Academic literature on the topic 'SOCIAL MARKETPLACE'

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Journal articles on the topic "SOCIAL MARKETPLACE"

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Khotimah, Khusnul, Ahmad Bakroni, and Neneng Puspitasari. "Transformasi Filantropi melalui Marketplace di Era Pandemi Covid-19." Tasyri' : Journal of Islamic Law 2, no. 1 (January 30, 2023): 35–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.53038/tsyr.v2i1.59.

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In the current pandemic era, innovations related to the ziswaf payment model are urgently needed, in era 4.0 the digital role has reached all levels of society, besides that digital is also a way to reduce physical contact between individuals. Thi s research is descriptive research with a qualitative approach. This paper describes the fundraising approach in the digital era. The innovation of zakat institutions in fundraising is carried out in collaboration with marketplaces 1. Bukalapak, 2. Shope, 3. Tokopedia, 4. Lazada and 5. Blibi. The results of this study found that the five marketplaces combine business techniques with social business through philanthropy. This fusion of business commercial and social business shows the marketplace's concern for philanthropy. In the use of fundraising, each zakat institution and social institution applies different approaches, according to the characteristics of the offering model made by the marketplace.
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Ahmad, Raziah, Mohamed Ikhwan Nasir Mohamed Anuar, Zainuddin Ab Rahman, Muhammad Adam Zakaria, and Jamalunlaili Abdullah. "The seen and unseen: Exploring place identity of market place in Peninsular Malaysia." IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science 1067, no. 1 (October 1, 2022): 012012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/1067/1/012012.

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Abstract The roles of the marketplace in promoting place identity have been the central focus of the UN- Habitat and stakeholders around the globe. The notion of marketplace relating to place identity, place attachment and sense of place have gained attention by Malaysian researchers but much focused on the overt of the marketplaces compared to the covert. This study aims to explore how the seen and unseen elements coexist and enhance place identity. The objective is to discover the influence of overt and covert parameters on marketplace identity through the cultural mapping among four different regions in Peninsular Malaysia. This study employs a qualitative approach through direct non-participant observation and cultural mapping at the four selected marketplaces: Pantai Suri floating market in Tumpat, Kelantan, Pasar Bisik in Penaga, Penang, Pasar Jerami in Sungai Besar, Selangor and Pasar Borneo in Masai, Johor. The overt and covert of each market were carefully observed and mapped, where three substantial outcomes were revealed. First, the social interaction and transaction, social activities and social connectivity at the market portray the covert aspect as vital for place identity. Second, marketplaces have the potentials as dynamic community public spaces to get fresh daily products and promote local heritage and tourism. Third, marketplaces face threats from climate change, pandemic Covid-19, and the diminishing local culture and traditions. In conclusion, the covert and overt of marketplaces should be equally preserved as they become primary components for developing a regional place identity.
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Oliveira, Renata Couto de Azevedo de. "Carmen Miranda: um Ícone de Mercado Incorporado." Organizações & Sociedade 29, no. 100 (January 2022): 51–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1984-92302022v29n0002pt.

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Abstract Building upon the CCT framework of incorporation of ideologies, taste regimes, and national and regional interests by consumer cultures, this paper proposes that social and political ideologies are also embodied in marketplace icons. This paper aims, then, to bring together the concepts of iconicity and liminality to provide an account of Carmen Miranda as a marketplace icon who not only embodied the national myths of her time but also continues to be employed in the current marketplace for a variety of purposes. As such, icons like Carmen contribute to the production of marketplaces in which historical, political, and ideological issues are naturalized. Carmen’s collaboration via cultural industries such as radio and cinema, her omnipresence in advertising campaigns and in the printed media, and her influence on female fashion contributed to the consumer culture of her time. Moreover, the mythical character of her persona and her cultural legacy hold an expressive symbolic power, making her a remarkable contemporary marketplace icon. The key to her iconicity is her liminality; unsettling hierarchies, traversing social planes, and questioning identity. As a marketplace icon, Carmen’s legacy is thus constantly reissued, founded upon the ambivalence of her persona and signaling her transgressive potential.
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Oliveira, Renata Couto de Azevedo de. "Carmen Miranda: an Embodied Marketplace Icon." Organizações & Sociedade 29, no. 100 (January 2022): 51–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1984-92302022v29n0002en.

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Abstract Building upon the CCT framework of incorporation of ideologies, taste regimes, and national and regional interests by consumer cultures, this paper proposes that social and political ideologies are also embodied in marketplace icons. This paper aims, then, to bring together the concepts of iconicity and liminality to provide an account of Carmen Miranda as a marketplace icon who not only embodied the national myths of her time but also continues to be employed in the current marketplace for a variety of purposes. As such, icons like Carmen contribute to the production of marketplaces in which historical, political, and ideological issues are naturalized. Carmen’s collaboration via cultural industries such as radio and cinema, her omnipresence in advertising campaigns and in the printed media, and her influence on female fashion contributed to the consumer culture of her time. Moreover, the mythical character of her persona and her cultural legacy hold an expressive symbolic power, making her a remarkable contemporary marketplace icon. The key to her iconicity is her liminality; unsettling hierarchies, traversing social planes, and questioning identity. As a marketplace icon, Carmen’s legacy is thus constantly reissued, founded upon the ambivalence of her persona and signaling her transgressive potential.
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Wright, Peter. "Marketplace Metacognition and Social Intelligence." Journal of Consumer Research 28, no. 4 (March 2002): 677–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/338210.

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Tao, Zhou. "Harnessing the Power of Social Media Marketing to Boost E-Marketplace Performance: A Paradigm Shift." Journal of Digitainability, Realism & Mastery (DREAM) 2, no. 04 (April 30, 2023): 50–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.56982/dream.v2i04.117.

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This paper offers a novel examination of the transformative role of social media marketing in elevating e-marketplace performance, signifying a pivotal shift in digital commerce. We propose a unique conceptual framework that explains how aspects such as customer engagement, targeted advertising, and real-time feedback can enhance the success of digital marketplaces. The study underscores the necessity of understanding and leveraging the power of social media algorithms and data-driven marketing strategies. By highlighting potential challenges and offering strategic recommendations, this paper seeks to guide e-marketplace stakeholders and digital marketers towards optimizing their platforms. Ultimately, our paper aims to pave the way for a more comprehensive, dynamic approach to social media marketing in e-commerce, marking the next step in this digital evolution.
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Marciniak, Lukasz. "The Social Organization of Merchants’ Activities. An Interactionist Study of Urban Marketplaces." Qualitative Sociology Review 16, no. 4 (October 31, 2020): 106–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/1733-8077.16.4.07.

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The article briefly presents the empirical results of a large research project focused on Polish urban marketplaces, commonly known as bazaars, and their interactional order. Due to the spatial separation and legal regulations concerning bazaar trade, a relatively constant community of market vendors is created in the area of the particular marketplace. The primary activity of each merchant is to offer and sell goods; however, the specificity of marketplace trade results in the necessity to maintain relationships with other vendors to keep this primary activity going. Thus, the activities of merchants are carried out in the same direction for both economic results and performance (sales and profit) and social action, that is, building and managing relations with vendors operating in the same marketplace. A wide range of activities and interaction strategies is developed that create an order of interactions between vendors, both in terms of perceiving and assigning meanings, interpreting, and taking actions. The consequences of such an interactional foundation affect the economic layer of the market, embedding, on the one hand, economic phenomena in social phenomena, and, on the other hand, generating paradoxes of prices and competition—the two economic concepts that cannot be analyzed without their social contexts.
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Said, Laila Refiana, Maya Anggela, and Gusti Rina Fariany. "Online Purchase Decision of Gen Z Students at Shopee Marketplace." International Journal of Professional Business Review 8, no. 5 (May 24, 2023): e01187. http://dx.doi.org/10.26668/businessreview/2023.v8i5.1187.

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Purpose: This study's objective is to analyze the purchase decisions of Generation Z (Gen Z) university students on the Shopee marketplace. The detailed analysis was: The influences of online customer ratings, celebrity endorsers, and free shipping promotion on the purchase decision. Theoretical framework: Gen Z is the generation that uses technology the most, especially for social contact. Therefore, Gen Z is used to online shopping. However, Gen Z is still forming and is not fully identified. Design/methodology/approach: This study's participants were university students who had purchased on the Shopee marketplace. By purposive sampling method, the total sample gathered was 160 respondents. Multiple linear regression analysis was utilized to evaluate the data. Findings: The findings indicated that online customer ratings did not affect purchasing decisions of Gen Z customers in the marketplace. Other variables, celebrity endorsers and free shipping promotions, affected purchase decisions. Research, Practical & Social implications: Gen Z students are price sensitive. Gen Z students will likely be attracted to marketplaces that offer promotional offers and discounts on their products and services. Gen Z students are heavily influenced by social media, the recommendations of their peers, and brand ambassadors. Therefore, a marketplace with a solid social media presence and a positive reputation among Gen Z students will likely attract and retain their business more successfully. Originality/value: Gen Z considers celebrity opinions more matter than ordinary customer reviews.
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Andreasen, Alan R. "Marketing Social Marketing in the Social Change Marketplace." Journal of Public Policy & Marketing 21, no. 1 (April 2002): 3–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1509/jppm.21.1.3.17602.

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Social marketing faces significant barriers to growth because there is no clear understanding of what the field is and what its role should be in relation to other approaches to social change. However, growth is possible through increases in social marketing's share of competition at the intervention, subject matter, product, and brand levels. The author proposes a specific social marketing branding campaign to advance the field, with roles for academics and the American Marketing Association.
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Bell, David, and Sara Robaty Shirzad. "Social Media Business Intelligence." International Journal of Sociotechnology and Knowledge Development 5, no. 3 (July 2013): 51–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijskd.2013070104.

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Social media tools are increasingly used for relationships management among marketplace actors (e.g. organisations, suppliers and individuals). As markets become ever more global and dynamic, new entrants find themselves struggling to fully understand the marketplace, companies operating with it and changes that occur. The authors discuss Social Media Network (SMN) tools and outline a methodology and procedure that supports the identification of domain specific networks within particular global business-to-business environments. Research is carried out using SMN data about firms in the pharmaceutical industry. The authors use their own methodology to uncover market participants, linkages and prominent issues that may help new firms to position themselves effectively within a new marketplace. SMNs provide a sizable source of information and new approaches are required to fully leverage their considerable value. This paper explores how SMNs can be used as an effective source of business intelligence by utilising two popular SMN platforms.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "SOCIAL MARKETPLACE"

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Iraola, Miguel Igor. "Urban marketplace : an evaluation of the social and retail environment." Kansas State University, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/17960.

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Lindsey, Charles D. "Antecedents of memory confidence for a delayed marketplace transaction." [Bloomington, Ind.] : Indiana University, 2006. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:3215216.

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Thesis (Ph.D.)--Indiana University, Kelley School of Business, 2006.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 67-04, Section: A, page: 1442. Adviser: Shanker H. Krishnan. "Title from dissertation home page (viewed June 19, 2007)."
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Clarke, Hannah E. "Building a Religious Marketplace: Evangelical Protestantism and the Social Construction of Religion." Thesis, Boston College, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/2162.

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Thesis advisor: Stephen Pfohl
This thesis further explores the relationship between capitalism and Christianity by examining current changes to the style in which Evangelical Protestantism is practiced within the context of America's transition to consumer society. Using a theoretical framework of the marketplace theory of religious change and critical cultural studies, I argue that by displacing religion as the dominant mediator of ultimate meaning, the pressure consumer society places on religious content and practices to adapt may be part of a process of colonization through which the alignment between capitalism and Christianity is continued and its potential to be a critical cultural resource is reduced. To this end, I employ a mixed methodology of participant observation, unstructured interviews and Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) to examine the cultural content of Lakewood Church in Houston, TX, America's largest Protestant church
Thesis (MA) — Boston College, 2011
Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Discipline: Sociology
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Orlando, Serena <1990&gt. "Nuovi modelli di business per l'e-commerce: flash sales e social marketplace." Master's Degree Thesis, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10579/7798.

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L’obiettivo dell’elaborato finale è indagare i nuovi modelli di business per il settore dell’e-commerce, con un focus particolare su vendite a tempo e social marketplace. In prima analisi viene presentata l’evoluzione subita dal contesto competitivo nell’era di internet, ripercorrendo le tappe principali di crescita e sviluppo del commercio elettronico. L’analisi in questione comprende sia gli aspetti strategici interni alle aziende sia uno sguardo sul cambiamento del processo d’acquisto dei consumatori. Sulla base di queste ricerche vengono poi contestualizzati i nuovi modelli di business presi in analisi. A supporto vengono presentati due casi rappresentativi per le vendite a tempo e i social marketplace: Vente Privee ed Etsy. Per entrambi la ricerca si concentra, tramite conduzione di interviste, sulla comprensione di vantaggi, opportunità e criticità riscontrate dai merchant nel processo di vendita dei loro prodotti nelle rispettive piattaforme.
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Dwyer, Robyn. "Agency and exchange: an ethnography of a heroin marketplace." Thesis, Curtin University, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/2302.

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This thesis is concerned with the exchange of heroin in localised, street-based marketplaces. Commercial exchange of heroin in such sites has been a characteristic of the Australian heroin scene since the early 1990s. Although some qualitative investigations have been undertaken, the dominant approach to understanding these sites in Australia has been quantitative (primarily epidemiological and criminological). These efforts largely adopt a narrow and under-developed conception of 'markets' and much of this work adopts a narrow and circumscribed conception of the subjects who act within these sites. In contrast, this thesis is positioned within a long tradition of ethnographic accounts of drug users as active agents and of drug markets as embedded in particular social, cultural and economic contexts.In this thesis, I explore two related questions: 1) what are the social relations and processes constituting street-based drug markets, and 2) how do participants in these street-based drug markets express agency, given that, in public and research discourses, they are often understood and depicted either as lacking agency or as expressing agency only through profit-seeking, criminality or both. I explore these questions through an ethnographic examination of the everyday lives of Vietnamese heroin user/dealers who participate in a local heroin marketplace in the Melbourne suburb of Footscray. The key analytical concerns are the social relations through which this particular market is constituted, the social and cultural processes of exchange through which the market is produced and reproduced, and the ways in which participants in the market express agency, including the ways in which their agency might be constrained.My ethnography of the Footscray drug marketplace reveals that the marketplace is constituted by complex and dynamic social processes and relations. With a focus on drug user/dealers, my analysis condenses to two major themes - those of agency and exchange. Throughout the thesis, I show how, and in what ways, drug marketplace participants act on the world, achieve diverse outcomes (intended or otherwise, constrained or not) and, thus, express their agency. I also demonstrate the complexities of heroin exchange in the marketplace, revealing that heroin is exchanged in multiple ways (e.g. through trade, barter and gifts) for multiple purposes and according to multiple and fluid classifications of social relationships. My account shows the embeddedness of the Footscray drug marketplace - that it is shaped by its particular historical, social, cultural, political and economic context. I show also how market processes - such as exchange - are shaped by culturally patterned ideas about what is right, wrong and even conceivable. This thesis also problematises dominant constructions of drug user subjectivity. Such conceptions have ethical and political implications with regard to the ways in which drug users are understood, judged, regulated and governed. My analysis suggests that the subjectivity of Footscray dealers is ambiguous, contradictory and multiple, constituted not simply by instrumental rationality but by a complex of motivations and by the cultural and social formations which shape these motivations.This thesis provides an alternative to the dominant approaches to understanding Australian drug markets and marketplaces. Accounts of drug markets tend to privilege an etic view that is theoretically underpinned by neo-classical economic models of markets. Additionally, the quantitative methodological approaches that predominate in Australian drug market research tend to preclude considerations of process and temporality. In contrast, in this thesis I privilege an emic account of the drug marketplace. Influenced by theoretical frameworks drawn from anthropology, in my examination of the everyday lives of drug user/dealers, I stress the importance of the social, political and cultural dimensions of these people's lives and direct attention to the importance and creativity of personal agency.Drug users and dealers are widely stigmatised and demonised as 'other', juxtaposed against supposedly 'normal' non-drug users. Dominant representations of drug users are unidimensional and do not capture the complexity of drug user agency and subjectivity. This thesis demonstrates that the people who sell heroin in the Footscray marketplace actively engage in a range of exchanges, for a range of purposes - subsistence, the creation of identity, the pursuit of prestige, reciprocity, sociality, the production and reproduction of social relations, and profit-making. My account, therefore, repositions drug users, challenging their stigmatisation by revealing that, in their everyday lives, they struggle with many of the same challenges that confront us all.
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Rudakova, Ekaterina <1993&gt. "Marketing of Social Epidemics in a Digital Marketplace. A Case of the Organic-Food Industry." Master's Degree Thesis, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10579/12856.

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This master thesis presents the results of a theoretical and an empirical analysis of the main factors and conditions that contribute to a trend creation and diffusion in the society. It aims to explore, whether consumers play a dominant role in a trend-setting and exercise their power through online social communities, or companies externally alter public opinion and escalate it to the level of a wide-spreading trend. For this purpose, a concept of “social contagion” is taken as a basis for a social behaviour analysis. It has been subsequently applied to the marketing context. Psycho-emotional (social) contagion defines the processes of natural spread of messages and ideas in the society. Understanding its mechanisms and its impact on consumer behaviour can significantly improve the effectiveness of marketing campaigns in today’s world of digital communication. This paper focuses in particular on the food industry as a field of current transition towards a trend of organic and healthy consumption.
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Johansson, Glenn. "Consumer Online Resale at Tradera : A Qualitative Study of Valuation and Pricing in the Online Auction Marketplace." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Sociologiska institutionen, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-352503.

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Trade of second hand goods between private individuals has increased substantially during the 21st century, particularly in the light of a growing e-commerce scene. Consequently, individual consumers more notably find themselves in the role of sellers in the marketplace and take on responsibilities traditionally performed by businesses. The study at hand builds on this phenomenon and examines how consumer online resellers at the online auction marketplace Tradera make sense of valuation and pricing processes related to their intended resale of pre-owned branded clothing. For this purpose, nine private Tradera-users have been interviewed. By drawing on theoretical contributions from economic sociology and the sociology of valuation, the study has contributed to an enhanced understanding of consumer online resale behaviour and the role of individual valuation and pricing processes for the ordering of an online auction market. The results show that the informants find it problematic to economically value and price garments that are to be resold in the market since they are considered, more or less, usable and meaningful possessions. The study has found valuation of garment condition to be the main source of uncertainty as it distinguishes the economic value of branded garments in the marketplace. The informants broaden the definition of what is judged “new” to make valuation processes more favourable in accordance to their perception of second hand markets. The study further finds that the informants facilitate individual valuation and pricing processes, and simultaneously contribute to market order, by referring to an informal and socially constructed scale for valuating product condition that is marketplace-specific and complements Tradera’s formal categorization system by adding nuances. To cope with the situational uncertainty of not knowing the auction outcome in advance, the study has shown that the informants appear risk averse when pricing garments and therefore avoid misplacing the value distribution.
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Chambliss, Virginia Ricci. "Curricula Responses to the Demands of Industrialization and High Technology in the Marketplace." Thesis, North Texas State University, 1985. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc500717/.

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This study addresses itself to several issues in relation to public education in the United States. First, it examines the basic social philosophies underlying the development of mass education in the United States. Secondly, it asks the question: what is the purpose of public education? Thirdly, it relates the development of public education to a dominant source of social change--industrialization, and examines the relationship between the structure and function of education in the 1800's and early 1900's, and the needs of the marketplace. Fourthly, it examines the relationship between the curricula of education in the 1980's and the needs of high technology in the marketplace.
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Bowsher, Andrew John. "Authenticity and the commodity : physical music media and the independent music marketplace." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2014. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:a421adac-1d86-4351-8778-6e16e1744513.

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This thesis examines the circulation of physical music media (78rpm records, LPs, CDs, tape) in the independent music marketplace. It is based on six months of ethnographic fieldwork in Austin, Texas, amongst the producers of goods for the independent marketplace, independent music stores and consumers of these goods and services. Against prevailing constructivist interpretations, I will argue for the value of authenticity as an analytical anthropological concept because it unites what my research participants value about materiality, technology, and marketplace relationships. In the independent marketplace for physical music media, authenticity is a multi-local, multi-vocal phenomenon. A nexus of economic rationales, design, reproduction-technologies, histories and personal conduct interact in an ongoing process that authenticates music commodities and their marketplace. This means that particular commodities are sought out over others on account of the multi-local authenticities they anchor. The thesis firstly demonstrates how the independent music scene safeguards claims to authentic identities by constructing an opposition to the mainstream, drawing on discourses of ethical production and consumption, sound technologies, spaces of consumption and cultural production. Secondly, I will uncover how physical music media and sound-reproduction technologies are assessed as effective providers of authentic musical reproductions according to their historical contingencies and performative material capacities. Thirdly, I develop the notion of the scene (Shank 1994) from its previously genre-fixed perspective to encompass multiple musical styles operating within a common social network of producers, retailers and collectors. The pluralistic scene I describe utilises multiple musical genres and nuanced notions of materiality and authenticity to establish their complex hierarchy of sonic and technological experiences.
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GUPTA, PRIYANKA. "P2P LENDING." Thesis, DELHI TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY, 2021. http://dspace.dtu.ac.in:8080/jspui/handle/repository/18400.

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Desperate times call for desperate measures. As technology continues to emerge bigger and better, it has also changed the way we book flights, or a taxi, or search for a hotel room outside, fintech continues to make massive transformation in the way flow of money and settlements of transactions happen. With the prevalent financial crisis in India during 2008, alternative finance industry started taking shape. In the fast-changing landscape of Fin- tech, Peer to Peer (P2P) lending platforms has become a subject of interest as well as importance because of the unique characteristics of this method of intermediation. P2P lending is a form of crowd funding where loans are sought through the various mediums of platforms from which people are willing to lend and borrow. These platforms act as a market place for borrowers and lenders in the virtual world and hence can be called a virtual marketplace. This advanced way of loaning caters to various individuals and small businesses by searching lenders within a time frame, without the need to provide collateral for obtaining loans. Self-employed persons, contract employees, persons with no regular jobs and borrowers with some black marks in their credit history may well be able to find lenders in the peer to peer lending space. Most of these loan seekers usually find it difficult to get loans from banks. In addition to this these platforms also enable consumers in the personal loan segment and petty businesses to borrow loans through them. P2P lending and crowdfunding have a few other names, including social finance, marketplace finance, and disintermediated finance. None of these terms and conditions are alone a prima facie description of peer-to-peer lending; P2P is indeed a bigger term indicating disintermediation of consumer finance using a social marketplace virtually. Alternative finance refers to financial channels, processes, and instruments that have emerged outside of the traditional finance system including regulated banks and capital markets. Crowdfunding and peer to peer lending are at the vanguard of this movement. The basic rationale behind emergence of this industry was removal of middlemen from the whole process of investment transaction, thereby reducing the cost and creating an online marketplace for the interested and potential investors and borrowers. This industry even includes the innovative and technical online instruments like cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, SME mini-bond and other shadow banking mechanisms. Crowdfunding platforms including the P2P Lending platforms in India emerged in around 2010. The number of these platforms grew without much regulatory and institutional oversight, which was encouraged also, by the general growth of the apparent digital economy. In 2017, according to a survey the number of online platforms were estimated to be close to 50 and the outstanding loans sanctioned through P2P platforms was estimated to have reached more than 60 crore rupees (Care Ratings, 2017). While we study about these platforms and the industry, we also need to focus on how it ll be affecting the finance industry both banking and non-banking in the future. While there will be a new way of determining interest rates for these platforms, the risk and credit assessing methods will also see a new horizon for its determination. We cannot oversee the fact that traditional methods of lending have been solving the financial problems of the masses for long, hence to ensure the trust of the investors and continued service to those in need a careful analysis of both these factors are required and this paper therefore consists of two parts the first one dealing with the interest rates and what affects these rates in an alternate finance industry and the second one dealing with the credit risk that the investors face from the borrowers as there is no middlemen or any form of collateral involved in P2P lending cycle. This paper aims to analyse the factors affecting interest rates and the credit risk that the investors face while investing. This has been done by a regression and correlation analysis on various variables identified during the study and observation of the data available on the P2P lending online websites and platforms, providing the service.
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Books on the topic "SOCIAL MARKETPLACE"

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Michael, Bauman, Roche Lissa, Koshelnyk William, and Hillsdale College. Center for Constructive Alternatives., eds. Morality and the marketplace. Hillsdale, Mich: Hillsdale College Press, 1994.

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1939-, Leiss William, and Botterill Jackie, eds. Social communication in advertising: Consumption in the mediated marketplace. 3rd ed. New York: Routledge, 2005.

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Ufomata, Titilayo. Voices from the marketplace: Short stories. Ibadan, Nigeria: Kraft Books, 1998.

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Kildea, Paul Francis. Selling Britten: Music and the marketplace. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.

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Kildea, Paul Francis. Selling Britten: Music and the marketplace. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.

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Rumor in the marketplace: The social psychology of commercial hearsay. Dover, Mass: Auburn House Pub. Co., 1985.

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Zerdick, Axel. E-Conomics: Strategies for the Digital Marketplace. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2000.

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Pierre, Valette-Florence, ed. Marketplace lifestyles in an age of social media: Theory and methods. London: Routledge, 2015.

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Pierre, Valette-Florence, ed. Marketplace lifestyles in an age of social media: Theory and methods. Armonk, N.Y: M.E. Sharpe, 2011.

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1938-, Moran Robert T., Braaten David O, and Walsh John Edward 1927-, eds. International business case studies for the multicultural marketplace. Houston: Gulf Pub. Co., 1994.

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Book chapters on the topic "SOCIAL MARKETPLACE"

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Jha, Sadan. "Dwelling in the Marketplace." In Social City, 151–96. London: Routledge India, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003354079-7.

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Leiss, William, Stephen Kline, Sut Jhally, Jacqueline Botterill, and Kyle Asquith. "The Mediated Marketplace." In Social Communication in Advertising, 238–70. 4th ed. Fourth Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2018. | Revised edition of Social communication in advertising, 2005.: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315106021-10.

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Bailey, Matthew. "The social world of shopping." In Managing the Marketplace, 79–101. Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2020. | Series: Routledge studies in the history of marketing; 6: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429451652-6.

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Blank, Robert H. "The Alzheimer’s Marketplace." In Social & Public Policy of Alzheimer's Disease in the United States, 45–73. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-0656-3_3.

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Tuten, Tracy, Christy Ashley, and Jason Oliver. "Social Media Applications for Marketing Educators." In The Sustainable Global Marketplace, 4. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-10873-5_4.

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Madill, Judith, and Norman O’Reilly. "Financing Social Marketing Programs Through Sponsorship: Implications for Evaluation." In The Sustainable Global Marketplace, 26–30. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-10873-5_20.

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Rhue, Lauren. "Crowd-Based Markets: Technical Progress, Civil and Social Regression." In Race in the Marketplace, 193–210. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-11711-5_12.

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Kordestani, Arash Abolghasemi, Moez Limayem, Esmail Salehi-Sangari, Henrik Blomgren, and Afshin Afsharipour. "Why a few Social Networking Sites Succeed While Many Fail." In The Sustainable Global Marketplace, 283–85. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-10873-5_164.

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Archer-Brown, Chris, Niall Piercy, and Adam Joinson. "Sorting the Wheat from the Chat: Influence in Social Networks." In The Sustainable Global Marketplace, 375–79. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-10873-5_224.

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Leiss, William, Stephen Kline, Sut Jhally, Jacqueline Botterill, and Kyle Asquith. "The Internet, Social, and Mobile Mediated Marketplace." In Social Communication in Advertising, 313–44. 4th ed. Fourth Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2018. | Revised edition of Social communication in advertising, 2005.: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315106021-12.

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Conference papers on the topic "SOCIAL MARKETPLACE"

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Prasetya, Davin, and Muhammad Zuhri Catur Candra. "Microtask Crowdsourcing Marketplace for Social Network." In 2018 5th International Conference on Data and Software Engineering (ICoDSE). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icodse.2018.8705834.

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Gaikwad, Snehalkumar (Neil) S., Mark E. Whiting, Dilrukshi Gamage, Catherine A. Mullings, Dinesh Majeti, Shirish Goyal, Aaron Gilbee, et al. "The Daemo Crowdsourcing Marketplace." In CSCW '17: Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3022198.3023270.

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Putra, Rahmat. "Mapping of Electronic Marketplace Business Model in Building Urban Electronic Marketplace." In Proceedings of the International Conference on Business, Economic, Social Science and Humanities (ICOBEST 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icobest-18.2018.94.

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Rizky Pribadi, Muhammad, Eka Puji Widiyanto, Dedy Hermanto, Desy Iba Ricoida, Desi Pibriana, and Rusbandi. "Analysis of Marketplace Social Media User Engagement by Topic." In 2022 6th International Conference on Information Technology, Information Systems and Electrical Engineering (ICITISEE). IEEE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icitisee57756.2022.10057722.

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Prova, Alpana Akhi, Tania Akter, Md Rafiqul Islam, Md Rakib Uddin, Tanvir Hossain, Md Hannan, and Md Safaet Hossain. "Analysis of Online Marketplace Data on Social Networks Using LSTM." In 2019 5th International Conference on Advances in Electrical Engineering (ICAEE). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icaee48663.2019.8975591.

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Handayani, Fitrie, Lidya Wati Evelina, and Adrian Fitzgerald Tinihada. "Social Network Analysis of Campaign Mobilization of Marketplace on Twitter." In 2022 International Conference on Information Management and Technology (ICIMTech). IEEE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icimtech55957.2022.9915260.

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Bahtar, Azlin Zanariah, Geetha Muthusamy, Zarinah Abu Yazid, and Shahreena Daud. "The E-Servqual Effect on Mobile Stickiness Intention of E-Commerce Marketplace." In International Academic Symposium of Social Science. Basel Switzerland: MDPI, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2022082034.

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Scolari, Paolo. "ZARATHUSTRA AT THE MARKETPLACE. NIETZSCHE AND THE CITY OF MEN." In 4th International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conference on Social Sciences and Arts SGEM2017. Stef92 Technology, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2017/hb21/s06.054.

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Rosu, Daniela, Dionne M. Aleman, J. Christopher Beck, Mark Chignell, Mariano Consens, Mark S. Fox, Michael Gruninger, Chang Liu, Yi Ru, and Scott Sanner. "A virtual marketplace for goods and services for people with social needs." In 2017 IEEE Canada International Humanitarian Technology Conference (IHTC). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ihtc.2017.8058188.

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Zhou, Rui, Shengxi Wu, Susan Faulkner, and Betsy DiSalvo. "Marketplace for Choice and Independence: Young Chinese’s Social Commerce Practices on WeChat." In Chinese CHI 2020: The eighth International Workshop of Chinese CHI. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3403676.3403678.

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Reports on the topic "SOCIAL MARKETPLACE"

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Lind, Jeremy. Politics and Governance of Social Assistance in Crises From the Bottom Up. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/basic.2022.004.

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Abstract:
This paper reviews existing perspectives on the politics and governance of social assistance in crises from the bottom up – from sub-national regions (or states/provinces) down to districts, sub-districts, towns, and villages. It begins by examining recent literature on the politics of social protection, which is mostly based on assessment of political dynamics and relationships in settings that are peaceful and only minimally affected (or unaffected) by conflict-related violence. Key insights from political economy analysis of humanitarian assistance, alongside the ‘political marketplace’ – a more recent concept used to understand governance in fragile and conflict-affected settings (FCAS) – are introduced to deepen understanding of politics specifically in situations where statehood is both limited and negotiated. The second part of the paper reviews various insights into sub-national and local governance, focusing on the role of non-state actors in provisioning and distribution at the edges of state power, delivery configurations in these settings, and the rationalities of local governance and ‘real implementation’. Understanding the arrangements and dynamics of governance sub-nationally and locally is essential for designing and planning the provision of social assistance in ways that are more likely to be politically and socially acceptable while also being inclusive and delivering value for money. The conclusion draws together these various perspectives on politics and governance from the bottom up to consider the implications and questions for further research on social assistance in crises.
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Kang, Ju-Young M. Repurchase Loyalty for Customer Social Co-Creation E-Marketplaces. Ames: Iowa State University, Digital Repository, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/itaa_proceedings-180814-503.

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