment Anne‐Laure Gatignon‐Turnau, Karim Mignonac 7‐18 The impact of external and internal entrainment on firm innovativeness: A test of moderation Clay Dibrell, Samantha Fairclough, Peter S. Davis 19‐26 Authenticity Perceptions in the Chinese Marketplace Martin J. Liu, Natalia Yannopoulou, Xuemei Bian, Richard Elliott 27‐33 Retention of IT professionals: Examining the influence of empowerment, social exchange, and trust Alper Ertürk, Levent Vurgun 34‐46 Post‐IPO governance and top management team rent generation and appropriation Bruce A. Walters, Son A. Le, Mark Kroll 47‐55 Effect of an unexpected small favor on compliance with a survey request Céline Jacob, Nicolas Guéguen, Gaëlle Boulbry 56‐59 The impact of incongruity between an organization's CSR orientation and its employees' CSR orientation on employees' quality of work life Anusorn Singhapakdi, Dong‐Jin Lee, M. Joseph Sirgy, Kalayanee Senasu 60‐66 Validating the reduced burnout scale and sequencing of burnout Brian N. Rutherford, C. David Shepherd, Armen Tashchian 67‐73 Tourism spatial spillover effects and urban economic growth Tao Ma, Tao Hong, Haozhe Zhang 74‐80 Nostalgia as travel motivation and its impact on tourists' loyalty Aliana Man Wai Leong, Shih‐Shuo Yeh, Yu‐Chen Hsiao, Tzung‐Cheng T.C. Huan 81‐86 8
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
BUSINESS
Absorptive capacity and autonomous R&D climate roles in firm innovation Kuo‐Feng Huang, Ku‐Ho Lin, Lei‐Yu Wu, Pang‐Hsiang Yu 87‐94 Heuristics and resource depletion: eye‐tracking customers’ in situ gaze behavior in the field Erik Wästlund, Tobias Otterbring, Anders Gustafsson, Poja Shams 95‐101 Search scope and innovation performance of emerging‐market firms Shengce Ren, Andreas B. Eisingerich, Huei‐ting Tsai 102‐108 Disentangling the influence of technological process and product innovations Jose‐Luis Hervas‐Oliver, Francisca Sempere‐Ripoll 109‐118 As worlds collide: The role of marketing management in customer‐to‐customer interactions Akon E. Ekpo, Breagin K. Riley, Kevin D. Thomas, Zachary Yvaire, Geraldine Rosa Henderson Gerri, Isaac I. Muñoz 119‐126 Roots, reasons, and resources: Situated optimism and firm growth in subsistence economies Matthew S. Wood, Steven W. Bradley, Kendall Artz 127‐136 Differences between early adopters of disruptive and sustaining innovations Ronny Reinhardt, Sebastian Gurtner 137‐145 Network behavior as driving forces for tourism flows Tao Hong, Tao Ma, Tzung‐Cheng (T.C. Huan 146‐156 Brand typicality and distant novel extension acceptance: How risk‐reduction counters low category fit Frank Goedertier, Niraj Dawar, Maggie Geuens, Bert Weijters 157‐165 Consumer perceptions of product creativity, coolness, value and attitude Subin Im, Subodh Bhat, Yikuan Lee 166‐172 9
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
BUSINESS
Journal of Business Venturing Volume 30, Issue 1 Entrepreneurship through a qualitative lens: Insights on the construction and/or discovery of entrepreneurial opportunity Roy Suddaby, Garry D. Bruton, Steven X. Si 1‐10 Entrepreneurial inception: The role of imprinting in entrepreneurial action Blake D. Mathias, David W. Williams, Adam R. Smith 11‐28 Entrepreneurial legacy: Toward a theory of how some family firms nurture transgenerational entrepreneurship Peter Jaskiewicz, James G. Combs, Sabine B. Rau 29‐49 Embedded entrepreneurship in the creative re‐construction of place Edward McKeever, Sarah Jack, Alistair Anderson 50‐65 How should we divide the pie? Equity distribution and its impact on entrepreneurial teams Nicola Breugst, Holger Patzelt, Philipp Rathgeber 66‐94 Opportunities and institutions: A co‐creation story of the king crab industry Sharon A. Alvarez, Susan L. Young, Jennifer L. Woolley 95‐112 Emotional arousal and entrepreneurial outcomes: Combining qualitative methods to elaborate theory Jennifer E. Jennings, Tim Edwards, P. Devereaux Jennings, Rick Delbridge 113‐130 Institutional entrepreneurs' social mobility in organizational fields Theodore L. Waldron, Greg Fisher, Chad Navis 131‐149 Failed, not finished: A narrative approach to understanding venture failure stigmatization Smita Singh, Patricia Doyle Corner, Kathryn Pavlovich 150‐166 The evolution of interorganizational relationships in emerging ventures: An ethnographic study within the new product development process Tucker J. Marion, Kimberly A. Eddleston, John H. Friar, David Deeds 167‐184 10
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
BUSINESS
Journal of Retailing Volume 90, Issue 4 A Network Bidder Behavior Model in Online Auctions: A Case of Fine Art Auctions Mayukh Dass, Srinivas K. Reddy, Dawn Iacobucci 445‐462 Contrasting the Drivers of Switching Intent and Switching Behavior in Contractual Service Settings Jochen Wirtz, Ping Xiao, Jeongwen Chiang, Naresh Malhotra 463‐480 Gift Cards and Gifted Cash: The Impact of Fit between Gift Type and Message Construal Qing Yao, Rong Chen 481‐492 An Empirical Investigation of Composite Product Choice Kalpesh Kaushik Desai, Dinesh Kumar Gauri, Yu Ma 493‐510 Simple Decision Aids and Consumer Decision Making Nicholas H. Lurie, Na Wen 511‐523 Is Beauty in the Aisles of the Retailer? Package Processing in Visually Complex Contexts Ulrich R. Orth, Roberta C. Crouch 524‐537 Selling Vertically Differentiated Products under One Roof or Two? A Signaling Model of a Retailer's Roof Policies Xubing Zhang, Yong Cao 538‐551 The Recent versus The Out‐Dated: An Experimental Examination of the Time‐Variant Effects of Online Consumer Reviews Liyin Jin, Bingyan Hu, Yanqun He 552‐566 Affect versus Cognition in the Chain from Perceived Quality to Customer Loyalty: The Roles of Product Beliefs and Experience Björn Frank, Boris Herbas Torrico, Takao Enkawa, Shane J. Schvaneveldt 567‐586 Do Retailers Benefit from Deploying Customer Analytics? Frank Germann, Gary L. Lilien, Lars Fiedler, Matthias Kraus 587‐593 11
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
MANAGEMENT
Administrative Science Quarterly Volume 59, Issue 4 What’s Love Got to Do with It? A Longitudinal Study of the Culture of Companionate Love and Employee and Client Outcomes in a Long‐term Care Setting Sigal G. Barsade and Olivia A. O’Neill 551‐598 Portfolios of Political Ties and Business Group Strategy in Emerging Economies: Evidence from Taiwan Hongjin Zhu and Chi‐Nien Chung 599‐638 Imprint–environment Fit and Performance: How Organizational Munificence at the Time of Hire Affects Subsequent Job Performance András Tilcsik 639‐668 Derivatives and Deregulation: Financial Innovation and the Demise of Glass–Steagall Russell J. Funk and Daniel Hirschman 669‐704 The Contaminating Effects of Building Instrumental Ties: How Networking Can Make Us Feel Dirty Tiziana Casciaro, Francesca Gino, and Maryam Kouchaki 705‐735 12
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CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
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Human Performance Volume 27, Issue 5 Leader Advancement Motive, Political Skill, Leader Behavior, and Effectiveness: A Moderated Mediation Extension of Socioanalytic Theory Christian Ewen, Andreas Wihler, Rachel E. Frieder, Gerhard Blickle, Robert Hogan & Gerald R. Ferris 373‐392 Disentangling the Effects of Self Leader Perceptions and Ideal Leader Prototypes on Leader Judgments Using Loglinear Modeling With Latent Variables Bethany C. Bray, Roseanne J. Foti, Nicole J. Thompson & Sarah F. Wills 393‐415 Does Teaming Obscure Low Performance? Exploring the Temporal Effects of Team Performance Diversity Cristina Rubino, Derek R. Avery, Sabrina D. Volpone & Lucy Ford 416‐434 Do Employees Know How Their Supervisors View Them? A Study Examining Metaperceptions of Job Performance Xiaoxiao Hu, Seth Kaplan, Feng Wei & Ronald P. Vega 435‐457 13
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
MANAGEMENT
Human Resource Management Review Volume 24, Issue 4 The negative effects of delays in information exchange: Looking at workplace relationships from an affective events perspective Hannes Guenter, IJ. Hetty van Emmerik, Bert Schreurs 283‐298 Expatriate knowledge utilization and MNE performance: A multilevel framework Jorge A. Gonzalez, Subhajit Chakraborty 299‐312 Stakeholder harm index: A framework to review work intensification from the critical HRM perspective Sugumar Mariappanadar 313‐329 ‘High potential’ programs: Let's hear it for ‘B’ players Amina Raza Malik, Parbudyal Singh 330‐346 14
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
MANAGEMENT
Journal of Change Management Volume 14, Issue 4 Coping Strategies of Professionals in Emerging Change Processes: An Empirical View Christine Teelken & Mairi Watson 429‐433 Stabilizing Movements: How Television Professionals Use Other People's Voices to Cope with New Professional Practices During Times of Change Maria Norbäck, Jenny Helin & Elena Raviola 434‐452 (ReConstructing Career Strategies After Experiencing Involuntary Job Loss Sue Mulhall 453‐474 Psychosocial Training: A Case of Self‐Efficacy Improvement in an Italian School Gianfranco Cicotto, Silvia De Simone, Luca Giustiniano & Roberta Pinna 475‐499 15
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
MANAGEMENT
Journal of Management Development Volume 33 Issue 10 Contradictions and identity work: insights from early‐career experiences Jacob D. Vakkayil 906 ‐ 918 Promoting transformational leadership practices of retail managers Zondre Keevy , Juliet Perumal 919 ‐ 931 Business models for higher education: an Australian perspective Xuemei Tian , Bill Martin 932 ‐ 948 Competitive strategies and value creation: a twofold perspective analysis Emanuele Teti , Francesco Perrini , Linda Tirapelle 949 ‐ 976 Are leadership values different across generations?: A comparative leadership analysis of CEOs v. MBAs Mark J. Ahn , Larry W. Ettner 977 ‐ 990 Executive development through insider action research: voices of insider action researchers David Coghlan , A.B. (Rami Shani , Jonas Roth , Robert M. Sloyan 991 ‐ 1003 Potentials facilitators of workplace learning in a TPS based company Sandra Jönsson , Tobias Schölin 1004 ‐ 1018 Transformational leadership and teamwork improvement: the case of construction firms Amin Akhavan Tabassi , Mahyuddin Ramli , Abu Hassan Abu Bakar , Abd. Hamid Kadir Pakir 1019 ‐ 1034 Sources of satisfaction with high‐potential employee programs: A survey of Canadian HR professionals Igor Kotlyar , Leonard Karakowsky 1035 ‐ 1056 Beneficence as a source of competitive advantage Cam Caldwell , Larry Floyd , Joseph Taylor , Bryan Woodard 1057 ‐ 1079 16
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
MANAGEMENT
Organizational Dynamics Volume 43, Issue 4 Death and the executive: Encounters with the “Stealth” motivator Manfred F. R. Kets de Vries 247‐256 Leadership skills for international crises: The role of cultural intelligence and improvisation Tiffany Maldonado, Dusya Vera 257‐265 Business exit as a deliberate strategy for incumbent firms Hao Ma, Xiaohui Lu, Xuanli Xie 266‐273 Critical junctures in strategic planning: Understanding failure to enable success Malvina Klag, Ann Langley 274‐283 Decision‐making in a crisis: What every leader needs to know Fred O. Walumbwa, Modesto A. Maidique, Candace Atamanik 284‐293 Team sports metaphors in perspective Robert W. Keidel 294‐302 Finding strategic human resource advantage from building an effective internship capability Carl P. Maertz Jr., Philipp A. Stoeberl, Peter Magnusson 303‐311 Sifting to efficiently select the right service employees John E.G. Bateson, Jochen Wirtz, Eugene F. Burke, Carly J. Vaughan 312‐320 Footprints in the Sand: Edgar Schein Barry Mike 321‐328 17
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
MANAGEMENT
The Academy of Management Perspectives Volume 28, Issue 3 Responsible Leadership: Theoretical Issues and Research Directions David A. Waldman and Rachel M. Balven 224‐234 Antecedents of Responsible Leader Behavior: A Research Synthesis, Conceptual Framework, and Agenda for Future Research Günter K. Stahl and Mary Sully de Luque 235‐254 Responsible Leadership and Stakeholder Management: Influence Pathways and Organizational Outcomes Jonathan P. Doh and Narda R. Quigley 255‐274 Is Shared Leadership the Key to Responsible Leadership? Craig L. Pearce, Christina L. Wassenaar, and Charles C. Manz 275‐288 Corporate Governance, Responsible Managerial Behavior, and Corporate Social Responsibility: Organizational Efficiency Versus Organizational Legitimacy? Igor Filatotchev andChizu Nakajima 289‐306 18
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
MARKETING
European Journal of Marketing Volume 48, Issue 11/12 Boosting consumers’ self‐efficacy by repositioning the self Michal Ben‐Ami , Jacob Hornik , Dov Eden , Oren Kaplan 1914 ‐ 1938 Having champagne without celebration?: The impact of self‐regulatory focus on moderate incongruity effect Shin‐Shin Chang , Chung‐Chau Chang , Ya‐Lan Chien , Jung‐Hua Chang 1939 ‐ 1961 Consumer expertise matters in price negotiation: An empirical analysis of the determinants of mortgage loan prices in Spain prior to the financial crisis Jose M. Barrutia , María Paz Espinosa 1962 ‐ 1985 Publicity and advertising: what matter most for sales? Harlan E. Spotts , Marc G. Weinberger , Michelle F. Weinberger 1986 ‐ 2008 Conceptualising the management of packaging within new product development: A grounded investigation in the UK fast moving consumer goods industry Christopher Simms , Paul Trott 2009 ‐ 2032 The elaboration likelihood model: review, critique and research agenda Philip J. Kitchen , Gayle Kerr , Don E. Schultz , Rod McColl , Heather Pals 2033 ‐ 2050 The effect of service employees’ accent on customer reactions Alastair Tombs , Sally Rao Hill 2051 ‐ 2070 The reflexive turn in key account management: Beyond formal and post‐bureaucratic prescriptions Markus Vanharanta , Alan J.P. Gilchrist , Andrew D. Pressey , Peter Lenney 2071 ‐ 2104 Be rational or be emotional: advertising appeals, service types and consumer responses Hongxia Zhang , Jin Sun , Fang Liu , John G. Knight 2105 ‐ 2126 Store managers – the seismographs in shopping centres Christoph Teller , Andrew Alexander 2127 ‐ 2152 The asymmetric influence of cognitive and affective country image on rational and experiential purchases Dongjin Li , Cheng Lu Wang , Ying Jiang , Bradley R. Barnes , Hao Zhang 2153 ‐ 2175 19
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
MARKETING
The impact of text product reviews on sales Sangkil Moon , Yoonseo Park , Yong Seog Kim 2176 ‐ 2197 International market selection for small firms: a fuzzy‐based decision process Gianluca Marchi , Marina Vignola , Gisella Facchinetti , Giovanni Mastroleo 2198 ‐ 2212 The role of convenience in a recreational shopping trip Vaughan Reimers , Fred Chao 2213 ‐ 2236 Segmenting consumers’ reasons for and against ethical consumption Paul F. Burke , Christine Eckert , Stacey Davis 2237 ‐ 2261 The influence of religiously motivated consumer boycotts on brand image, loyalty and product judgment Ibrahim Abosag , Maya F. Farah 2262 ‐ 2283 20
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
MARKETING
International Journal of Market Research Volume 56, Issue 6 The future of survey research Peter Mouncey 695–704 Peter Mouncey, editor of the International Journal of Market Research, introduces this issue of IJMR and focuses on the three topics: a presentation on 'the future of survey research', a review of the past 10 years in market research, and guidelines on open access publishing Mobile Market Research, 2014 Ray Poynter 705–707 This overview highlights what mobile market research means in 2014, as online surveys and CATI (computer assisted telephone interviewing grows in usage. Mobile research can be considered 'big', both in terms of usage, dollars spent and impact on MR, and in terms of being talked about, making headlines and attracting business start‐ups Consumer literacy Samuel Mohun Himmelweit 709–716 The goal of consumer policy is often to improve the functioning of markets in which consumer needs are not being met. Yet we know that consumers do not always act in their own best interests and often face detriment because of this. This paper explores the gap between the consumer capabilities of real consumers measuring what we call 'consumer literacy' – a combination of skills, knowledge and engagement – we find that only one in 250 consumers even approaches the ideal model, and that those most likely to are older, more educated and have a higher income. The importance of rank for shorter, smarter surveys Kyle Findlay, Jan Hofmeyr and Alice Louw 717–736 The traditional market research paradigm believes that, the more data you measure, the more potential for insight the data will hold. However, this paper takes the counter‐intuitive standpoint that'‘less is more'. Drawing on the authors' familiarity with neuroscience and behavioural economics, as well as five years' worth of panel behavioural data in three categories and data from 2,769 studies across 1.9 million respondents, the paper argues that, just as it is important to ask the right questions in a survey, it is similarly important to measure 'just enough' but not too much information about brands. A Comparison of ABS Mail and RDD Surveys for Measuring Consumer Attitudes Mahmoud Elkasabi, Z. Tuba Suzer‐Gurtekin, James M. Lepkowski, Uiyoung Kim, Richard Curtin and Rebecca McBee 737–756 The increasing cost and decreasing coverage of Random Digit Dialing (RDD landline telephone surveys motivated The Surveys of Consumer Attitudes (SCA at the University of Michigan to conduct monthly experimental mail survey studies using address‐based sampling (ABS. 21
MLB Vol. 24, No.12, December 2014
CURRENT JOURNALS CONTENTS
MARKETING
Product longevity: exploring success factors in the children's market Jony Oktavian Haryanto and Luiz Moutinho 757–782 The potential of the child segment offers an immense opportunity for marketers to explore. In the ever more dynamic and ever changing children’s market, the identification and ability to optimise the factors that can preserve product dominance are key to product longevity. This paper attempts to identify those factors that can influence the success of products in the children’s market. Assessment of brand equity measures Rong Huang, Emine Sarigöllü 783–806 Although several brand equity measures have been proposed in the literature, a comparative assessment of their characteristics and performances is lacking. This paper attempts to fill that gap. Combining survey data with real market data, it assesses two types of brand equity measure: customer mind‐set measures (brand knowledge and product‐market performance measures (revenue premium. Influences of Co‐creation on Brand Experience: The Role of Brand Engagement Herbjørn Nysveen and Per Pedersen 807–832 The purpose of this article is to study the influence of customer co‐creation participation on customers’ brand experience, brand satisfaction and brand loyalty. We apply a service logic approach in which co‐creation participation refers to co‐creation of customer value together with the brand, co‐creation of new value with the brand and co‐creation of value together with other customers within the context of the brand. Ethics in Qualitative Research (2nd edn) Matthew Alexander 833–835 This book review looks at Ethics in Qualitative Research, which outlines the tensions between the often linear and mechanistic approaches of university ethics committees. It also examines the 'fluidity and inductive uncertainty' that pervade qualitative research where ethical dilemmas and concerns permeate the research process. The reviewer found that the book is intellectually challenging and most appropriate for an academic or doctoral audience, although the principles and challenges raised are relevant to all qualitative researchers. Ultimately, the book shows that ethics should permeate the entire research process and not simply be a tick‐
box exercise. 22
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International Journal of Research in Marketing Volume 31, Issue 4 Reward redemption effects in a loyalty program when customers choose how much and when to redeem Matilda Dorotic, Peter C. Verhoef, Dennis Fok, Tammo H.A. Bijmolt 339‐355 Variable selection in international diffusion models Sarah Gelper, Stefan Stremersch 356‐367 A comparison of different pay‐per‐bid auction formats Ju‐Young Kim, Tobias Brünner, Bernd Skiera, Martin Natter 368‐379 Predicting consumer behavior with two emotion appraisal dimensions: Emotion valence and agency in gift giving Ilona E. de Hooge 380‐394 Consumer participation in the design and realization stages of production: How self‐production shapes consumer evaluations and relationships to products S. Sinem Atakan, Richard P. Bagozzi, Carolyn Yoon 395‐408 Impact of component supplier branding on profitability Stefan Worm, Rajendra K. Srivastava 409‐424 Billboard and cinema advertising: Missed opportunity or spoiled arms? Steffi Frison, Marnik G. Dekimpe, Christophe Croux, Peter De Maeyer 425‐433 The effects of a “no‐haggle” channel on marketing strategies Xiaohua Zeng, Srabana Dasgupta, Charles B. Weinberg 434‐443 23
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Journal of Consumer Research Volume 41, Issue 4 1.
Branding Disaster: Reestablishing Trust through the Ideological Containment of Systemic Risk Anxieties Ashlee Humphreys, Craig J. Thompson 2.
Outsourcing Parenthood? How Families Manage Care Assemblages Using Paid Commercial Services Amber M. Epp, Sunaina R. Velagaleti 3.
How Nonconsumption Shapes Desire Xianchi Dai, Ayelet Fishbach 4.
The Offer Framing Effect: Choosing Single versus Bundled Offerings Affects Variety Seeking Mauricio Mittelman, Eduardo B. Andrade, Amitava Chattopadhyay, C. Miguel Brendl 5.
Consuming Experiential Categories Anuj K. Shah, Adam L. Alter 6.
Fooled by Heteroscedastic Randomness: Local Consistency Breeds Extremity in Price‐Based Quality Inferences Bart de Langhe, Stijn M. J. van Osselaer, Stefano Puntoni, Ann L. McGill 7.
Marketplace Sentiments Ahir Gopaldas 8.
Monochrome Forests and Colorful Trees: The Effect of Black‐and‐White versus Color Imagery on Construal Level Hyojin Lee, Xiaoyan Deng, H. Rao Unnava, Kentaro Fujita 9.
The Effects of Country‐Related Affect on Product Evaluations Cathy Yi Chen, Pragya Mathur, Durairaj Maheswaran 10. Emotions Shape Decisions through Construal Level: The Case of Guilt and Shame DaHee Han, Adam Duhachek, Nidhi Agrawal 11. Lucky Loyalty: The Effect of Consumer Effort on Predictions of Randomly Determined Marketing Outcomes Rebecca Walker Reczek, Kelly L. Haws, Christopher A. Summers 12. The Effects of Heightened Physiological Needs on Perception of Psychological Connectedness Xiuping Li, Meng Zhang 24
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13. Forced to Be Bad: The Positive Impact of Low‐Autonomy Vice Consumption on Consumer Vitality Fangyuan Chen, Jaideep Sengupta 14. The Role of Arousal in Congruity‐Based Product Evaluation Theodore J. Noseworthy, Fabrizio Di Muro, Kyle B. Murray 15. The Presenter’s Paradox Revisited: An Evaluation Mode Account Tobias Krüger, André Mata, Max Ihmels 16. Optimal Visualization Aids and Temporal Framing for New Products Min Zhao, Darren W. Dahl, Steve Hoeffler 25
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Journal of International Marketing Volume 22, Issue 4 1.
Country‐Level Performance of New Experience Products in a Global Rollout: The Moderating Effects of Economic Wealth and National Culture David A. Griffith, Goksel Yalcinkaya and Gaia Rubera 2.
Exploring Subsidiary Desire for Autonomy: A Conceptual Framework and Empirical Findings Christian Homburg and Jana‐Kristin Prigge 3.
Sustainable Export Marketing Strategy Fit and Performance Athina Zeriti, Matthew J. Robson, Stavroula Spyropoulou and Constantinos N. Leonidou 4.
The Importance of Strategic Fit Between Host–Home Country Similarity and Exploration Exploitation Strategies on Small and Medium‐ Sized Enterprises' Performance: A Contingency Perspective Annie Peng Cui, Michael F. Walsh and Shaoming Zou 5.
Product Diversification and Market Value of Large International Firms: A Macroenvironmental Perspective Tianjiao Qiu 26
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FINANCE
Journal of Accountancy December 2014 1.
Making a positive impact The AICPA’s 102nd chair, Tommye E. Barie, CPA, will focus on helping the profession deepen its relevance and rigor while extending its reach. 2.
Pricing issues for midsize and large firm sales Partners in midsize to large firms face many challenges and complexities when negotiating a sale of their ownership interest. 3.
Balance, teamwork part of vision for future A team‐oriented work culture and work/life balance are keys to keeping young CPAs engaged in the profession, says Jennifer Highsmith, a senior audit associate in Florida who became the AICPA’s 400,000th member. 4.
Second act: Consulting Learn how to successfully make a late‐career transition to consulting, from CPAs who have done it. 5.
Succession challenges for U.S. CPA firms to tackle U.S. public accounting firms must tackle five challenges in their succession planning to fill the gaps left by Baby Boomer partners who have begun to retire, according to results from a Global Accounting Alliance survey. 6.
A major milestone in accounting history Infographic highlights facts and figures behind the AICPA’s 400,000 members. 7.
Expanding your app‐titude If this, then that (IFTTT: Create “recipes” for success…Consolidate your cloud storage with cloudGOO 8.
Not‐for‐profits delve into risk management Six factors are critical for organizations in implementing and maintaining ERM. 9.
Form 990: Late filing penalty abatement Several types of relief may be available to not‐for‐profit organizations that incur penalties for violating complex filing requirements. 10. Are social media posts protected? What all employers need to know about the NLRB and social media The following strategies can help reduce the likelihood of a lawsuit or regulatory action due to a violation of Section 7 of the NLRA associated with employee use of social media. 11. Making manager: The key to accelerating a career in public accounting Being promoted to manager is a key development in a young public accountant’s career. Here’s what CPAs need to learn to land that promotion. 12. Motivation and preparation can pave the path to CFO CPAs in business and industry face intense competition to land a coveted CFO job. Learn how to best prepare yourself for the role. 27
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FINANCE
Journal of Accounting Education Volume 32, Issue 4 South African financial reporting students' reading comprehension of the IASB Conceptual Framework Cecile Janse van Rensburg, Stephen A. Coetzee, Astrid Schmulian 1‐15 Accounting case search: A web‐based search tool for finding published accounting cases Michael J. Meyer, Teresa S. Meyer 16‐23 Spreadsheet usage by management accountants: An exploratory study David A. Bradbard, Charles Alvis, Richard Morris 24‐30 Making sense of complex data using interactive data visualization Diane J. Janvrin, Robyn L. Raschke, William N. Dilla 31‐48 A river runs between them: An instructional case in professional services provided by a CPA firm Larry R. Davis, Diane M. Matson 49‐57 Accounting for complex investment transactions Natalie Tatiana Churyk, Renata Stenka 58‐70 28
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FINANCE
Journal of Financial Economics Volume 114, Issue 3 Price pressures Terrence Hendershott, Albert J. Menkveld 405‐423 Refinancing, profitability, and capital structure András Danis, Daniel A. Rettl, Toni M. Whited 424‐443 Preemptive bidding, target resistance, and takeover premiums Theodosios Dimopoulos, Stefano Sacchetto 444‐470 CEO deal‐making activities and compensation Eliezer M. Fich, Laura T. Starks, Adam S. Yore 471‐492 Fails‐to‐deliver, short selling, and market quality Veljko Fotak, Vikas Raman, Pradeep K. Yadav 493‐516 Forecasting stock returns under economic constraints Davide Pettenuzzo, Allan Timmermann, Rossen Valkanov 517‐553 The euro and corporate financing before the crisis Arturo Bris, Yrjö Koskinen, Mattias Nilsson 554‐575 Fact or friction: Jumps at ultra high frequency Kim Christensen, Roel C.A. Oomen, Mark Podolskij 576‐599 Advancing the universality of quadrature methods to any underlying process for option pricing Ding Chen, Hannu J. Härkönen, David P. Newton 600‐612 The long of it: Odds that investor sentiment spuriously predicts anomaly returns Robert F. Stambaugh, Jianfeng Yu, Yu Yuan 613‐619 29
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FINANCE
Journal of Financial Markets November 2014 Trading anonymity and order anticipation Sylvain Friederich, Richard Payne 1‐24 Macroeconomic uncertainty and the cross‐section of option returns Sirio Aramonte 25‐49 Who trades with whom? Individuals, institutions, and returns Noah Stoffman 50‐75 Liquidity risk and institutional ownership Charles Cao, Lubomir Petrasek 76‐97 High short interest effect and aggregate volatility risk Alexander Barinov, Juan (Julie Wu 98‐122 Predictions of corporate bond excess returns Hai Lin, Junbo Wang, Chunchi Wu 123‐152 Commodity index trading and hedging costs Celso Brunetti, David Reiffen 153‐180 30
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ECONOMICS
Finance & Development Volume 51, Issue 4 1.
The Shape of Global Health David E. Bloom The world has come a long way, but still has a long way to go 2.
Going Local Victoria Fan and Amanda Glassman In emerging and developing economies, public health spending is moving from central governments to states and cities. 3.
Global Health Threats of the 21st Century Olga Jonas, Ian Parry, Dan Chisholm and Nick Banatvala, and Ramanan Laxminarayan The world is a healthier place today but major issues continue to confront humanity 4.
Cost of Progress Alejandro Gaviria Prices of new medicines threaten Colombia’s health reform 5.
Bill of Health Benedict Clements, Sanjeev Gupta, and Baoping Shang The recent slowdown in the growth of public health spending in advanced economies is not likely to last 6.
Overseeing Global Health Devi Sridhar and Chelsea Clinton New actors, with new priorities, are crowding a stage the World Health Organization once had to itself 7.
The Efficiency Imperative David Coady, Maura Francese, and Baoping Shan Public health spending must become more efficient to avoid overwhelming government coffers 8.
Preparation Is Paramount Agnes Binagwaho Rwanda’s efforts to prevent Ebola from spreading into the country show that a multisectoral approach beyond health is needed 9.
Private vs. Public Jorge Coarasa, Jishnu Das, and Jeffrey Hammer In many countries the debate should not be about the source of primary health care but its quality 10. Fiscal Fitness Patrick Petit, Mario Mansour, and Philippe Wingender The move to use taxes to induce healthier behavior has its limits 31
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11. Attention to Innovation Carol A. Nacy There are impediments to developing drugs to fight emerging diseases 12. Slow Trade Cristina Constantinescu, Aaditya Mattoo, and Michele Ruta Part of the global trade slowdown since the crisis has been driven by structural, not cyclical, factors 13. Dragon among the Iguanas Anthony Elson China’s economic and financial relationship with Latin America is increasingly important to the region 14. The Benevolent Side of Big Data Christoper W. Surdak and Sara Agarwal Data analytics can be used to drive growth in the developing world 15. Sharing the Wealth Sanjeev Gupta, Alex Segura‐Ubiergo, and Enrique Flores Countries that enjoy a resource windfall should be prudent about distributing it all directly to their people. 32
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ECONOMICS
International Tax and Public Finance Volume 21, Issue 6 Social long‐term care insurance and redistribution Helmuth Cremer, Pierre Pestieau 955‐974 Does charitable gambling crowd out charitable donations? Using matching to analyze a policy reform Shih‐Ying Wu 975‐996 Corruption and competition for resources Kjetil Bjorvatn, Tina Søreide 997‐1011 Agglomeration, tax competition, and fiscal equalization Matthias Wrede 1012‐1027 Revenue and welfare effects of financial sector VAT exemption Thiess Buettner, Katharina Erbe 1028‐1050 33
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ECONOMICS
The American Economic Review Volume 104, Issue 12 Optimal Allocation with Costly Verification Elchanan Ben‐Porath, Eddie Dekel and Barton L. Lipman 3779‐3813 Ambiguity Aversion with Three or More Outcomes Mark J. Machina 3814‐40 Hospital Choices, Hospital Prices, and Financial Incentives to Physicians Kate Ho and Ariel Pakes 3841‐84 Is It Whom You Know or What You Know? An Empirical Assessment of the Lobbying Process Marianne Bertrand, Matilde Bombardini and Francesco Trebbi 3885‐3920 The Effects of Poor Neonatal Health on Children's Cognitive Development David Figlio, Jonathan Guryan, Krzysztof Karbownik and Jeffrey Roth 3921‐55 Private Equity, Jobs, and Productivity Steven J. Davis, John Haltiwanger, Kyle Handley, Ron Jarmin, Josh Lerner and Javier Miranda 3956‐90 Hot and Cold Seasons in the Housing Market L. Rachel Ngai and Silvana Tenreyro 3991‐4026 Reputation and Persistence of Adverse Selection in Secondary Loan Markets V. V. Chari, Ali Shourideh and Ariel Zetlin‐Jones 4027‐70 The Dynamic Efficiency Costs of Common‐Pool Resource Exploitation Ling Huang and Martin D. Smith 4071‐4103 Trade Wars and Trade Talks with Data Ralph Ossa 4104‐46 34
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ECONOMICS
Consume Now or Later? Time Inconsistency, Collective Choice, and Revealed Preference Abi Adams, Laurens Cherchye, Bram De Rock and Ewout Verriest 4147‐83 Present Bias and Collective Dynamic Choice in the Lab Matthew O. Jackson and Leeat Yariv 4184‐4204 Consumption and Debt Response to Unanticipated Income Shocks: Evidence from a Natural Experiment in Singapore Sumit Agarwal and Wenlan Qian 4205‐30 Risk Matters: The Real Effects of Volatility Shocks: Comment Benjamin Born and Johannes Pfeifer 4231‐39 35
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ECONOMICS
The Journal of Development Studies Volume 50, Issue 11 Theft, Gift‐Giving, and Reciprocity: A South African Experiment Clinton J. Pecenka & Godfrey Kundhlande 1467‐1481 Trust and Reciprocity in the Aftermath of Natural Disasters David A. Fleming, Alberto Chong & Hernán D. Bejarano 1482‐1493 Developing Countries in Need: Which Characteristics Appeal Most to People when Donating Money? Paul Hansen, Nicole Kergozou, Stephen Knowles & Paul Thorsnes 1494‐1509 The Income Lever and the Allocation of Aid Lidia Ceriani & Paolo Verme 1510‐1522 Television on Women’s Empowerment in India Hsin‐Lan Ting, Chon‐Kit Ao & Ming‐Jen Lin 1523‐1537 Television and Contraceptive Use – A Weak Signal? Jörg Peters, Christoph Strupat & Colin Vance 1538‐1549 Estimating the Average Treatment Effect of Social Safety Net Programmes in Bangladesh Mohammad Mahbubur Rahman 1550‐1569 Pensions and the Health of Older People in South Africa: Is there an Effect? Peter Lloyd‐Sherlock & Sutapa Agrawal 1570‐1586 36
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ECONOMICS
The World Bank Economic Review Volume 28, Issue 3 Can We Trust Shoestring Evaluations? Martin Ravallion 413‐431 Evaluation of Development Programs: Randomized Controlled Trials or Regressions? Chris Elbers and Jan Willem Gunning 432‐445 Effects of Colombia's Social Protection System on Workers' Choice between Formal and Informal Employment Adriana Camacho, Emily Conover, and Alejandro Hoyos 446‐466 Can Conditional Cash Transfers Compensate for a Father's Absence? Emla Fitzsimons and Alice Mesnard 467‐491 Collective Action and Community Development: Evidence from Self‐Help Groups in Rural India Raj M. Desai and Shareen Joshi 492‐524 Excluding the Rural Population: The Impact of Public Expenditure on Child Malnutrition in Peru Gissele Gajate‐Garrido 525‐544 Is Small Better? A Comparison of the Effect of Large and Small Dams on Cropland Productivity in South Africa Elodie Blanc and Eric Strobl 545‐576 37
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SOCIAL SCIENCES
Cognition and Emotion Volume 28, Issue 8 Gaze‐fixation and pupil dilation in the processing of emotional faces: The role of rumination Almudena Duque, Alvaro Sanchez & Carmelo Vazquez 1347‐1366 Seeing through the eyes of anxious individuals: An investigation of anxiety‐related interpretations of emotional expressions Claudia Gebhardt & Kristin Mitte 1367‐1381 But consider the alternative: The influence of positive affect on overconfidence Kyle J. Emich 1382‐1397 Attending to the fear in your eyes: Facilitated orienting and delayed disengagement Joshua M. Carlson & Karen S. Reinke 1398‐1406 Memory for the 2008 presidential election in healthy ageing and mild cognitive impairment Jill D. Waring, Ashley N. Seiger, Paul R. Solomon, Andrew E. Budson & Elizabeth A. Kensinger 1407‐1421 Prime time news: The influence of primed positive and negative emotion on susceptibility to false memories Stephen Porter, Leanne ten Brinke, Sean N. Riley & Alysha Baker 1422‐1434 Interoceptive sensitivity predicts sensitivity to the emotions of others Yuri Terasawa, Yoshiya Moriguchi, Saiko Tochizawa & Satoshi Umeda 1435‐1448 The influence of working memory on the anger superiority effect Jun Moriya, Ernst H. W. Koster & Rudi De Raedt 1449‐1464 38
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SOCIAL SCIENCES
Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology Volume 87, Issue 4 Individual and contextual determinants of innovative work behaviour: Proactive goal generation matters Francesco Montani, Carlo Odoardi and Adalgisa Battistelli 645–670 On the reciprocal relationship between job insecurity and employee well‐being: Mediation by perceived control? Tinne Vander Elst, Anja Van den Broeck, Nele De Cuyper and Hans De Witte 671–693 Psychosocial safety climate moderating the effects of daily job demands and recovery on fatigue and work engagement Adam Garrick, Anita S. Mak, Stuart Cathcart, Peter C. Winwood, Arnold B. Bakker and Kurt Lushington 694–714 Work–family interference, psychological distress, and workplace injuries Nick Turner, M. Sandy Hershcovis, Tara C. Reich and Peter Totterdell 715–732 Mindfulness as a cognitive–emotional segmentation strategy: An intervention promoting work–life balance Alexandra Michel, Christine Bosch and Miriam Rexroth 733–754 Stressors, withdrawal, and sabotage in frontline employees: The moderating effects of caring and service climates Feng‐Hsia Kao, Bor‐Shiuan Cheng, Chien‐Chih Kuo and Min‐Ping Huang 755–780 An experience sampling study of expressing affect, daily affective well‐being, relationship quality, and perceived performance Kevin Daniels, Jane Glover and Nadine Mellor 781–805 An application of Mobley's intermediate linkages turnover model to a full‐time employee group typology Jenell L. S. Wittmer, Agnieszka Shepard and James E. Martin 806–812 39
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SOCIAL SCIENCES
Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly Volume 46, Issue 3 Beyond Grantmaking: Philanthropic Foundations as Agents of Change and Institutional Entrepreneurs Rand Quinn, Megan Tompkins‐Stange, and Debra Meyerson 950‐968 Diaspora Philanthropy: Lessons From a Demographic Analysis of the Coptic Diaspora Jennifer M. Brinkerhoff 969‐992 The Role of Mental Budgeting in Philanthropic Decision‐Making Monica C. LaBarge and Jeffrey L. Stinson 993‐1013 Performance Measurement Challenges in Nonprofit Human Service Organizations Sarah Carnochan, Mark Samples, Michael Myers, and Michael J. Austin 1014‐1032 The Flow of Management Practices: An Analysis of NGO Monitoring and Evaluation Dynamics Jeffery H. Marshall and David Suárez 1033‐1051 Exploring the Motives and Retention Factors of Sport‐For‐Development Volunteers Jon Welty Peachey, Alexis Lyras, Adam Cohen, Jennifer E. Bruening, and George B. Cunningham 1052‐1069 The Impact of Ethnic Diversity on Participation in European Voluntary Organizations: Direct and Indirect Pathways Michael Savelkoul, Maurice Gesthuizen, and Peer Scheepers 1070‐1094 Training Effectiveness and Trainee Performance in a Voluntary Training Program: Are Trainees Really Motivated? Yunchen Huang, Lesley Strawderman, Kari Babski‐Reeves, Shaheen Ahmed, and Arash Salehi 1095‐1110 The Role, Measurement, and Impact of Volunteerism in Hospitals Renee Brent Hotchkiss, Lynn Unruh, and Myron D. Fottler 1111‐1128 40
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SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
CIO Magazine December 2014 1.
2.
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Top 10 Tech Industry Megatrends of 2015 More IT vendors will split up. Boards will get even more paranoid about security. UX and CX become critical competencies for CIOs. These are some of IDG CEO Michael Friedenberg's predictions for 2015. J.C. Penney: A Case of What Not to Do for Business and IT Leaders The missteps and misfortunes of this retailer offer some classic warning signs that any enterprise would be wise to heed, says Maryfran Johnson. Three‐Minute Coach: How to Prepare for Media Interviews Before meeting with a reporter, you should prepare your talking points and remember that everything you say in the presence of a reporter could be used in a story, says consultant Bill McGowan. Booz Allen Takes Data Science Training Online Aiming to make data science training more accessible, Booz Allen Hamilton introduces a hands‐on online training course complete with gamification elements. byod illustration Court Ruling Could Bring Down BYOD In what could be a decisive blow to the Bring Your Own Device trend, the California Court of Appeal ruled that companies must reimburse employees for work‐related use from personal mobile devices. dec grow lead 5 Things CIOs and VCs Can Learn From Each Other CIOs and venture capitalists, two groups with seemingly different agendas, can often educate each other on how to evaluate tech trends and successfully construct deals. Business Agility Drives Cloud Adoption Companies adopting cloud computing most aggressively say that business agility ‐‐ not cost ‐‐ is the primary driver of adoption. 41
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SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
IEEE Computer Volume 47, Issue 1 Software‐Defined Networking: Standardization for Cloud Computing's Second Wave Lin, Ying‐Dar ; Pitt, Dan ; Hausheer, David ; Johnson, Erica ; Lin, Yi‐Bing 19 ‐ 21 SDN and OpenFlow Evolution: A Standards Perspective Tourrilhes, Jean ; Sharma, Puneet ; Banerjee, Sujata ; Pettit, Justin 22 ‐ 29 Aligning Technology and Market Drivers in an Open Source Standards Testing Program Bauer, Rick ; Milford, Ron ; Zhen, Li 30 ‐ 36 Service Function Chaining: Creating a Service Plane via Network Service Headers Quinn, Paul ; Guichard, Jim 38 ‐ 44 When Open Source Meets Network Control Planes Rothenberg, Christian Esteve ; Chua, Roy ; Bailey, Josh ; Winter, Martin ; Correa, Carlos N.A. ; de Lucena, Sidney C. ; Salvador, Marcos Rogerio ; Nadeau, Thomas D. 46 ‐ 54 Software‐Defined Networks: Incremental Deployment with Panopticon Canini, Marco ; Feldmann, Anja ; Levin, Dan ; Schaffert, Fabian ; Schmid, Stefan 56 ‐ 60 Virtualization of Home Network Gateways Dillon, Marion ; Winters, Timothy 62 ‐ 65 Defensive Biometrics Lowther, Lindsey 66 ‐ 69 Wellth Creation: Using Computer Science to Support Proactive Health schraefel, m.c. ; Churchill, Elizabeth F. 70 ‐ 72 Theory‐Guided Data Science for Climate Change Faghmous, James H. ; Banerjee, Arindam ; Shekhar, Shashi ; Steinbach, Michael ; Kumar, Vipin ; Ganguly, Auroop R. ; Samatova, Nagiza 74 ‐ 78 Imagining and Building Robots (in Capes!) Johnson, Brian David 79 ‐ 81 42
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SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Why Clouds Give Me a Case of the Vapors Berghel, Hal 82 ‐ 85 Toward Social Life Networks Jain, Ramesh 86 ‐ 88 Energy Efficiency in the Wild: Why Datacenters Fear Power Management Cameron, Kirk W. 89 ‐ 92 Security or Privacy? A Matter of Perspective Hurlburt, George ; Bojanova, Irena ; Sobel, Ann ; Crosby, Keesha 94 ‐ 98 Understanding Integrity Level Concepts Joannou, Paul ; Wassyng, Alan 99 ‐ 101 43
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SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
IEEE IT Professional Volume 16, Issue 6 Exploring Metasystems Djavanshir, Reza 4 ‐ 7 Employing Enterprise Architecture for Applications Assurance Houser, Walter 8 ‐ 11 Anomalies Detection in Healthcare Services Srinivasan, Uma 12 ‐ 15 Advancing Cloud Computing [Guest editors' introduction] Bojanova, Irena ; Dimitrov, Vladimir ; Corno, Fulvio 16 ‐ 17 Achieving Dynamic Capabilities with Cloud Computing West, Barry C. ; Battleson, Douglas A. ; Kim, Jongwoo ; Ramesh, Balasubramaniam 18 ‐ 24 The Indian Banking Community Cloud Sangavarapu, Lalit ; Mishra, Shakti ; Williams, Abraham ; Gangadharan, G.R. 25 ‐ 32 Elucidating the Cloud Enterprise Architecture for Smarter Enterprises Chelliah, Pethuru Raj 33 ‐ 37 Automated Semantic Tagging of Textual Content Jovanovic, Jelena ; Bagheri, Ebrahim ; Cuzzola, John ; Gasevic, Dragan ; Jeremic, Zoran ; Bashash, Reza 38 ‐ 46 Can Malware Be Exterminated by Better Understanding Its Roots? Cho, Michael Cheng Yi ; Hsu, Chia‐Wei ; Shieh, Shiuhpyng ; Wang, Chi‐Wei 47 ‐ 53 Cost‐Benefit Analysis of Datacenter Consolidation Using Virtualization Deka, Ganesh Chandra 54 ‐ 62 Toward Smart Machine Tools in Taiwan Huang, Yao Hsien ; Lee, Maria R. ; Luo, Tzuo‐Liang ; Liao, Chien‐Chih 63 ‐ 65 Computational Networks: Challenging Traditional Program Management Hurlburt, George ; Bojanova, Irena ; Berezdivin, Robert 66 ‐ 69 Claude Shannon: Mastermind of Information Theory Strawn, George 70 ‐ 72 44
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SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
IEEE Software Volume 31, Issue 6 Fifteen Years of Service‐Oriented Architecture at Credit Suisse Murer, S. ; Hagen, C. 9 ‐ 15 Fault Intolerance [Reliable Code] Holzmann, G.J. 16 ‐ 20 Software Development Tooling: Information, Opinion, Guidelines, and Tools Spinellis, Diomidis ; Androutsellis‐Theotokis, Stephanos 21 ‐ 23 Functional Size Estimation Technologies for Software Maintenance Ebert, C. ; Soubra, H. 24 ‐ 29 Harnessing UML for Architectural Description‐‐the Context View Woods, E. 30 ‐ 33 Requirements in a Global World Cleland‐Huang, J. ; Laurent, P. 34 ‐ 37 The Persistence of Memory Booch, Grady 38 ‐ 40 Virtual Teams [Guest editors' introduction] Smite, D. ; Kuhrmann, M. ; Keil, P. 41 ‐ 46 Collaboration Spaces for Virtual Software Teams Dullemond, K. ; van Gameren, B. ; van Solingen, R. 47 ‐ 53 Onboarding in Open Source Projects Fagerholm, F. ; Sanchez Guinea, A. ; Borenstein, J. ; Munch, J. 54 ‐ 61 Process Mass Customization in a Global Software Firm Mathiassen, L. ; Sandberg, A.B. 62 ‐ 69 45
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Dataflow Modeling with Crosscutting Concerns and a Concept Lattice Chernak, Y. 70 ‐ 78 Effective Quality Management: Value‐ and Risk‐Based Software Quality Management Poth, A. ; Sunyaev, A. 79 ‐ 85 Impact of Ad Libraries on Ratings of Android Mobile Apps Mojica Ruiz, I.J. ; Nagappan, M. ; Adams, B. ; Berger, T. ; Dienst, S. ; Hassan, A.E. 86 ‐ 92 Hiring in the Software Industry Kaatz, T. 96‐96 46
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GENERAL
Foreign Affairs November/December 2014 1.
A Hard Education Gideon Rose and Jonathan Tepperman Few would argue that Washington’s approach to the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq has been a success worth emulating. So the most important question now is what can be learned from the failures. 2.
More Small Wars Max Boot Washington doesn’t have the luxury of simply avoiding insurgencies, so it needs to figure out how to fight them better. Drawn from more than a decade of war, here are ten lessons for doing so. 3.
Pick Your Battles Richard K. Betts After a decade‐plus of war, the lessons for the United States are clear: fight fewer, more traditional wars and fight them more decisively. Above all, avoid getting entangled in the politics of chaotic countries. 4.
Withdrawal Symptoms Rick Brennan The destabilizing consequences of Washington’s hasty withdrawal from Iraq were not only foreseeable, but foreseen by U.S. military planners and commanders. To avoid a similar disaster in Afghanistan, President Obama must not make the same errors. 5.
Homeward Bound? Daniel Byman and Jeremy Shapiro ISIS' army has attracted a stream of Western volunteers, but there is no reason to panic about their return home. Some may come back as terrorists, but the danger has been exaggerated, and the United States and the EU know how to handle such problems. 6.
The Good War? Peter Tomsen More than 13 years after 9/11, the Afghan war is far from over, even if Washington insists that the U.S. role in it will soon come to an end. Three recent books help explain why, and what Washington needs to do next to protect the gains that have been made. 7.
The Unraveling Richard N. Haass With U.S. hegemony waning and no successor waiting to pick up the baton, the current international system will likely give way to a larger number of power centers acting with increasing autonomy. The post–Cold War order is unraveling, and it will be missed. 47
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8.
China's Imperial President Elizabeth C. Economy Xi Jinping’s reforms are designed to produce a corruption‐free, politically cohesive, and economically powerful one‐party state with global reach: a Singapore on steroids. But there is no guarantee the reforms will be as transformative as the Chinese leader hopes. 9.
Normal Countries Andrei Shleifer and Daniel Treisman Twenty‐five years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, critics say postcommunist reforms have failed. But the evidence says otherwise. Transition states in Europe and Eurasia have become normal countries ‐‐ no worse, and sometimes better, than other states at comparable levels of development. 10. The End of the Military‐Industrial Complex William J. Lynn III Commercialization and globalization, coupled with a decline in U.S. defense spending, have ushered in a new era for the U.S. defense industry. The Pentagon is off to a slow start, however, in weathering the current transition. 11. The Strategic Logic of Trade Michael B. Froman To strengthen its economic power and extend its strategic influence during uncertain times, Washington must lead on global trade. If it doesn’t, it will be left on the sidelines. 12. Culture War James Cuno Over the last few decades, governments have increasingly sought to reclaim indigenous artifacts from museums abroad. Yet inappropriate calls for repatriation should be resisted. Encyclopedic museums do more than house artifacts; they also spread cosmopolitan ideas. 13. Promises to Keep Bjorn Lomborg The Millennium Development Goals are due to expire at the end of 2015, and debate has turned to what should come next, with hundreds of new targets already proposed. Governments need to focus carefully and decide which goals offer the greatest returns on investment. 14. Misrule of the Few Pavlos Eleftheriadis Since the early 1990s, a handful of oligarchs has dominated Greece’s economy and politics. So long as these elites have a vested interest in keeping things as they are, the country will never fully find its way out of crisis. 15. Opening Indonesia Joko Widodo Indonesia’s new president talks to Foreign Affairs about his recent victory, his national agenda, and the threat of Islamic extremism. 48
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16. The Mission for Manila Benigno Aquino III The president of the Philippines talks to Foreign Affairs about economic reform, political corruption, and Chinese aggression. 17. The War That Didn't End All Wars Lawrence D. Freedman A hundred years after World War I, new accounts of the drama help readers navigate the intricacies of European politics and the political and diplomatic maneuverings that kicked off the war. Yet there is still no consensus on its origins or lessons. 18. Why They Fought Michael Mandelbaum According to Ian Morris, the author of a sweeping history of conflict from prehistoric times to the present, war can sometimes produce safety. But his account runs into difficulties as it approaches the present. 19. What Heidegger Was Hiding Gregory Fried Scholars have long known that Martin Heidegger was a Nazi, but many doubted that his philosophy had anything to do with Hitler’s ideology. Now Peter Trawny, drawing on Heidegger’s hidden notebooks, argues that the philosopher’s anti‐Semitism was deeply entwined with his ideas. 49
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National Geographic Magazine December 2014 1.
The Joy of Food For as long as people have gathered to break bread together, we have savored food’s power to nourish, delight, and unite. 2.
The Communal Table In Milpa Alta, Mexico, the faithful eat, pray, and celebrate to keep life whole. 3.
Cross Currents Can a marine reserve network save some of the richest waters in the world? Orthodox Christians Church Holy Sepulchre 4.
Blessed. Cursed. Claimed Continuing his Out of Eden Walk, Paul Salopek travels through land coveted by three faiths. 5.
Just Press Print Coming from a 3‐D printer near you: airplane parts, pizzas, living tissue, and much more. Hanford Site Richland Washington 6.
Wasteland Remember when Superfund sites were a concern? They still are. 7.
Cowboys on the Edge Like the feral cattle they capture, the bagualeros are a breed apart. 50
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