Thus this work presents powerful new tools for the study of economic and corporate networks that are only just beginning to attract the attention of scholars.
This book explains how politics shapes corporate governance--how managers, shareholders, and workers jockey for advantage in setting the rules by which companies are run, and for whom they are run.
Neutrosophics and other topics Florentin Smarandache. On. Global. corporate. control. and. Federal. Reserve. between. 2007 ... the network of global corporate that controls about 80% of the world profits. Vitali, Glattfelder, and Battiston ...
... The Network of Global Corporate Control . ” PLoS One : 1–36 . http://www.scribd.com/doc/70706980/The-Network- of - Global - Corporate - Control - by - Stefania - Vitali - James - B - Glattfelder - and - Stefano- Battiston - 2011 ...
Christopher May. Hugh Compston, “The network of global corporate control: implications for public policy,” Business and Politics 15, no. 3 (2013): 357–379. Complementing Carroll and Sapinski's work, this article looks at the intra ...
... global economy . It is only in recent years that social scientists have begun to notice how much of a crossover ... the network of capital control is . They came to the astonishing conclusion that the global economy is sustained by ...
... corporate culture it is often difficult to take a step back and look at transnational corporations, beyond what ... The Network of Global Corporate Control, in Numbers In the 33 Global Corporations Are More Powerful than Many Governments.
... Global Dominance Group : 9/11 Pre - Warnings & Election Irregularities in Context , " http : //www.pro ... The Network of Global Corporate Control , " PLOS ONE , October 26 , 2011 , http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi ...
... The Network of Global Corporate Control . " PLOS ONE , 6 ( 10 ) : e25995 . Vogel , David . 2006. The Market for Virtue . Washington , DC : Brookings Institution Press . Vogel , David . 2008. “ Private Global Business Regulation ...
... networks of power that can extend to any—and perhaps every—country in the world. Much of the control over the corporate world now appears to be in the hands of a single “super-entity,” according to “The Network of Global Corporate Control ...