Results 201 to 210 of about 28,112 (273)

Formal Institutional Quality and Product Innovation: Moderating Effects of Policy Instability and Technological Infrastructure

open access: yesThunderbird International Business Review, Volume 68, Issue 2, Page 191-207, March/April 2026.
ABSTRACT Grounded in the strategy tripod view, this research aims to examine the relationship between formal institutional quality and product innovation while considering the moderating effects of policy instability and technological infrastructure.
Samuel Amponsah Odei
wiley   +1 more source

Resource windfalls and political sabotage: Evidence from 5.2 million political ads

open access: yesAmerican Journal of Agricultural Economics, Volume 108, Issue 2, Page 630-664, March 2026.
Abstract We study the role of incentives in inducing sabotage in political contents, vis‐à‐vis natural resource windfalls. The latter induce plausibly exogenous increases in contests' stakes by extending opportunities for policy implementation or private gain upon winning and enhancing incumbent advantage.
David Lagziel, Ehud Lehrer, Ohad Raveh
wiley   +1 more source

Working From Home and Performance Pay: Individual or Collective Payment Schemes?

open access: yesBritish Journal of Industrial Relations, Volume 64, Issue 1, Page 39-51, March 2026.
ABSTRACT Working from home (WFH) reduces real‐time visibility of employees within the physical space of the workplace. This makes it difficult to monitor employees’ work behaviour. Employers may instead monitor employees’ outputs and provide incentives through performance pay.
Uwe Jirjahn, Cinzia Rienzo
wiley   +1 more source

Governance Arrangements That Fit Social‐Ecological Context Are Associated With Fishery Sustainability

open access: yesFish and Fisheries, Volume 27, Issue 2, Page 381-399, March 2026.
ABSTRACT In many parts of the world, natural resources are primarily managed by governance arrangements at the local level. Those arrangements range from collective, such as cooperatives and associations, to individualistic, such as patrons and owner‐operators.
Mateja Nenadović   +25 more
wiley   +1 more source

Investigating the Relation Between Second Language Proficiency and Study Success Using a Causal Inference Approach

open access: yesLanguage Learning, Volume 76, Issue 1, Page 132-175, March 2026.
Abstract Prior research suggests that second language (L2) proficiency is key in students’ study progress, but this research has mainly been carried out at universities. It is thus unclear how this relation varies across different educational levels. Moreover, previous studies are often not informative about the causality of this relation, making it ...
Sybren Spit, Sible Andringa, Oisín Ryan
wiley   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy