Results 171 to 180 of about 22,861 (299)
The politicization of ESG investing shows why ESG metrics cannot be depoliticized. [PDF]
Chen S.
europepmc +1 more source
Historical Perspectives on Deglobalization's Drivers, Outcomes, and Managerial Responses
Abstract The deglobalization process experienced in the early 2020s is not without precedent. This Special Issue leverages business history as a lens to generate new insights and to uncover previously hidden complexities and nuances. Studying previous periods of deglobalization and their varying drivers, outcomes, and responses, the papers in this ...
Andrew Smith +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Political determinants of US states' screening-amenable cancer stage at diagnosis and premature cancer mortality. [PDF]
Krieger N +8 more
europepmc +1 more source
This thesis contributes substantially to a debate that has long been a preoccupation of historians surrounding the timing, underlying reasons for, and inevitability (or otherwise) of the Labour Party's replacement of Liberalism as the main opponent to
Perks, R.B.
core
Variation in Black and White Life Expectancy Across State Policy Groups, 1990-2019: A Research Note. [PDF]
Luck AN.
europepmc +1 more source
The structure of mass political belief systems: A network approach to understanding the left-right spectrum. [PDF]
Bentall RP +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Why Are Young Men Increasingly Drawn to Christianity? A Study of Finnish Young Men
ABSTRACT Recent surveys in the Global North suggest a possible reversal in established gender patterns of religiosity, with young men increasingly engaging with Christianity. This study examines this development in Finland, a highly secular country, drawing on qualitative individual and small‐group interviews with 30 men attracted to Christianity.
Kati Tervo‐Niemelä +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Political expression of academics on Twitter. [PDF]
Garg P, Garg P, Fetzer T.
europepmc +1 more source
Why Do Prosocial People Dislike Markets in Some Countries and Like Them in Others?
ABSTRACT Based on the doux commerce thesis, which suggests that people in market‐oriented societies hold stronger prosocial values than those in less market‐oriented ones, one can expect prosocial and pro‐market values to be positively associated. The fact that the association holds for cross‐country observations but does not universally hold for cross‐
Pál Czeglédi
wiley +1 more source

