Academic literature on the topic 'Wealth creation'

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Journal articles on the topic "Wealth creation"

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Edwards, Michael. "Wealth creation and poverty creation." City 6, no. 1 (April 2002): 25–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13604810220142826.

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Wright, Mike. "Creating and growing wealth: Sue Birley on entrepreneurship and wealth creation." Academy of Management Perspectives 15, no. 1 (February 2001): 37–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.5465/ame.2001.4251391.

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Wright, M. "Entrepreneurship and wealth creation Sue Birley Reflects on Creating and growing wealth:." European Management Journal 19, no. 2 (April 2001): 128–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0263-2373(00)00083-9.

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Jervis, Max. "Design and Wealth Creation." Engineering Management Journal 1, no. 1 (1991): 4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/em:19910003.

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Leech, D. J., and C. P. H. Walker. "Wealth creation from design." Engineering Management Journal 5, no. 3 (1995): 121. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/em:19950308.

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Capaldi, Bernard. "Design and Wealth Creation." IEE Review 37, no. 7-8 (1991): 264. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/ir:19910122.

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Richmond, Mark. "Science and wealth creation." Nature 362, no. 6421 (April 1993): 584. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/362584a0.

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Devendra, C. "Livestock and Wealth Creation." Small Ruminant Research 65, no. 1-2 (September 2006): 180–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.smallrumres.2006.08.003.

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Leepsa, N. M., and Chandra Sekhar Mishra. "Wealth creation through acquisitions." DECISION 40, no. 3 (December 2013): 197–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40622-013-0023-z.

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Okech, Roselyne N. "Tourism and wealth creation." Tourism Management 29, no. 6 (December 2008): 1237. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tourman.2007.11.009.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Wealth creation"

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Stiti, Karim. "Factors Determining Wealth Creation from Divestitures in Sweden." Thesis, KTH, Matematisk statistik, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-229816.

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Divestitures have grown in importance and popularity over the years, rivaling other strategic transactions in mergers and acquisitions. The dominating opinion in academic research is that divestitures overall generate an abnormal return for the parent company stock. This thesis will focus on how Swedish companies perform in the short-term around the announcement of a divestiture. A multiple linear regression analysis finds significance for divestiture gains being attributed to companies focusing on core competencies and to companies with low returns on assets and high returns on equity. However, no significance is found for the size of the companies or financial distress.
Avknoppningar är idag en populär företagstransaktion. Den dominerade åsikten i den globala forskningen kring avknoppningar gör gällande att de generar en överavkastning för företaget i förhållande till marknaden. Denna kandidatuppsats ämnar undersöka vilka faktorer som kan påverka denna överavkastning genom att studera svenska företag på Nasdaq Stockholm. En multipel regressionsanalys visar att företag som säger sig utföra avknoppningar för att fokusera på kärnverksamheten generar en överavkastning. Vidare blir det en överavkastning på företag som har låg avkastning på totalt kapital och hög avkastning på eget kapital. Ingen verkan hittas dock för att storleken på företaget eller skuldstrukturen har en inverkan på överavkastningen.
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Worth, Thomas F. II. "Housing assistance and the creation of household wealth." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2019. https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/123592.

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Thesis: S.M. in Real Estate Development, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Program in Real Estate Development in conjunction with the Center for Real Estate, 2019
Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 52-55).
This thesis aims to develop the framework of a housing program designed to help current recipients of rental subsidies begin to build household wealth through homeownership. Its core beneficiaries are households in Boston and Cambridge earning between 60% and 80% of the area median income. It also proposes an extended program to help households earning between 80% and 135% AMI purchase a home, since they also face significant burdens from housing costs in the current market and are underserved by existing housing programs. The proposal does not aim to solve the overall housing crisis, nor to replace existing programs, but rather to act as a supplement to current programs. The first chapter examines the history of housing policy, and from that review draws six principles of effective housing programs which are used to guide the new proposal. The second chapter examines the needs of renters, home buyers, and property developers in order to identify basic criteria which a new program must meet. The third chapter evaluates individual potential elements of a new program with respect to the principles and criteria identified within the earlier chapters. Finally, the framework of the proposal for a new housing program is laid out.
by Thomas F. Worth, II.
S.M. in Real Estate Development
S.M.inRealEstateDevelopment Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Program in Real Estate Development in conjunction with the Center for Real Estate
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Campbell, Alistair John, and n/a. "Engineers, entrepreneurs & wealth-creation from idea to product." Swinburne University of Technology, 2003. http://adt.lib.swin.edu.au./public/adt-VSWT20061205.164435.

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The paradigms that examine and describe the nature of the entrepreneurship process have generally been linear, following the lead of the more mature management and physical sciences. This emulation of linear methodologies has occurred despite indications from authors such as Bygrave, Shaver and Mitton of their being less appropriate at this relatively early stage of the social science of entrepreneurship. When examining the nature of a phenomenon such as entrepreneurship, statistical correlations and linear descriptions are limited to confirmation of existing hypotheses. The underlying assumption is that the correct questions are known. However this assumption becomes moot when seeking to include the many unpredictable, non-linear aspects that add the key human vitality of entrepreneurship. This research seeks to move toward a more complete description than linearity alone is able to capture. The research presents a non-linear paradigm, being a holistic combination of the rational evidence of entrepreneurship and what might be termed the spiritual or intangible aspects that together constitute the observed craft of entrepreneurship. The research highlights the dynamic skill-set used by entrepreneurs to balance key elements in the entrepreneurial process, in a way that achieves a relational coherence. The focus is on the high-tech industry which is especially prone to the use of linear descriptions of the entrepreneurship process which takes a new idea and leads it to become a successful product. Interviews with entrepreneurship practitioners involved in the creation of new ventures in the high-tech industry form the database against which this non-linear paradigm is investigated. The results confirm that the success of the entrepreneurial process depends on far more than the linear descriptions that are commonly used to describe the process. Once the basics are in place, entrepreneurs appear to shift their focus to achieving a multi-dimensional integration among what they identify as the key elements in the entrepreneurial process. This is achieved despite apparent disorder and chaos being evident in the process of new venture creation. Entrepreneurs appear to make sense of the confusing non-linearity by focussing on the relational attributes among elements in the new venture. The use of the non-linear relational paradigm (NLRP) developed from the results of this research, enables a more holistic understanding of the empirically observed process of entrepreneurship. This has some significant implications for the management and evaluation of nascent technology enterprises. The NLRP's additional fix on the entrepreneurship process, can be used to inform the venture capital industry when trying to predict the likelihood of success of prospective ventures vying for funds. The NLRP's alternative view could also translate into more appropriate new venture management once funded, and thus better success rates for nascent ventures. The NLRP's insights on the way in which entrepreneurs create and grow new ventures, can improve best-practice techniques for entrepreneurs and influence the way in which entrepreneurship education is approached. Describing innovation and entrepreneurship more holistically also has important implications for all facets of industry that include a process of design, or seek to create wealth.
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Wasiluk, Kendra Lyn. "Sustainable wealth creation in practice : a framework to manage firm's intangibles." Thesis, University of Leeds, 2012. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/3136/.

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This study investigates how firms in the Australian property and construction sector manage their intangibles in order to operationalise sustainable development. Previous research linking intangibles and corporate sustainability has tended to focus on intangibles as a phenomenon endeavouring to establish links between intangibles and corporate financial performance. This thesis makes a unique contribution to knowledge by drawing a conceptual bridge between the intangibles and corporate sustainability literature using both the phenomenon and practice based approach to intangibles. The practice based approach aims to understand how firms manage and mobilise their intangibles towards a purpose – which for this research is sustainable development. A key outcome of this study is a framework to manage firms’ intangibles which outlines how firms identify, measure/value, control, and report their intangibles at various stages of corporate sustainability. The research design is a case study methodology, implemented across two phases, using mixed methods. The first phase focused on the phenomenon of intangibles in the wider Australian property and construction sector. Data was collected using a questionnaire, semi-structured interviews and content analysis. In the second phase, four case studies of individual firms were conducted to study the practice of intangibles. There were two key findings of this research. The first is that the practice based approach to intangibles more accurately reflected how firms in the Australian property and construction sector manage their intangibles. However, tensions still exist between the more traditional accounting-based phenomenon approach to intangibles and the practice based approach. This is particularly relevant in the business case for sustainability. The second main finding is that firms in the case study sector are actively managing their intangibles to implement organisational change for sustainability. This finding led to the development of the ‘inside- out’ approach to operationalising sustainable development which focuses on managing a firm’s intangibles rather than just its environmental and social performance.
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Hu, Peng. "Wealth creation in mergers and acquisitions : a study of Chinese corporate restructurings." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/29164.

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Research into the wealth effects of M&A activity generally concludes that substantial value is created for target shareholders. Whereas the evidence from the developed markets is overwhelming, fewer studies have been conducted using data from emerging markets. In this thesis, we will study the wealth consequences for Chinese listed companies in domestic takeovers. Using a sample of 160 “legal-person” share transactions involving the companies listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange (SHSE) and Shenzhen Stock Exchange (SZSE) between 1996 and 2000, empirical tests are carried out to examine whether the targets’ “A share” shareholders gain in corporate restructurings. The tests reveal that the Chinese stock markets are efficient in terms of correctly anticipating new information relating to the M&As before they are announced to the public and on average targets’ shareholders benefit from such takeovers. Further analysis, however, reveals certain characteristics of acquisitions that result in more value being created than others, and in some cases targets’ shareholders lose wealth as a result of the acquisition.
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Sridaran, Lakshmi. "Coastal restoration and management as a strategy for wealth creation in Louisiana." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/50121.

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Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2009.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 131-133).
With more people in the world living along coasts than any other environment, planning for the coastal zone requires negotiating the socially constructed human relationships that have traditionally produced severe inequality between coastal residents and users. In Louisiana, this inequality is apparent in the great deal of wealth external users have extracted from the coast at the direct environmental and economic expense of local residents. An examination of the economic history of Louisiana's coast reveals how this disparity between coastal residents and users has produced deleterious environmental consequences, which have grown exponentially precisely because this inequality between human residents and users persists today. The current coastal restoration and management strategy in Louisiana does not focus on the socially constructed origins of this continuing environmental destruction, but it must do so in order to restore any hope of saving, restoring, and improving the coast. This thesis offers a socially reconstructed strategy for coastal restoration and management in Louisiana that narrows the environmental and economic disparity between coastal users and residents to address the environmental harm. This new wealth creation strategy enables local firms and residents to offer their existing knowledge of the coast and participate in the implementation of restoring and improving the natural assets of their coast through a variety of economic incentives.
(cont.) In this way coastal residents are empowered to gain both the economic and environmental benefits of managing their coast, which I define as wealth. A case study of the Pulicat coastal community in Tamil Nadu, India provides valuable insights on how such a strategy can be implemented utilizing the existing civic and institutional infrastructure in Louisiana. The three significant recommendations this thesis offers can be implemented immediately to begin socially reconstructing Louisiana's coastal restoration and management strategy. The urgency and magnitude of environmental destruction to Louisiana's coast mandates such a bold shift.
by Lakshmi Sridaran.
M.C.P.
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Van, der Westhuizen Winnie. "The creation of wealth through family businesses within the agricultural sector of the Western Cape." Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/21188.

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Thesis (MBA)--Stellenbosch University, 2007.
ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Why can some family businesses survive over several generations when others cannot even be successfully carried over to the second generation? Can it be connected to the creation and definition of wealth? To create wealth for future generations implies much more than just establishing a financially healthy family business. This report examines all the other elements that are crucial to creating wealth and prosperity. In his research Mr Jaffe found that the creation of wealth and prosperity consists out of six dimensions. These dimensions are spiritual capital, financial capital, human capital, family capital, structural capital and societal capital. All of these dimensions are examined and tested in this report and members of family businesses in the Western Cape were asked for personal contributions by completing a questionnaire. From the research it is clear that some of these farmers do not have the correct and necessary structures in place to make it possible for their family businesses to survive to the next generations. Some of these dimensions are being addressed while the farmers have no idea of how important they are to the survival of their family business. Communication is one of the most compelling requirements for success and members of family businesses will have to realise how important effective and healthy communication is. Family members have to be able to communicate their expectations of each other and have to know each other's positive and negative characteristics. This will help ensure that family members are applied in areas they are strong in. To reach its full potential a family business must utilise its members to the fullest. By following these guidelines lasting wealth and prosperity can be created.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hoekom kan sommige familiebesighede vir gesla9te lank corleet en ander nie eers suksesvol oorgedra word na die tweede ge51a9 nie? Het dit moontlik iets te doen met die skepping en definisie van rykdom? Om rykdom te skep vir toekomstige geslagte behels baie meer as net die daarstelling van 'n finansieel gesonde familiebesigheid. Hierdie tesis ondersoek die ander elemente wat oak van kardinale belang is in die skepping van welvaart. Mnr Jaffe het uit sy navorsing bevind dat die skepping van welvaart ses dimensies behels. Die dimensies is geestelike-kapitaal, finansiele-kapitaal, menslike-kapitaal, familie-kapitaal, strukturele-kapitaal en gemeenskapskapitaal. In hierdie tesis word hierdie dimensies getoet5 en ontleed. Daar is aan lede van landbou-familiebesighede in die Wes-Kaap gevra om hul persoonlike ervaringe te deel deur middel van 'n vraelys. Uit die navorsing is dit duidelik dat sommige van die boere nie al die regte strukture in plek het wat dit moontlik sal maak vir hul familiebesighede om die volgende paar geslagte te aorleet nie. Party van die dimensies word weer aangespreek sonder dat die boere besef hoe belangrik dit regtig vir die toekoms van hul familiebesigheid is. Lede van familiebesighede sal moet besef dat goeie, gesonde kommunikasie baie belangrik vir sukses is. Die familielede moet vir mekaar kan se wat hul verwagtinge van mekaar is en moet ook weet wat die goeie en slegte punte van die ander lede van die familie is. Oit sal daartoe bydra dat familielede aangewend kan word in die areas waarin hulle sterk is. Om die volle potensiaal van 'n familiebesigheid te bereik moet al die familielede optimaal benut word. So kan blywende rykdom geskep word vir toekomstige geslagte.
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Pelykh, Halyna. "Wealth creation of mergers and acquisitions : the crisis period of 2008-2009 among U.S. firms." Master's thesis, Instituto Superior de Economia e Gestão, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/20860.

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Mestrado em Finanças
As fusões e aquisições são estratégias populares usadas por diversas empresas com variados objectivos. Desta forma, traduzem-se, todos os anos, em transações de biliões de dollars. Ainda assim, estudos mostram que as fusões e aquisições tendem a não criar valor para os acionistas. Recentemente, o Mundo encarou uma crise financeira global que mudou a realidade e as regras em muitas empresas. Através de um estudo de evento, a seguinte dissertação analisa e compara fusões e aquisições americanas considerando três períodos distintos: antes da crise, durante a crise e o pós-crise. Para cada período foi calculado o CAAR e os resultados mostram que há criação de valor para as fusões e aquisições públicas antes da crise. Para além disso, conclui-se que há criação de valor no dia de anúncio da transação para os 3 períodos estudados.
Mergers and acquisitions were always a popular strategy used by numerous companies for diverse reasons. They account for transactions of billions of dollars every year. Nevertheless, researchers proved that M&As often end up not creating value for its shareholders. Recently, the world faced a Global Financial Crisis that changed reality and rules for many businesses. By using an event study, this dissertation studies and compares U.S. M&A deals from three different periods: pre-crisis, crisis, and post-crisis. CAAR values were computed for each period, and the findings state that there is value creation for the public M&A deals that took place before the crisis period. Another result claim there is a creation of wealth on the announcement day for the three periods.
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
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Smith, Erin. "Structuring for serendipity: family wealth creation, farmer autonomy and the pursuit of security in an uncertain Australian countryside." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/13363.

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The social and economic particularities of family farms have captured researchers’ attention for many years; but rural scholarship still lacks a clear, analytical sense of how and why family farms are organised in the ways that they are. This thesis critically examines the internal logics underpinning the socio-economic organisation of Australian farms. It adopts Johnsen’s (2003) conceptualisation of farm enterprises as three-way coalitions between farm businesses, farm households and the respective property holdings. Changes to the Australian agricultural property regime are used as the lens through which to observe how the organisational logics of farm enterprises are recalibrated in response to environmental policy reforms; specifically, the separation of land and water titles. Despite the obvious economic significance of separating land and water titles, the impacts on farm organisation remain under-researched. Hence, this thesis uniquely brings together scholarship on family farming with that of water reforms. A qualitative research method – farm life history – is used to generate narratives of the development of 40 farms in Victoria, Australia. Twenty-one of these are from an irrigation district where land and water titles have been separated, and nineteen from a dry land region unaffected by the reforms. The interpretive chapters comprise an analysis of the ways in which the ownership configurations of farm businesses, land and water assets embody farmers’ aspirations for building wealth and maintaining autonomy. These aspirations are jointly articulated in the concept of ‘structuring for serendipity’, which elevates the notions of risk, uncertainty and security as critical drivers shaping farm-level responses to contemporary conditions. The thesis concludes that the organisational forms observed within the Australian agricultural sector ultimately represent farmers’ pursuit of a sense of security in a constantly changing and uncertain countryside.
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Wako, Adi Liban, University of Western Sydney, College of Social and Health Sciences, and School of Applied Social and Human Sciences. "Ideology as commodity : industry of a theocracy and production of famines in Ethiopia." THESIS_CSHS_ASH_WakoAdi-L.xml, 2003. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/452.

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This work introduces an alternative paradigm that claims that the primary industry of imperial Ethiopia has been (and still is) one that has evolved around the Abyssinian national mission vis-a-vis the populations it rules from a point of conquest. Abyssinia, like Catholic Spain in the Americas, carried out a series of 'civilising' missions (Christianising), that has spanned centuries to modern times. Around a theocratic mission evolved a service type industry, the author calls theo-industry. On that basis, the work demonstrates how well-known categories of 'land-tenure', namely, the gult/goolt, the gultenya/gooltenya, the rist, the ristenya, the gabbar and related others are categories of a fiscal system of theo-industry, not of an agrarian system or agrarian industry. It is argued how these rather complex categories belong in the realm of wages and pensions of a service-type industry, not in those of agriculture. By failing to establish the functional link between agriculture and the national mission of the rulers, the scholars of Ethiopian studies have so far been unable to identify this 'elusive' but all-pervasive primary industry of Ethiopia. That in turn, the author argues, has had a rub-off effect in hindering a clear and comprehensive understanding of issues such as poverty and famine. The central topic of this work is the 'identification' of this 'elusive' industry. The study of its evolution, set in historical grounds, of its dynamics and the intricate maze of multi-natured relations is attempted. On this basis, the option of creating an independent (from theo-industry), and more importantly, renewable agricultural industry is proposed as the key to tackling chronic levels of poverty and famine in Ethiopia
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
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Books on the topic "Wealth creation"

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E. Ratner, Shanna. Wealth Creation. 1st Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429289620.

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Madden, Bartley J. Wealth Creation. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118267769.

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David, Sainsbury. Education for wealth creation. [London]?: TSB Group Plc, 1989.

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Christopher, Smallwood, and Public Policy Centre, eds. Wealth creation and jobs. London: Public Policy Centre, 1987.

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Design and wealth creation. London, U.K: P. Peregrinus on behalf of the Institution of Electrical Engineers, 1990.

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Robert, Rosenberg, and Birley Sue, eds. Franchising: Pathway to wealth creation. Harlow: Financial Times Prentice Hall, 2004.

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Stephen, Spinelli. Franchising: Pathway to wealth creation. London: Prentice Hall PTR, 2004.

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Moxey, Paul. Corporate governance and wealth creation. London: Certified Accountants Educational Trust [for the] Association of Chartered Certified Accountants, 2004.

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Munawar, Iqbal, Wilson Rodney, and Islamic Research and Training Institute, eds. Islamic perspectives on wealth creation. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005.

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Brown-Peterside, Jack. Wealth creation: A common sense approach. London: Avon, 1997.

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Book chapters on the topic "Wealth creation"

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Ratner, Shanna. "Introduction." In Wealth Creation, 1–8. 1st Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429289620-1.

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Ratner, Shanna. "Taking a Wealth Creation Approach to Scale." In Wealth Creation, 150–58. 1st Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429289620-10.

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Ratner, Shanna. "What is Wealth?" In Wealth Creation, 9–27. 1st Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429289620-2.

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Ratner, Shanna. "What is a Wealth Creation Value Chain?" In Wealth Creation, 28–47. 1st Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429289620-3.

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Ratner, Shanna. "How Do Ownership and Control Change the Game?" In Wealth Creation, 48–63. 1st Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429289620-4.

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Ratner, Shanna. "What Does It Mean to Be Demand-Driven?" In Wealth Creation, 64–83. 1st Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429289620-5.

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Ratner, Shanna. "How Do We Connect with Investors?" In Wealth Creation, 84–101. 1st Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429289620-6.

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Ratner, Shanna. "Where Does Technology Fit into Wealth Creation Value Chains?" In Wealth Creation, 102–12. 1st Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429289620-7.

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Ratner, Shanna. "Rethinking Measures of Economic Impact." In Wealth Creation, 113–37. 1st Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429289620-8.

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Ratner, Shanna. "The Critical Roles of Wealth Creation Value Chain Coordinators and Coaches." In Wealth Creation, 138–49. 1st Edition. | New York : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429289620-9.

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Conference papers on the topic "Wealth creation"

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Lloyd, M. R. "Eurostar and beyond." In IEE Colloquium on `Wealth Creation from Design'. IEE, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/ic:19950337.

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Ion, B. "Methods of total design." In IEE Colloquium on `Wealth Creation from Design'. IEE, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/ic:19950338.

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Cundy, J. "Aero engine design and design systems." In IEE Colloquium on `Wealth Creation from Design'. IEE, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/ic:19950340.

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Blessing, L. T. M. "A process-based approach to design." In IEE Colloquium on `Wealth Creation from Design'. IEE, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/ic:19950339.

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Sorrell, J. "Wealth creation from design: effectiveness, collaboration and the new Design Council." In IEE Colloquium on `Wealth Creation from Design'. IEE, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/ic:19950336.

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Vadastreanu, Adela, A. Bot, F. Farcas, and Izabella Szabo. "Innovation capability - The main factor for wealth creation." In 2015 Conference on Grid, Cloud and High-Performance Computing in Science (ROLCG). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/rolcg.2015.7367430.

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Tukur, Emmanuel I., A. Hyacinth Eneh, Arinze Uchechukwu, Daniel D. Wisdom, Migdad B. Umar, and Joshua B. Hassan. "ICT in a Digital Era a Means of Entrepreneurship and Wealth Creation for the Girl Child." In 27th iSTEAMS-ACity-IEEE International Conference. Society for Multidisciplinary and Advanced Research Techniques - Creative Research Publishers, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.22624/aims/isteams-2021/v27p18.

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Information and Communication Technology, ICT have a direct impact on raising living standards and improving the quality of life of the poor. There is no doubt that countries that are making major progress in the area of wealth creation are those in the fore-front of developing, deploying and exploiting ICT within their economy and society. Also, Entrepreneurship is increasingly being accepted as an important and innovative strategy for improving the livelihood and economic independence of young people.However, ICT is believed to help the youths develop varied skills including entrepreneurial skills. This paper examines the role of ICT and Telecommunication as an Entrepreneurship, Wealth Creation and Implication for the Girl Child in Selected Science Secondary Schools in Kebbi State. The study adopted a descriptive survey design. The sample for the study consisted of 1,200 female students from the six (6) Girls science secondary schools in Kebbi State. A Structured questionnaire was developed by the researchers to collect information from the sample. The data collected was analyzed using inferential statistics (T-test). The paper concludes that ICT has a great role in improving the standard of living. Keywords: ICT, Telecommunications, Entrepreneurship and Wealth Creation.
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Ibe, Prince Ikenna. "Extending Wealth Creation Through Effective Project Management Strategy In The Oil And Gas Industry." In Offshore Technology Conference. Offshore Technology Conference, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4043/25141-ms.

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Scheel, Carlos, and Jaime Parada. "Leveraging competitiveness and economic growth through linking innovation systems to wealth creation in emerging countries." In Technology. IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/picmet.2008.4599666.

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Ahmad Dahlan, Abdul Rahman, Jamaludin Ibrahim, Noor Sakinah Aniza Binti Zakaria, Iryani Binti Ishak, Nur Nazihah Binti Rahim, and Nur Azrin Binti Abd Malek. "eSoulKitchen program — Enhancing societal wellbeing and wealth creation for Orang Asli Community at Pos Selim, Perak." In 2014 5th International Conference on Information and Communication Technology for The Muslim World (ICT4M). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ict4m.2014.7020634.

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Reports on the topic "Wealth creation"

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Reveiz-Herault, Alejandro, and Carlos Eduardo León-Rincón. Efficient portfolio optimization in the wealth creation and maximum drawdown space. Bogotá, Colombia: Banco de la República, June 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.32468/be.520.

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Cachalia, Firoz, and Jonathan Klaaren. A South African Public Law Perspective on Digitalisation in the Health Sector. Digital Pathways at Oxford, July 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-dp-wp_2021/05.

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We explored some of the questions posed by digitalisation in an accompanying working paper focused on constitutional theory: Digitalisation, the ‘Fourth Industrial Revolution’ and the Constitutional Law of Privacy in South Africa. In that paper, we asked what legal resources are available in the South African legal system to respond to the risk and benefits posed by digitalisation. We argued that this question would be best answered by developing what we have termed a 'South African public law perspective'. In our view, while any particular legal system may often lag behind, the law constitutes an adaptive resource that can and should respond to disruptive technological change by re-examining existing concepts and creating new, more adequate conceptions. Our public law perspective reframes privacy law as both a private and a public good essential to the functioning of a constitutional democracy in the era of digitalisation. In this working paper, we take the analysis one practical step further: we use our public law perspective on digitalisation in the South African health sector. We do so because this sector is significant in its own right – public health is necessary for a healthy society – and also to further explore how and to what extent the South African constitutional framework provides resources at least roughly adequate for the challenges posed by the current 'digitalisation plus' era. The theoretical perspective we have developed is certainly relevant to digitalisation’s impact in the health sector. The social, economic and political progress that took place in the 20th century was strongly correlated with technological change of the first three industrial revolutions. The technological innovations associated with what many are terming ‘the fourth industrial revolution’ are also of undoubted utility in the form of new possibilities for enhanced productivity, business formation and wealth creation, as well as the enhanced efficacy of public action to address basic needs such as education and public health.
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Castillo Parrilla, José Antonio. The Legal Regulation of Digital Wealth: Commerce, Ownership and Inheritance of Data. Universitätsbibliothek J. C. Senckenberg, Frankfurt am Main, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21248/gups.64581.

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Digital wealth and its necessary regulation have gained prominence in recent years. The European Commission has published several documents and policy proposals relating, directly or indirectly, to the data economy. A data economy can be defined as an ecosystem of different types of market players collaborating to ensure that data is accessible and usable in order to extract value from data through, for example, creating a variety of applications with great potential to improve daily life. The value of data can increase from EUR 257 billion (1.85 of EU Gross Domestic Product (GDP)) to EUR 643 billion by 2020 (3.17% of EU GDP), according to the EU Commission. The legal implications of the increasing value of the data economy are clear; hence the need to address the challenges presented by its legal regulation.
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McKnight, Katherine, Nitya Venkateswaran, Jennifer Laird, Rita Dilig, Jessica Robles, and Talia Shalev. Parent Teacher Home Visits: An Approach to Addressing Biased Mindsets and Practices to Support Student Success. RTI Press, September 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3768/rtipress.2022.op.0077.2209.

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Research has shown educators’ implicit biases to be a key factor in creating and perpetuating disparities in students’ experiences of schooling, learning, and longer-term outcomes, including job opportunities, wealth, and health. Current school reform and transformation efforts are aimed at addressing institutionalized racism in school policies, practices, and cultural systems by implementing implicit bias training for teachers and staff. In this paper, we explain how a school home visits program, Parent Teacher Home Visits (PTHV), is a promising intervention for counteracting implicit biases and improving outcomes for families and students. The PTHV “relational” home visit model focuses on promoting mutually supportive and accountable relationships between educators and families. We present data from a study examining the experiences of 107 educators and 68 family members who participated in PTHV, showing how educators shifted their deficit assumptions about families and students. Although the PTHV model was not created to address implicit biases, we found that the key components of these home visits align with strategies that psychological research has demonstrated effectively counteracting implicit biases and reducing discriminatory behaviors.
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Hood, Sula, Brittany Campbell, and Katie Baker. Culturally Informed Community Engagement: Implications for Inclusive Science and Health Equity. RTI Press, January 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3768/rtipress.2023.op.0083.2301.

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Public health efforts seeking to reduce disparities and promote equity must be inclusive to reach their full potential. Interventions, programs, and initiatives designed to promote health equity among Communities of Color must be culturally informed. Communities and the cultural values and practices that shape them are closely intertwined, creating opportunities for a more intentional approach to community engagement. Yosso’s framework of Community Cultural Wealth (CCW) emphasizes six forms of capital that People and Communities of Color use to thrive and succeed: social, navigational, linguistic, familial, resistant, and aspirational. We anchor our approach—culturally informed community engagement—in the core tenets of CCW. This paper discusses CCW and its applicability and utility for facilitating culturally informed community engagement in health research. In our approach, asset-based frameworks intersect with community engagement, CCW, and principles of health equity. We discuss how applying CCW to conducting community-engaged research promotes health equity, inclusive science, and authentic relationships with community partners. Lastly, we provide applied examples of community-engaged interventions that leverage cultural assets in Communities of Color to reduce disparities and promote health equity.
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Ali, Ibraheem, Thea Atwood, Renata Curty, Jimmy Ghaphery, Tim McGeary, Jennifer Muilenburg, and Judy Ruttenberg. Research Data Services: Partnerships. Association of Research Libraries and Canadian Association of Research Libraries, January 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.29242/report.rdspartnerships2022.

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The Association of Research Libraries (ARL)/Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) Joint Task Force on Research Data Services (RDS) formed in 2020 with a two-fold purpose: (1) to demonstrate and commit to the roles research libraries have in stewarding research data and as part of institution-wide research support services and (2) to guide the development of resources for the ARL and CARL memberships in advancing their organizations as collaborative partners with respect to research data services in the context of FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable) data principles and the US National Academies’ Open Science by Design framework. Research libraries will be successful in meeting these objectives if they act collectively and are deeply engaged with disciplinary communities. The task force formed three working groups of data practitioners, representing a wealth of expertise, to research the institutional landscape and policy environment in both the US and Canada. This report of the ARL/CARL RDS task force’s working group on partnerships highlights library RDS programs’ work with partners and stakeholders. The report provides a set of tools for libraries to use when assessing their RDS partnerships, including assessing partnerships using a partnership life cycle, defining the continuum of possible partnerships, and creating a catalog. Not all partnerships will last the entirety of a librarian’s career, and having clear parameters for when to continue or sunset a partnership can reduce ambiguity and free up resources. Recognizing the continuum of possible partnerships can provide the framework by which librarians can understand the nature of each group. From cyclical to seasonal to sporadic, understanding the needs of a type of partnership can help libraries frame their understanding and meet a group where they are. Finally, creating a catalog of partnerships can help libraries see the landscape of the organization, as well as areas for growth. This approach also aligns with OCLC’s 2020 report on Social Interoperability in Research Support: Cross-Campus Partnerships and the University Research Enterprise, which highlights the necessity of building and stewarding partnerships. Developing and providing services in a decentralized organization relies on the ability to build trusted relationships. These tools will help libraries achieve sustainable growth that is in concert with their partners, generating robust, clearly aligned initiatives that benefit all parties, their campuses, and their communities.
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Investors’ Strategies for Wealth Creation. IEDP Ideas for Leaders, April 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.13007/361.

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