Results 141 to 150 of about 153,050 (245)

The Impact on IPO Performance of Reforming IPO Allocation Regulations: An Event Study of Shanghai Stock Exchange A-Shares [PDF]

open access: yes
Initial public offerings in China are distinguished from IPOs in other markets by their extremely high abnormal initial returns and so-called 'Chinese Characteristics'.
Fei Jiang, Lawrence Leger
core  

Does venture capital pay off? a meta-analysis on the relationship between venture capital involvement and firm performance [PDF]

open access: yes, 2010
Venture capital (VC) as an alternative to mainstream corporate finance (Wright and Robbie, 1998) has attracted a large amount of interest in academic research and among practitioners. On e of the main questions is whether VC adds value to firms.
Muller, V., Rosenbusch, Nina
core  

When it comes to the use of AI in the inventive process: Is there room to confirm the subjective inventorship standard in a world of objective patentability criteria?

open access: yesThe Journal of World Intellectual Property, EarlyView.
Abstract While the requirement of substantial participation in the inventive process reflects a subjective standard of inventorship, patentability criteria remain objective. As a result, although patent protection presupposes sufficient human participation, which is especially important for AI outputs, there is no mechanism to assess such participation,
Nataliia Bulat
wiley   +1 more source

Indikasi Manajemen Laba (Earnings Management) dan Hubungannya dengan Kinerja Operasi Disekitar Initial Public Offering (Ipo) pada Perusahaan-Perusahaan Manufaktur yang Terdaftar di Bursa Efek Jakarta

open access: yesJournal of Accounting and Investment, 2016
The objective of this study is to found empirical about manufacture companies which the listed in Jakarta Stock Exchange performed the earnings management surrounding Initial Public Offering and association between Initial Public offering.
Sri Anik
doaj  

Do deepfakes, digital replicas and human digital twins justify personality rights?

open access: yesThe Journal of World Intellectual Property, EarlyView.
Abstract Unauthorised deepfakes are deeply problematic, from the spreading of misinformation to non‐consensual pornographic content. This paper asks whether deepfakes, digital replicas and human digital twins justify personality rights. To address this question, it examines the harms that deepfakes can cause through disinformation, demeaning content ...
Hayleigh Bosher
wiley   +1 more source

Searching for safety: Working conditions and policing in a US emergency department

open access: yesMedical Anthropology Quarterly, EarlyView.
Abstract In the United States, emergency departments aren't supposed to turn anyone away. They are the safety‐net of the safety‐net providing life‐saving care. Yet, what happens to healthcare when conditions are so strained that patients and staff lash out at each other? What happens when the safety net becomes a carceral net?
Fabián Luis C. Fernández
wiley   +1 more source

The IPO underpricing puzzle [PDF]

open access: yes
Corporations - Finance ; Stock ...
James Booth
core  

Optimizing Human Resource Conditions for 20‐Year Initial Public Offering (IPO) Survival

open access: yesPersonnel Psychology, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT The entrepreneurship literature emphasizes the importance of imprints founders leave on companies; those imprints can change at transformational events such as the initial public offering (IPO). Prior research has found that objective measures (such as structure or compensation systems) can imprint and predict survival post IPO.
Theresa M. Welbourne   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Initial Public Offering and Corporate Governance in China's Transitional Economy [PDF]

open access: yes
This paper empirically investigates the performance of Chinese initial public offerings (IPOs). The data used covers the period from mid-1995 to mid-1999 with the sample including 884 companies (both in the A- and B-share markets).
Chen-Chien Hsun, Shih Hui-Tzu
core  

Two Pathways to Proletarianization: Understanding Professionals' Adaptation to the “Corporatization” of Chinese Law Firms

open access: yesSociological Forum, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT This study examines how lawyers in China adapt to the “corporatization” of law firms, which limits their professional autonomy within bureaucratic structures. “Proletarianization” theory, which emerged in the 1970s, effectively explains employment relations and internal stratification within the legal profession, but it has been underestimated
Xinyi Shen
wiley   +1 more source

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