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book (3)


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English (3)


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2017 (3)

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Book
Labor Policy and Digital Technology Use : Indicative Evidence from Cross-Country Correlations
Authors: ---
Year: 2017 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank,

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Abstract

This paper exploits variation in country-level indicators drawn from published data to analyze the relationship between labor regulation and the use of digital technology. The analysis shows a statistically and economically significant association between digital technology use by firms and a country's statutory minimum wage and employment protection regulations. The results are robust to the inclusion of controls for level of development, economic stability, available infrastructure, and trade openness. To ensure the broadest country coverage, the paper develops new indexes of employment protection, using the World Bank's Doing Business indicators, which allow several aspects of labor market regulation-such as restrictions on hours and hiring, dismissal procedures, and severance costs-to be analyzed separately.


Book
Digital democracy in a globalized world
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ISBN: 1785363964 Year: 2017 Publisher: Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar Publishing,

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Book
The Art of Connection : Risk, Mobility, and the Crafting of Transparency in Coastal Kenya
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ISBN: 9780520966239 0520966236 9780520292871 0520292871 9780520292895 0520292898 Year: 2017 Publisher: Berkeley, CA : University of California Press,

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The Art of Connection narrates the individual stories of artisans and traders of Kenyan arts and crafts as they overcome the loss of physical access to roadside market space by turning to new digital technologies to make their businesses more mobile and integrated into the global economy. Bringing together the studies of globalization, development, art, and communication, the book illuminates the lived experiences of informal economies and shows how traders and small enterprises balance new risks with the mobility afforded by digital technologies. An array of ethnic and generational politics have led to market burnings and witchcraft accusations as Kenya's crafts industry struggles to adapt to its new connection to the global economy. To mediate the resulting crisis of trust, the Fair Trade sticker and other NGO aesthetics continue to successfully represent a transparent, ethical, and trusting relationship between buyer and producer. Dillon Mahoney shows that by balancing revelation and obfuscation-what is revealed and what is not-Kenyan art traders make their own roles as intermediaries and the exploitative realities of the global economy invisible.

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