...TAKEN Its May 5th 5:00 a.m and the pesky alarm rings away as it does every day, a groggy hand searches desperately for the snooze button. Danny reluctantly climbs out of bed and gets ready for his big corporate job. This Thursday start out like any other normal day for the CEO of Wade’s Enterprise, shower, shave, brush teeth, slide into one of his assortment of Armani suits, kiss his amazingly gorgeous wife goodbye, grab the keys, and speed off in his Bentley. Danny has it all, living the life everybody envies, married to the girl every one drools over as they gaze upon the billboards and magazines, but this day wasn’t going to be like all the rest. The soothing sound of elevator music dances about the cramped 8 by 8 elevator as he rises reaching the 55th floor, ding, the doors swing open and he struts to his office. The day still seems quite ordinary to the 25 year old as he glances out at the breath taking view of the shimmering panes of glass laced upon the towering buildings strewn about the city. Little does he know that down below, arriving at his building, is five vans full of five organized teams with a carefully plotted attack. Five men casually walk into the building and ask for their appointments made with the vice president. One man drops his quietly sets his suitcase down beside the security desk. Up they go into VP Wilson’s office. “Are you ready?” Wilson inquires. The men shake their heads and he sends them to the roof. They tear off their suits revealing...
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...Entrepreneurs with Disability in Uganda By Rebecca Namatovu1, Samuel Dawa, Fiona Mulira and Celestine Katongole Makerere University Business School Kampala, Uganda ICBE-RF Research Report No. 31/12 Investment Climate and Business Environment Research Fund (ICBE-RF) www.trustafrica.org/icbe Dakar, July 2012 1 Contact: rybekaz@yahoo.com This research was supported by a grant from the Investment Climate and Business Environment (ICBE) Research Fund, a collaborative initiative of TrustAfrica and IDRC. It’s a working paper circulated for discussion and comments. The findings and recommendations are those of the author(s), and do not necessarily reflect the views of the ICBE-RF Secretariat, TrustAfrica or IDRC Executive Summary This report addresses entrepreneurship activity among Persons with Disability in Uganda and their potential to contribute to economic development. Data was collected from Entrepreneurs with Disabilities (EWDs) in Kampala using mixed methods research. In the study we sought to answer questions about the environment, business activities EWDs are involved in, attitudes towards business, their motivations, challenges and growth aspirations. Key findings were that the majority of the EWDs are involved in retail trade. Most of them had started their own businesses using their own savings and had previously closed a business because it wasn’t profitable. Most of their businesses weren’t registered because they said they didn’t need to yet the majority of those...
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...Journal of Accounting and Economics 55 (2013) 206–224 Contents lists available at SciVerse ScienceDirect Journal of Accounting and Economics journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jae Cost of capital and earnings transparency$ Mary E. Barth a,n, Yaniv Konchitchki b, Wayne R. Landsman c a Graduate School of Business, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA Haas School of Business, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA c Kenan-Flagler Business School, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA b a r t i c l e in f o abstract Article history: Received 22 December 2008 Received in revised form 19 November 2012 Accepted 23 January 2013 Available online 1 February 2013 We provide evidence that firms with more transparent earnings enjoy a lower cost of capital. We base our earnings transparency measure on the extent to which earnings and change in earnings covary contemporaneously with returns. We find a significant negative relation between our transparency measure and subsequent excess and portfolio mean returns, and expected cost of capital, even after controlling for previously documented determinants of cost of capital. & 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. JEL classification: D8 G12 M4 M41 Keywords: Cost of capital Earnings transparency 1. Introduction This study provides evidence that firms with more transparent earnings enjoy a lower cost of capital. Firms with more transparent earnings are those whose earnings...
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...Doc 73Q019 Convention on International Civil Aviation Iyaviationcivile intern Convenio sobre Aviacion Civil lnterna rpa~aa~ca ofi H UHH sgs&gd@& v"l'ff-y#F&&,'Y%LL ?r International Civil Aviation Organization Organisation de I'aviation civile internationale Organization de Aviacion Civil lnternacional MeWyHapo~Hag P ~ ~ H H ~ ~ U M a Iw a ~ c ~ o k O rpF asuaqm Doc 730019 Convention on International Civil Aviation Convention relative a Iyaviationcivile internationale Convenio sobre Aviacion Civil lnternacional This document supersedes Doc 730018. Le present document annule et remplace le Doc 730018. Este documento remplaza el Doc 730018. H~CTOFII~(M~ AOKyMeHT 3aMeHFleT DOC 730018. Ninth Edition - Neuvieme edition - Novena edicion - klwatine Aeemoe - 2006 International Civil Aviation Organization Organisation de I'aviation civile internationale Organization de Aviacion Civil lnternacional Me>y~ly~apo~HasI OPraHH3a4HFI ~ P ~ > K C ~ ~ HaBHauHH CKO~ FOREWORD This document contains the text of the Convention on International Civil Aviation, signed at Chicago on 7 December 1944 (hereinafter referred to as the "Convention"), in the English, French, Russian and Spanish languages. Each of these texts is equally authentic. The English text is the text adopted and signed at Chicago on 7 December 1944, amended as indicated below. The French and Spanish texts are the texts adopted by and annexed to the Protocol on the Authentic Trilingual Text of...
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...Acknowledgments ix Acknowledgments This book owes a great deal to the mental energy of several generations of scholars. As an undergraduate at the University of Cape Town, Francis Wilson made me aware of the importance of migrant labour and Robin Hallett inspired me, and a generation of students, to study the African past. At the School of Oriental and African Studies in London I was fortunate enough to have David Birmingham as a thesis supervisor. I hope that some of his knowledge and understanding of Lusophone Africa has found its way into this book. I owe an equal debt to Shula Marks who, over the years, has provided me with criticism and inspiration. In the United States I learnt a great deal from ]eanne Penvenne, Marcia Wright and, especially, Leroy Vail. In Switzerland I benefitted from the friendship and assistance of Laurent Monier of the IUED in Geneva, Francois Iecquier of the University of Lausanne and Mariette Ouwerhand of the dépurtement évangélrlyue (the former Swiss Mission). In South Africa, Patricia Davison of the South African Museum introduced me to material culture and made me aware of the richness of difference; the late Monica Wilson taught me the fundamentals of anthropology and Andrew Spiegel and Robert Thornton struggled to keep me abreast of changes in the discipline; Sue Newton-King and Nigel Penn brought shafts of light from the eighteenthcentury to bear on early industrialism. Charles van Onselen laid a major part of the intellectual foundations on...
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