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  • China Reacts Fiercely After Obama Dalai Lama Meeting  By : Will E. Wright
    Only a few weeks after closing an arms deal with Taiwan, the US government held a meeting with the Dalai Lama in the White House. China responds angrily. What are Obama's intentions, is he standing up for American values or are his actions mere recklessness?
  • The Political Role  By : Chuck E Perry IV
    Politics is about getting re-elected and nothing else besides It is a common error to assume that the politician's role is to create jobs, encourage economic activity, enhance the welfare and well-being of his subjects, preserve the territorial integrity of his country, and fulfill a host of other functions
  • Republic Racism Democratic Accidents!  By : Chuck E Perry IV
    Current Affairs Over the weekend we were treated to the height of Democratic hypocrisy, and the stars are none other than our old friend Billy Jaye, (We miss ole Bubba), and Senate Majority Leader Harry (Squeaky), Reid
  • Unemployment Rises Motivation Declines  By : Chuck E Perry IV
    Many Americans have been unemployed at some point during the course of the last few years As a result of the recession, those that have not been unemployed, were on the cusp of becoming unemployed
  • How do we Improve Our Economy?  By : Chuck E Perry IV
    The United States has been in a recession since December, 2007, as defined by the National Bureau of Economic Research, a private, nonprofit research organization But the American people, and the Obama administration along with the democrat majority congress, seem to be at odds on how to fix the American economy
  • Why do Student Need to Research and Vote?  By : Chuck E Perry IV
    The most questions of people ask in election and political field is "Why do we need to care about the election" It shows how care people including students are with the political and election issue
  • The Human Role of Politics  By : Chuck E Perry IV
    It is commonly accepted that the project of sustainable development is conceptually composed of three constituent parts These parts are (1) environmental sustainability, (2) economic sustainability, and (3) social-political sustainability
  • Don't Play Around With Politics  By : Chuck E Perry IV
    Politics is a dirty thing no matter how noble intentions are If you are a considerate citizen you will find here a lot of things that may interest you
  • VP vs VP War On Terror Views  By : Rob Schmidt
    Dick Cheney Sees The Threat of Al Qaeda Terrorism Very Differently Than Obama Administration
  • Obama's Presidential Address: What He Really Means  By : Mike Simons
    President Obama gave a wonderfully written and well presented speech last night to our great nations masses First things first we have to remember that President Obama is a very well spoken man, and even used to go as far as to teach debate tactics on college campuses
  • What Does Deregulation Mean?  By : Brooke Drake
    I’ve heard a lot of talk in the past regarding deregulation in Texas and to be honest, I never really knew what that meant Even though I have lived in Houston for the majority of my life, I am slightly embarrassed to admit that I never paid much attention to things like the electricity market or even the oil and gas market
  • Exterior Interventions in Sovereign States  By : Artur Victoria
    Governments represents only those whose consent they have sought, action to prevent them from oppressing those whose consent they have not sought ceases to be seen as 'intervention' in the traditional sense Those who try to protect the oppressed would not be interfering in the internal workings of a sovereign territory or trying to break down the walls around a sovereign state
  • Sovereignty and Conflicts  By : Artur Victoria
    Once governments are seen as representatives of those whose consent they have obtained, an entirely new question arises: What powers have the people consented to delegate to their representatives To a constitutional lawyer, this issue is strangely absent from much international law
  • Disputes of Peacekeeping Forces During the War  By : Artur Victoria
    If a belligerent becomes a peacekeeper, they are more likely to be targets of those who had been on the opposing side of the conflict It is obviously the kind of demand that is likely to be rejected by those who are independent minded, let alone those who are suspicious of NATO motives
  • Ethical Risk Control  By : Artur Victoria
    The priorities, the working assumptions, and the cultures of organizations can make risk control difficult Risk control operations may run up against built-in assumptions of trust performance" in meaningful and persuasive ways
  • Marketing Your Political Candidate With Full Color 4" x 9" Postcards  By : Bob Pairan
    4 color 4" x 9" political candidate and choosing your source for high quality, low cost, four color printing, fast!
  • Society, Courts and Ethics - Three Solutions  By : Artur Victoria
    Prosecutions do have a cathartic effect and may help to mobilize reform Laws can support other reforms
  • Regulating States Conflict  By : Artur Victoria
    One of the greatest problems with the UNSC (United Nations Security Council) role in regulating conflict and in resolving disputes such as those that arose over the Kosovo bombing lies in the nature and origins of the Security Council Established at the end of the Second World War, it was an extension and refinement of the meetings of the 'big three' in Teheran, Yalta and Potsdam
  • About a Reform Process Plan  By : Artur Victoria
    Any reform process (whether in a scandal and strife ridden government or one that is seeking to get a new start) should start with values - and keep coming back to them The start of the process should involve the articulation of the values that the reform is intended to promote and those values should inform the rest of the reform
  • Ethical Risk Mitigation  By : Artur Victoria
    Those who have worked hardest and longest at risk-mitigation say that they experience this work as analytically and intellectually demanding, in ways they could not have predicted going in

    Meanwhile, others see no need for anything new, claiming that risk-control work, where it really is necessary, should simply be delegated through existing line-management structures, with each functional manager or process owner being required to identify and handle the risks within his or her own areas
  • Legitimacy of the Intervention in a Country's Sovereignty  By : Artur Victoria
    It is interesting that the revolutions of 1688 to 1789 did not place much emphasis on courts The Bills of Rights were not intended to be enforced by the courts against legislatures
  • Ethics in Public Services  By : Artur Victoria
    As public body managers, you are tasked to deliver your services to the public and hence you have the responsibility to ensure that the services you provide are not only effective, efficient, reliable but also that their delivery is free from corruption and malpractice People must get a clear understanding of the important functions of public bodies and the obligations of your organization and yourselves as stipulated in the law
  • The Funny Side of Politics: Political Bumper Stickers  By : Mark Trumper
    Politics brings out the best and the worst in people, whether it is the candidates grasping for votes or the electorate themselves, but in any event, there is a great deal of fun to be had from watching the great democratic process in action

    One of the funniest aspects of the political arena is the number of political bumper stickers which make their appearance, not just at election time but whenever a “popular” politician is in office
  • Armed Intervention in States' Sovereignty  By : Artur Victoria
    The UN Charter seeks to establish the The United Nations Security Council (UNSC) as the supreme body for the regulation of international peace and security with what seems to appear as the sole right to authorize armed intervention

    There are limitations on the right to sanction intervention
  • Enforcing International Law  By : Artur Victoria
    Where actions involve the use of force against others, we not only deprive those against whom we strike the protection of the law, we also deprive ourselves of the protection of that law We become, literally, outlaws
  • Ethical Values in the Globalization Process  By : Artur Victoria
    The challenges of globalization will be met with new values that inform new institutions that can civilize a world of weaker states -just as the North Atlantic Enlightenment contributed to civilizing the absolutist sovereign states of post-Westphalia Europe However, this is by no means guaranteed
  • State Intervention on Humanitarian Areas  By : Artur Victoria
    The limited but growing recognition of the possibility of intervention on humanitarian grounds is the first crack in the arguments used to support the principle of no intervention In addition, as more and more nations formally embrace democratic ideals, the first two factors listed above are losing much of their force
  • The Constitutional Value of Sovereignty  By : Artur Victoria
    The constitutional value that is most under threat is, of course, sovereignty itself Sovereignty is being weakened as the forces of globalization ensure that forces outside the walls of the state fundamentally affect, and sometimes determine, what goes on within them
  • Searching the Ethical Values, Ideals and Concepts  By : Artur Victoria
    The global search for answers will draw on the attempts of different cultures to seek answers to problems of the human condition Within each culture, the process will begin with an exploration of its own culturally specific values, ideals, concepts and stories as the way that their culture has dealt with those problems
  • Ethics as the State Theory of Democracy  By : Artur Victoria
    Ethics is founded on the view that the values of liberal democracy should be rethought rather than abandoned on the excuse of globalization, or defended by an attempt to recreate the strong states of the recent past People would, however, argue for the protection and preservation of state-based institutions wherever possible pending the emergence of new institutions
  • The Ethical Globalized State  By : Artur Victoria
    The process of preconceiving liberal democratic values and re-institutionalizing them for a global world calls for nothing less than a new enlightenment Such a global enlightenment should aim to civilize the increasingly brutal world of global economics, just as the eighteenth century Enlightenment began the process of civilizing the absolutist post-Westphalia states
  • Ethical Origins of Public Administration  By : Artur Victoria
    The ethics will be seen as partly self generated (though in fact self interpreted) rather than handed down from on high -in drafting specific codes it is possible to take into account the various other duties which bind officials of the relevant public sector agency under criminal, employment and other law
  • The Ethical Relationship in the Corporate and Public Sector  By : Artur Victoria
    There are several reasons why some are reluctant to apply business ethics to public sector ethics

    Public/Private Distinction:

    Those who draw a strong distinction between "public" and "private" might also seek to distinguish the ethics of their operatives
  • Ethical Circles  By : Artur Victoria
    The ethical problems of the organization are the problems of the staff, whereas many members of staff will, rightly or wrongly, see the root of the ethical problems in senior management If "top down" codes are resented, they will be ignored when possible and, otherwise, treated like an unwelcome legal rule
  • Ethical Justification on the Public Administration  By : Artur Victoria
    The justification of a public sector institution can provide the basis for the ethics of its administrators This can help indicate what individuals should refrain from doing
  • Ethical Behavior As a Solution for the Public Interest  By : Artur Victoria
    The thrust of the report and its recommendations were to try to change institutions so as to emphasize and reinforce ethical behavior, to promote rather than discourage those who would be ethical, to make unethical behavior more difficult to perform and easier to detect

    As always, the trick is to make institutions work to the benefit of individuals not to pretend that all the problems are individual ones
  • New Year's Resolutions Should Change World Not Just Self  By : Todd A. Smith
    As we begin a New Year and a new decade, people across the world have begun or unfortunately already ended their New Year’s resolution Whether it is losing weight, saving money or finishing up that degree that you postponed, many enter each New Year with aspirations of improving their personal lives
  • Form Versus Function in Rich Countries' Resources Governance  By : Artur Victoria
    The fact in order to deliver the same institutional function it does not require a particular institutional form Likewise a particular institutional form can deliver very different functions in different country contexts
  • Governance in Natural Resources  By : Artur Victoria
    Global demand and prices for oil, gas and minerals have increased dramatically in recent years, not least driven by the economic successes of a number of emerging economies These developments could provide an opportunity for mineral-rich countries to push economic and social development
  • Institutional Theory and Definitions About Natural Resources  By : Artur Victoria
    Why institutions matter to achieving economic and social development is certainly not a question that has arisen only in the context of mineral-rich countries Social scientists have long pointed to institutions as well as institutional change to explain economic and social transformations
  • Explaining Differences in Outcomes of Governance in Countries Rich in Mineral Resources  By : Artur Victoria
    Some observers have challenged this negative policy outlook by pointing to mineral-rich countries that have performed relatively well Commonly singled out are Botswana, Chile, Indonesia, Malaysia, the United Arab Emirates and mineral-rich OECD countries
  • Institutional Theories About Governance Policies on Natural Resources  By : Artur Victoria
    To explain institutional change institutions need to be conceptualized as a dependent rather than an independent variable The social science literature on institutional change is too large to be dealt with comprehensively
  • Crime Situation in Africa  By : Artur Victoria
    Nigeria is a country that dominates the West African region due to its large population (125 million) and the importance of its mineral and oil resources (the sixth largest oil producer in the world) Political instability, poverty and endemic corruption force many native people to leave their places of origin to the European Union countries in search of a better life
  • Drug Trafficking in West African Criminal Networks  By : Artur Victoria
    Poor countries are a source of production or transportation of illegal goods or as transit points for trafficking, while developed countries offer clear opportunities for the sale and acquisition These countries have more interest for criminal groups as a base for their activities, namely:

    a) In the European Union, Ireland - UK - Germany - Netherlands - Belgium - Italy - Spain

    b) In Latin America and the Caribbean-Netherlands Antilles - Venezuela - Peru - Ecuador -Brazil

    c) In Asia - Afghanistan - Pakistan - Thailand

    d) In the Middle East, Lebanon - Dubai - Bahrain

    West African criminal networks operate with great ease and flexibility
  • West African Criminal Networks of Illegal Immigration  By : Artur Victoria
    Each year tens of thousands of people from West African countries are transported by road to North Africa, mainly Morocco, from where they to Spain across the Strait of Gibraltar, whether hidden in trucks, which make the journey aboard ferries, or rafts

    In some cases there is also the smuggling of illegal immigrants by sea directly to France and Italy from North African countries
  • Terrorist Methods of Subversive Groups - Acting and Recruiting  By : Artur Victoria
    Usually the study is directed toward the criminal aspects of terrorism, which are present in all areas, and into the criminal aspects of illegal immigration Clearly, migration (regular or not) and criminal activity that may fall under illegal immigration, have a general and wider dimensions than the pure criminal dimension of terrorism
  • Terrorism and Drug Trafficking in Afghanistan  By : Artur Victoria
    Afghanistan was the world largest producer of opiates While throughout the war against illicit crops communists had continued to develop in areas controlled by Moujaidines
  • Big Oil And Conspiracy To Keep Down Wind Energy Implementation?  By : Tony Jones
    Over the past few years interest in wind power has increased Wind power production has developed significantly since the price of oil has gone up and the extra added costs of pollution have become apparent
  • Was Fort Hood Shooting About Jihad Or Indicative Of How Broken Our Mental Health System Is?  By : Kelly Burris, PhD
    Nidal Hasan needs to be thoroughly investigated and prosecuted for this despicable crime at Fort Hood but it is important not to use him as yet another excuse for the incredible incompetence of the mental health industry The most important information from the Generals and mental health professionals about the Fort Hood shooting will not be revealed until the media asks better questions and demands hard evidence in regard to these questions
  • The Legal and Organized Political Power  By : Artur Victoria
    The components of national power of the state, qualitative and quantitative factors of economic, political, social and military power are needed to interpret the same state as a dynamic social relationship, which necessarily interacts with all facets of social behavior

    The combination of these optical multidisciplinary appreciate the history and present of nations, as part of social and institutional contents of the country, under the deposit of state powers in the government figure, defines the policies to follow
  • The Challenge of Citizenship Empowerment  By : Artur Victoria
    Local governments face a rapidly changing society, both in terms of speed and dimension Some of today's most striking issues are: (i) the economic restructuring as the former socialist industries collapsed; (ii) the impact that high rates of unemployment have on families and communities; (iii) the continuous growth of vulnerable groups, as division and differentiation within the society grows, and; (iv) a growing environmental concern, which is often related to the "wild" urbanization process
  • Links Between Terrorism and Drug Trafficking  By : Artur Victoria
    The links between terrorism and drug trafficking are real and are growing, according to officials and former officials who participated in the special symposium at the headquarters of the Drug Enforcement Agency of America (DEA) Highlight several interventions invited to this synopsis
  • Linkages Between Terrorism and Drug Trafficking in North Africa  By : Artur Victoria
    Until the moment when 16 terrorist attacked in Casablanca and caused the killing of 44 people, the Moroccan regime had been taking a low profile in the treatment of cannabis crop growing and trafficking In the 90s, the former king Hassan II formed an agency for the development of northern Morocco under the auspices of the Ministry of Interior
  • The Concept of Power  By : Artur Victoria
    The conditions of domination and subordination of power have always been a constant in the history of human relations and its forms of social organization

    For that reason, analyze the nature and dynamics of power is one of the most important elements of policy analysis and to develop prospective scenarios
  • Review: Angela Davis Honors Hero in Frederick Douglass Book  By : Judith Brown
    When I was a child, I heard stories about the so-called “activist” Angela Davis We’d whisper her name in the schoolyard – as if betraying our parents, those very ones who were themselves fooled into thinking that Ms
  • Show the Military Appreciation 365 Days a Year  By : Todd A. Smith
    They put their lives in harm’s way everyday to protect our freedom They show bravery in the midst of battle overseas, that we cannot even possibly imagine
  • Was Fort Hood Shooting About Jihad or Indicative of How Broken Our Mental Health System Is?  By : Kelly Burris, PhD
    Nidal Hasan needs to be thoroughly investigated and prosecuted for this despicable crime at Fort Hood but it is important not to use him as yet another excuse for the incredible incompetence of the mental health industry The most important information from the Generals and mental health professionals about the Fort Hood shooting will not be revealed until the media asks better questions and demands hard evidence in regard to these questions
  • Residential Wind Power The Savior Of The American Economy?  By : Tony Jones
    Over the last few years you may be aware of the present administrations focus of green energy The platform has been that the emergence of wind power will create many jobs that will “stimulate our economy”
  • The Paradigms Review  By : Artur Victoria
    The state and its sovereignty are the face of new poles of power In the realm of theory, revision of interpretive studies of the international scene has led to such divergent responses ranging from the conservative behaviorists to postmodern iconoclasts
  • The Review of the Concepts of Safety and Capacity  By : Artur Victoria
    States quickly learn 'the game' or they should do to ensure their survival and make the appropriate security measures This approach also reinforces the Center for Strategic and International Studies Georgetown one of the most influential think tanks (or academic and research activities related to American power) of the previous decade and the present, noting that "foreign policies in several respects returned to the family lines particularly the control of its process by the main international actor, the States
  • Summarizing Power  By : Artur Victoria
    Summarizing power relativity imposes social dynamics, explained by the concepts of relativity and comprehensiveness of power Social mobility encourages internal and external procedures to continuously review and evaluate information, taking as long as the reference point which is the permanent strategic interests and objectives
  • Guide to National Security and Foreign Policy - Policy Analysis  By : Artur Victoria
    In defining the state policy, national security and foreign policy, the starting point is the national interest If we take as a reference point that only one state is able to give your business a sense of political security, global and comprehensive objectives and national interests are the basic parameters of its overall activity of the state
  • Policies and Interventionism  By : Artur Victoria
    Foreign policy is clearly defined their goals and permanent is the synthesis of the exercise of power of the state in the field of international relations This applies to all nations and is, as noted in the previous chapter, the guidance of national interest for all States
  • Different Conceptions of Power  By : Artur Victoria
    The respect that American democracy gives to its constitution and generally the rule of law that emanates from it forms the backbone of his power and authority in the internal The powers are legally and legitimately founded by the sovereign will of the American people and their division keeps its balance date and ensures the system of checks and balances that since its genesis, constituted the basic contours of American democracy
  • The Reality of Insecurity  By : Artur Victoria
    In this multidimensional dimension of insecurity, we are witnessing a moment of fatal confluence of crises that generate such feedback, and many devastating impacts on vast quantities of human beings, particularly the most vulnerable regions and sectors of this inequitable globalization and compulsive
  • African Bureaucracies  By : Artur Victoria
    The context in many African countries (among others) is not conducive to successful bureaucracies For example:

    • Information and evaluation are scarce and expensive, which inhibits internal and external controls
  • Organizing Workshops to Design Anti-Corruption Strategies  By : Artur Victoria
    High-level participatory diagnoses have proved remarkably fruitful in generating frank analyses of sensitive policy issues, leading to suggestions for remedial measures But sometimes there is no carrot or stick to keep that momentum moving
  • Fight Against Corruption - After Deterrence Comes the Structural Changes  By : Artur Victoria
    A campaign against corruption must be credible The public has grown cynical
  • Anti-Corruption Strategies  By : Artur Victoria
    Anti-corruption strategies must go beyond blanket condemnations Privately, at least, one must be very shrewd about where to begin and how
  • Applications to Country Programs Against Corruption  By : Artur Victoria
    A campaign against corruption must go beyond words, indeed beyond new laws Institutional adjustment is needed to limit the scope of corruption (and more generally, to enhance efficiency)
  • Measuring Democracy - - Artur Victoria Studies  By : Artur Victoria
    The International Political Risk Service Group Ltd is a private company that provides analysis of political risk for 140 countries in the world
  • Measuring Democracy - Relevant Projects of the International IDEA - Artur Victoria Studies  By : Artur Victoria
    The International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance is one of the most interesting, if not the most useful, possible sources in the area of democracy research Though at the moment they have nothing that could be used as a source of data for measuring democracy, they have few projects that may be very useful potential sources in the future
  • Measuring Democracy - The IDEA Questionnaire - Artur Victoria Studies  By : Artur Victoria
    From the broadly concept of democracy an assessment questionnaire is formed It contains four components and each of them contains a number of questions
  • Measuring Democracy - The UNDP’s Human Development Report - Artur Victoria Studies  By : Artur Victoria
    The UNDP Human Development Report was first launched in 1990 and it has been conducted regularly each year since then The last report for 2001 included 162 cases and the report for 200 included 174 cases
  • Economist Magazine - Well Educated Well-off Readers Only Please  By : Konstantinos Papahatzis
    For more than 160 years the Economist informs a worldwide audience with Economic Financial and Political news that affect economies at a local and global level We examine the main characteristics of this established publication
  • Measuring Democracy - Reports by the Committee to Protect Journalists - Artur Victoria Studies  By : Artur Victoria
    The Committee to Protect Journalists is a non-profit organization established with the aim to protect the press freedom around the world There is not much information available on who the members of organization are and whether it has regional affiliates apart from its central office in New York
  • Measuring Democracy - Reports on Press Freedom by Reporters Sans Frontiers - Artur Victoria Studies  By : Artur Victoria
    Reporters sans frontiers are another source of information on the state of press freedom The report of RSF that is conducted annually is in terms of content and topic covered very similar to the reports of the CPJ and IPI
  • Measuring Democracy - The ICFTU’s Reports on Violations of Union Rights - Artur Victoria Studies  By : Artur Victoria
    International Confederation of Free Trade Unions publishes annual report about the violations of labor and union rights that is covering 148 countries and territories The organization is founded in 1949 and has 225 affiliated organizations in 148 countries
  • Concept of Democracy - Artur Victoria Study  By : Artur Victoria
    “Democracy” is nearly universally cherished in the contemporary world: hence the inherently contested nature of the concept This contested nature means that different political forces try to attach somewhat different meanings to the word
  • Measuring Democracy - Human Rights Watch’s - Artur Victoria Studies  By : Artur Victoria
    Human Rights Watch’s annual report is similar to the AI report and can be put to the same use as suggested above It is also heavily country focused and not made according to methodology that includes comparable indicators
  • How to Measure Democracy - The Freedom House Survey of Political and Civil Liberties - Artur Victoria Studies  By : Artur Victoria
    Freedom House was founded almost sixty years ago by Eleanor Roosevelt, Wendell Willkie and other Americans concerned with the dangers that faced democracy Freedom House is led by a Board of Trustees composed of Democrats, Republicans and Independents; business and labor leaders; former senior government officials, scholars, writers and journalists
  • Measuring Democracy - Reports by the International Press Institute - Artur Victoria Studies  By : Artur Victoria
    The International Press Institute is the organization that is operating as the global network of editors, media executives and leading journalists The focus of organization work is the enhancement of professionalism and journalist standards and the media freedom
  • About Democracy - Artur Victoria Researchs  By : Artur Victoria
    More generally, not all definitions operate at the same level of abstraction, or even if they do, they may define democracy with reference to different sets of other abstract concepts despite an apparent agreement on what empirical phenomena is delineated by the concept For instance, Kenneth Bollen (1980) submitted that “[democracy] is the extent to which the political power of the elite is minimized and that of the non-elite is maximized”, while Robert Dahl (1971: 2) would “reserve the term 'democracy' for a political system one of the characteristics of which is the quality of being completely or almost completely responsive to all its citizens
  • Measuring Democracy - The US Department of State’s Reports on Human Rights - Artur Victoria Studies  By : Artur Victoria
    The American Department of State issues an annual report on the state of human rights in each country that is a member of the United Nations Although these country reports acknowledge the cultural diversity of each country, the basic principle underlying them is in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
  • Has The United States' Penchant For Sports Crossed Over Into And Blurred The Political Landscape?  By : Alan Alphin
    It's a new day I've been told, or sold, I should say I want to believe
  • Bribery of Foreign Officials – a Study by Artur Victoria  By : Artur Victoria
    In the past the extent of bribery by companies from Western Europe and North America of foreign officials for contracts has been a matter of pure speculation Little or no empirical evidence was available
  • Spying and Bribery – a Study by Artur Victoria  By : Artur Victoria
    Attitudes in the West are changing No longer is it deemed acceptable to bribe your way into a contract as long as you and your company are not caught
  • Political Parties Funding Recent History - A Study by Artur Victoria  By : Artur Victoria
    Parties seek more money from the taxpayer but there will always be tight constraints on this source of funding The obvious source of big money is rich donors and corporations
  • Political Donations and Corruption - A Study by Artur Victoria  By : Artur Victoria
    In one case Spanish anti-corruption public prosecutors began the investigation last March into the allegedly fraudulent sale of the Spanish telephone installation company Sintel to the Cuban entrepreneur Jorge Mas Canosa The action was taken after unions alleged the former management of the company had plundered millions of pesetas from the sale of the company
  • Approach to Knowledge and Learning Integrity - A Study by Artur Victoria  By : Artur Victoria
    The resources required to 'deliver' high levels of public integrity are huge though, even if it were possible; arguably greater than the resources one could imagine being available

    This is due to the high costs of achieving:

    • Strategic 'doneness' (prioritization/sequencing)

    • Local legitimacy (polices come with ideological baggage)

    • High quality of knowledge to transfer (appropriateness to context)

    • Local commitment or 'buy-in'

    All these play a significant role in the application of pro-integrity reforms and are hard to overcome when applying a top-down, internationally driven approach to public integrity reform, such as has characterized much policy to date
  • Organizational Learning - A Study by Artur Victoria  By : Artur Victoria
    The learning curve for implementing effective reforms is steep To better understand one of the important dimensions of organizational learning, we find the distinction between tacit and codified knowledge to be a useful one
  • Money, Arms and Much More - A Study by Artur Victoria  By : Artur Victoria
    If one person in the West symbolizes the growing resistance to corruption it is Eva Jolly, the Paris based investigating magistrate in the Elf Aquitaine affair With its allegations of bribes and suspicious arms deals involving those at the highest levels of French political life the case have rocked France over the last eighteen months
  • Privatizing - A Way to Make Illicit Profits With Bribery and Corruption - A Study by Artur Victoria  By : Artur Victoria
    For more than a year it has been France's turn to fall under the microscope of the international media over bribery and corruption allegations, as it had been Britain turn in the mid 1990s over sleaze in the Conservative Government Recent events in the USA, Canada, France, Germany, Austria, Britain, Ireland, Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Denmark, Cyprus, Malta, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Sweden and Finland
  • The Lisbon Treaty For Women - The Reasons Why  By : Regina O Connor
    Joining the European Community in 1973 was a fundamental step forward for Irish women who automatically upon membership of the EEC received rights of equality particularly in the field of employment For example, women who married prior to 1973 were prohibited from continuing in civil service employment following their marriage under Irish law guided by the Irish Constitution
  • Should David Miliband Resign Over Tibet Suzerainty?  By : Ralph Quinlan Forde
    Last year the British Foreign Secretary David Miliband removed the suzerainty status afforded to Tibet a country the size of Europe that has been illegally occupied by China since 1959 This status of autonomy was one of the main claims Tibetans had to their nation; internationally, diplomatically and legally
  • The Need of a Reform on Integrity Education - A Study by Artur Victoria  By : Artur Victoria
    Over the last 25 years a compelling body of evidence has been accumulated concerning the harm and waste caused by corruption and low levels of public integrity The sums estimated are vast
  • Short Selling The United States  By : MAR
    For those not familiar with the term, “Short Selling "; it means betting against the future success of a company To sell short you would borrow and sell shares of a company, you believe is doomed, at the present value with the hope that you will buy and return these shares in the future when the price is lower
  • The Merits of a Domestic Appliance Scrappage Scheme  By : Elmo Populous
    In a recent move to help the environment, The British Retail Consortium has put in a request to the Government to introduce a domestic appliance scrappage scheme akin to the car industry scrappage programme that already exists in Britain The suggestion is that the government should waive the 15 per cent VAT on white goods such as fridges and washing machines when customers trade up
  • Obama's Presidency Not Given Same Respect as Predecessors  By : Todd A. Smith
    The date November 4, 2008 will live in the history books forever Somewhere in this great nation, a young boy or girl is sitting in a classroom dreaming that they can achieve greatness in their life because of Barack Obama’s presidency and what it represents for our country
  • Building an Information System - A Study by Artur Victoria  By : Artur Victoria
    An information system (IS) can be defined as "a set of inter-related components working together to collect, retrieve, process, store and distribute information in order to facilitate the planning, control, coordination, analysis and decision making in companies and other organizations"

    The most common concepts of an information system are those in which:

    • Computer networks are systems of components of information processing;

    • The use of computer networks by firms are, in fact, interconnected information systems;

    • Developing ways of using computer networks in business includes the design of the basic components of information systems;

    • The administration of information technology emphasizes the quality and value for business and security of information systems in an organization

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