...status with Danish citizens on this form. You must satisfy one of the conditions to be granted equal status. Read about the conditions: • • www.su.dk > SU > English > SU as a foreign citizen > Equal status according to Danish rules www.su.dk > SU > English > SU as a foreign citizen > Equal status according to EU law 1 First name To be completed by the educational establishment Institution code Field of study code Last name Received by educational establishment Day Month Year 2 Danish civil reg. no. (CPR) _ Address/stamp of educational establishment 3 Nationality Nationality, state name of country or ”stateless” .................... 4 Residence permit/work permit Do you have a residence permit from the Danish Immigration Service? .................................................................................. If Yes, you must enclose a copy of all permits you have received since you came to Denmark Yes No Do you have a work permit from the Danish Immigration Service? .................................................................................. If Yes, you must enclose a copy of all permits you have received since you came to Denmark. Do you have a registration certificate proving that you are an EU/EEA citizen from the State Administration? ....................... If Yes, you must enclose a copy of your registration certificate Yes No Yes No 5 Southern Schleswig Do you belong to the Danish minority in Southern...
Words: 1218 - Pages: 5
...Generation Fucked Up – Danish Drinking Culture. Alcohol consumption is a large part of many cultures, from celebrations at coming-of-age ceremonies to wishing good health on one’s friends. Denmark is a country which does not sway from this notion in the slightest. Denmark, a part of the notoriously-drunk Scandinavian countries, is facing a crisis: Generation Fucked Up. Generation Fucked Up refers to the Danish adolescents, who, heavy with a culture of binge drinking, are spiralling out of control. Who is responsible? Why is it so? And what can we do to stop it. Binge drinking is a concept that is concerning parents in not only Scandinavia, but worldwide. Binge drinking is when people, often young people, go out and consume alcohol at alarmingly high levels, often enough to be hospitalised. This is most prevalent in teenagers. In most parts of the world, it is forbidden to consume alcohol at all until ages 18-21. But in Scandinavian countries, this is not the case. The students of the Norwegian schools are given venues within their institution to consume alcohol. The Swedish teens are sufferers of the Swedish ‘4-day-hangover’ after every weekend and public holiday. And Denmark tops them off with not only the most lax access to alcohol for teenagers, but the highest alcohol consumption, for teenagers, in the world. According to the World Health Organization, the Danish teens are drinking 11.3L of pure alcohol every year. The Danish adults, however, are not as severe. Whilst...
Words: 1153 - Pages: 5
...1916) is a Danish American furniture designer. An exemplar of MidCentury modern design, Risom was one of the first designers to introduce Scandinavian design in the United States.[1] Contents Jens Risom Born 8 May 1916 Copenhagen, Denmark Nationality Danish Alma mater The School of Arts and Crafts, Copenhagen Occupation Industrial designer 1 Biography 2 Honors 3 Modern revival 4 References 5 External links Biography Jens Risom was born in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 8 May 1916. His father was a prominent architect, Sven Risom, a member of the school of Nordic Classicism. Jens Risom was trained as a designer at the Copenhagen School of Industrial Arts and Design (Kunsthåndværkerskolen), where he studied under Ole Wanscher and Kaare Klint. He was classmates with Hans Wegner and Børge Mogensen.[2] Risom then spent two years at Niels Brock Copenhagen Business College, before beginning work as a furniture developer and interior designer with the architectural firm of Ernst Kuhn. He later relocated to Stockholm, taking a job with a small architectural firm. From there he joined the design department of Nordiska Kompaniet and gained such a reputation that he was introduced to Alvar Aalto and Bruno Mathsson. In 1939, Risom traveled to New York City to study American design. He found it difficult to find work as a furniture designer in New York, however, and was forced to accept a number of textile designs that ultimately secured him freelance work with designer Dan Cooper...
Words: 918 - Pages: 4
...model 25 Conclusion 26 Part IV 27 Targeting, penetration and expansion 27 Part V 29 Design specification 29 V.I Development strategy 29 V.III. Design and content 30 V.IV. Technology 32 Conclusion 33 Budget 35 Potential upsides 37 Risks 37 Part VII 39 Advantages, disadvantages, challenges 39 Part IX 42 Conclusion 42 Bibliography 44 Part I Introduction I.I Background During the last years the situation at the Danish educational market has changed. Some of the educational institutions have experienced the growth in the quantity of foreigners having a wish to study in Denmark. Students coming from different parts of the world have become a significant part of Danish Educational system. Lots of programmes in English were created and proposed to the foreign students in order to attract their attention. Six years ago the Market Economist programme came to some of the educational institutions all over Denmark. Two years duration has given the opportunity to Danish companies to have specialists with a great potential and fresh way of...
Words: 10599 - Pages: 43
...transmittal without its written permission. Reproduction of this material is not covered under authorization by any reproduction rights organization. To order copies or request permission to reproduce materials, contact Ivey Publishing, Ivey Management Services, c/o Richard Ivey School of Business, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada, N6A 3K7; phone (519) 661-3208; fax (519) 661-3882; e-mail cases@ivey.uwo.ca. Copyright © 2008, Ivey Management Services Educational material supplied by The Case Centre Copyright encoded A76HM-JUJ9K-PJMN9I Order reference F240103 Version: (A) 2008-06-24 INTRODUCTION Director Allan Rasmussen took a good deal of pride in the achievements of Coloplast A/S1 (Coloplast) in Tatabánya, Hungary. In consecutive quarters in 2004, the plant had outperformed the company’s longer established Danish production units in quality levels (see Exhibit 1). Rasmussen had been the Tatabánya plant’s manager, its first, since 2001. Just three and a half years later, he was responsible for the daily management of a plant with a head count of 550 and production valued at 1.5 billion Danish kroner (DKK). In 2005, he resumed his position as director of Coloplast’s Danish subsidiary and returned to Denmark. With the Hungarian operation, Coloplast had learned important lessons in designing and implementing a relocation process, and in managing the communication involved. Although Coloplast had some minor production facilities outside of Denmark,...
Words: 6632 - Pages: 27
...become happy. Whatever country or society people live in, they all have the same deep desire: to become happy. Happiness may appear to be a subjective and intangible quality that is hard to define and harder to measure. However, happiness remains one of the most meaningful and deeply felt life experiences and has become an important and growing field to study. The first ‘World Happiness Report’ commissioned for the UN conference on happiness was held in April 2012, and drew international attention as the first survey of the state of global happiness (Denmark.dk & WorldHappinessReport2013). Denmark has taken the top spot. Even though the weather can be dreary and in winter it’s dark most of the day, leaving some Danes as depressed, the Danish people is considered to be the world’s happiest. How come? To figure out why Denmark is the happiest country on earth we have to look closer into the definition of happiness and how to measure it. The idea that individuals have happiness as their ultimate goal in life is not undisputed. According to Michael Argyle, happiness is not a static goal that individuals are able to attain by aspiring it. Rather, happiness is a by-product of a “good life” producing satisfaction over the long run. Therefore happiness can be seen as the overall contentment with life, which is normally called “life satisfaction”. Next, happiness is the quality of life achieved by developing and fulfilling one’s potential, which has been called eudemonia or “the...
Words: 1967 - Pages: 8
...The concept of „S.O.S. Notebook “is producing A5 sized notebooks with formulas and rules of different subjects for high school students. There would be 10 different kinds of notebooks with different subjects like physics, mathematics, chemistry, Danish, German, English, literature, biology, history and geography. Notebooks would also contain games (Sudoku, crosswords, and drawings), advertisements from student organizations and companies, information about events and other relevant information for students. Finance of the notebooks would come from advertisements that the notebooks consist and the Notebooks will be handed to students for free to use. Background information Name: „S.O.S. Notebook“ Website: SOSnotebook.com Established: 17.03.2014 Phone: +45 91267497 E-mail: ottoppimine@gmail.com The Executive Board members: Equity: 61000 DKK Owners, their share of the capital: The company's field of activity: Education The company's area of operation: Denmark Executive summary This business plan provides an overview of our business concept about educational studying tool named „ S.O.S. Notebook“. There would be 10 different kinds of notebooks with different subjects like physics, mathematics, chemistry, Danish, German, English, literature, biology, history and geography. Notebooks would also include games (Sudoku, crosswords), advertisements from student organizations and companies, information about events and other relevant information for...
Words: 3722 - Pages: 15
...have often debated whether or not students should be paid to attend school. Rick Noack author of Why Danish students are paid to go to college, and Nikhil Swaminathan author of Should We Pay Kids to Go to School? argue that students should be financed to attend school. Students should be paid to go to school because it teaches students to become responsible adults, student’s academic performance increases, and attendance in schools increases. Students should be paid to attend school because this payment encourages students to behave as responsible adults. Paying students allows them to learn how to save and spend money carefully. One could argue that the youth of today are not old enough to responsibly manage money and would spend it recklessly. However, Denmark’s students are paid to go to school, and student Astrid Winter Fischer refutes “Some Danish think that we spend money we receive in bars or clubs, but most students understand what is at...
Words: 648 - Pages: 3
...Tsunami Evaluation Coalition (TEC) The International Community’s Funding of the Tsunami Emergency and Relief NGO Funding Denmark Rie Andersen Marina Buch Kristensen June 2006 TABLE OF CONTENTS ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS .......................................................................... II DEFINITIONS .................................................................................................................. III INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................ 1 METHODOLOGY ...............................................................................................................3 Limitations with respect to definitions and formats...................................................... 3 GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF NGO CONTEXT IN DENMARK ............................................4 Selection of NGOs ...................................................................................................................... 5 GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF BUDGET SOURCES AND ALLOCATIONS ................................6 Allocation Sectors ....................................................................................................................... 7 Allocation Country....................................................................................................................... 8 Disbursements.......................................................................
Words: 8775 - Pages: 36
...ut-Tahrir are outlined and the Danish and British sections of the group are compared in terms of agendas, members and image. Furthermore, a comparison between the Danish section of Hizb ut-Tahrir and another and more recent Danish Muslim organization called Muslimer i Dialog is made. In the article, it is argued that there are distinctive differences between the national sections of Hizb ut-Tahrir which indicate that the group is not entirely immune to national agendas (media, political or otherwise). Based on the comparison between the Danish Hizb ut-Tahrir and Muslimer i Dialog, it is also argued that a new understanding of the relation between religious, ethnic and national identity is evolving. Groups such as Hizb ut-Tahrir and Muslimer i Dialog seem to thrive and recruit new members on a combination of a transnational, deterritorialized understanding of the Muslim religious community and reterritorialized agendas. Introduction In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington D.C. in September 2001, Hizb ut-Tahrir started making headlines in Denmark. In the media, the group was seen as a local, Danish version of an al-Qaeda cell, and with its public meetings and demonstrations in the streets of Copenhagen in the Autumn of 2001, Hizb ut-Tahrir seemed proud to let its black flag be the target of journalists’ and politicians’ speculations and accusations. Since then, Hizb ut-Tahrir has been debated regularly within and outside the Danish Muslim...
Words: 4604 - Pages: 19
...Marts, 2011 Line-item budgeting and film production – Exploring some benefits of constraints on creativity and aesthetic value creation Thomas Frandsen, Ivar Friis, and Allan Hansen*) Solbjerg Plads 3 2000 Frederiksberg Copenhagen Business School Denmark *) Corresponding author: ah.om@cbs.dk Early work – Please do not quote without the permission from the authors Paper to be presented at the workshop on Creativity and Control Sponsored by Accounting Organizations and Society 4–5 April 2011, Barcelona, Spain Abstract: This paper explores the role of budgeting in the Danish film industry and seeks to illustrate the positive effects a line-budget might have on the creativity and innovativeness in film production. In our analysis we provide illustrative examples of the enabling and facilitating role of budget constraints on film production from the Danish film industry in general as well as from a case study of the process of making the Danish film “The Island of Lost Souls” in particular. We draw on Elster (2000)’s constraint theory and suggest that the constraints imposed on agents by line-item budgeting under some circumstances lead to situations where ‘less is more’ as line-item budgeting might be used to focus creative behavior as well as pre-commit the agent against passion and time inconsistency. 1 I. Introduction The dysfunctional consequences of constraints imposed by budgets on agents dealing with uncertain, complex or dynamic organizational...
Words: 17084 - Pages: 69
...nancing opera ations,” which provided liq h quidity to the Eurozone, ju days befor Lars Løkke took e ust re e office. Denmark was a member of the Europ w r pean Union but had retain its own cu ned urrency, the k krone. Likew wise, plans for rmulated a year ago to ex xpand the Dan nish workforc by looseni labor rule and ce ing es reduc cing welfare benefits had b b become unpop pular as unem mployment in ncreased. An nders Fogh Rasmussen had left a mixed legacy. Denm d d mark benefite from a balanced govern ed nment budge little publi debt, and lo unemploy et, ic ow yment. But its internationa reputation had suffered from s al d contro oversies over immigration. As the lo r ongest ruling Liberal Part (Venstre) prime minist in g ty ter mode Danish hi ern istory, Ander Fogh had led a centerrs -right coalitio governme that developed on ent strict immigration policies. The policies m ese made it...
Words: 13312 - Pages: 54
...Nutrition education is a major environmental influence on the behaviors, physical and mental growth of in a child’s life. Before a child starts school, during the baby years, the food habits can have a major impact on choices that are made later on in life. For example, starting a baby on vegetables first rather then fruits, will lead the child to make a better nutritional choice when they approach the salad bar in first grade. “Studies support that good nutrition contributes to improving the wellbeing of children and their potential learning ability, thus contributing to better school performance.” (Rodrigo). Children are getting morbidly obese, and their behavior has changed for the worse. If the children are learning healthy eating habits with encouragement to make healthy eating choices, then obesity and chronic disease will decrease. These children can have the reduce impact of chronic diseases in adulthood. Eating healthy will help reduce stress and may even avoid smoking if they have encouragement on staying active. “Nutrition education is a key element to promoting lifelong healthy eating and exercise behaviors and should start from the early stages of life.” (Rodrigo). If health educators and teachers have a good sense of direction on teaching children about nutrition, then it is likely that these issues will improve. School should have a mandatory nutrition – based education in their curriculum, especially the younger students because they must learn about what they...
Words: 1550 - Pages: 7
...SEMESTER PROJECT BY Afungsa Candy Noumvi 7TH SEMESTER (2012/2013) AALBORG UNIVERSITY COPENHAGEN RESEARCH QUESTION Do Danish families Prefer traveling more abroad or within Denmark for holidays ? As a National Destination Management Organisation- VisitDenmark, what is the organization doing to stimulate Danish families to participate more in domestic tourism? * The theme of our research is Motivation. What motivates Danish families in choosing their holiday destinations? Do they mostly go abroad or not? And why? * Problem area is improving the tourism sector of Denmark to attract local Danish families. Here we will be analyzing the campaign VisitDenmark to see what the organization has been doing so far to encourage domestic tourism. TABLE OF CONTENT * chapter one……………………………………………………… …..Page 4 -Introduction (some background on tourism in Denmark)………………………4 -Problem formulation/ hypothesis -Research objective (what do we want to achieve in this research……………………………………………………………5 - Delimitation………………………………………………………………..........6 * chapter two……………………………………………………………………….7 - History of leisure tourism …………………………………………………......7-8 - Definition of theory…………………………………………………………..9-12 - Analysis of the Campaign, how does VisitDenmark promote domestic tourism……………………………………………………………………… 13-19 - Danish outbound tourism…………………………………………………...20-22 * chapter three………………………………………………………………….....23 - Research methodology……………………………………………………...
Words: 11483 - Pages: 46
...business settings (Hofstede, 1997, p.4). International managers, being capable of managing this challenge, possess a set of intercultural competencies, allowing them to turn cultural diversity into a competitive advantage (Browaeys and Price, 2008, p.215). This information pack provides substantial information about Danish and Brazilian business practices. The subsequent analysis is based upon the theories of the Dutch anthropologists Geert Hofstede and Fons Trompenaars. In particular, Hofstede’s “Uncertainty Avoidance” and Trompenaars’ “Ascription vs. Achievement” have been applied. 2. Theoretical Background Hofstede and Trompenaar are proponents of the ‘etic’ approach. They hold that culture is linked to people’s values. Furthermore they argue that these values can be transferred into universal cultural characteristics. Underpinned by empirical and experimental evidence, both anthropologists developed their set of bi-polar dimensions. According to Browaeys and Price (2008, p.92) these dimensions serve to differentiate national cultures. Moreover they provide implications on the impact of culture in business and management. 2.1. Geert Hofstede Hofstede’s work is based on research conducted at the multinational computing company IBM. Surveys were conducted amongst 116.000...
Words: 2971 - Pages: 12