UNRISD U NITED N ATIONS R ESEARCH I NSTITUTE FOR S OCIAL D EVELOPMENT Religion, Fundamentalism and Ethnicity A Global Perspective Jeff Haynes UNRISD Discussion Paper 65 May 1995 UNRISD Discussion Papers are preliminary documents circulated in a limited number of copies to stimulate discussion and critical comment. The United Nations Research Institute for Social Development (UNRISD) is an autonomous agency engaging in multidisciplinary research on the social dimensions of contemporary
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END TERM PROJECT COMMERCIAL BANK MANAGEMENT TOPIC 5 BANK CAPITAL MANAGEMENT- CAPITAL ADEQUACY FRAMEWORK Submitted to: Submitted by: Group 5 Prof. D.N. Panigrahi Abhishek Singh (2014013) Anisha jain (2014042) Bakul Malik (2014072) Gurusha Godwani (2014100) Ketki Chaturvedi (2014133) CHAPTER 1 BANK CAPITAL MANAGEMENT- CAPITAL ADEQUACY FRAMEWORK INTRODUCTION Bank capital is often defined in tiers or categories that include shareholders' equity, retained earnings, reserves
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Financial turnaround of the Indian Railways: Good Luck or Good Management? Abstract We analyse the factors that led to the turnaround of the Indian Railways from a low performing organisation to a high performing one. Literature on public sector turnaround provides the theoretical underpinnings. Enterprise turnaround is often ascribed to managerial leadership; we found that environmental factors (good luck) contributed in a substantial way to the success of Indian Railways. The implication
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Research Proposal – Unit II Evaluating the Federal Student Loan Debt in Regards to the Status Quo of the United States Economy Geoffrey J. Wynn, MBA Columbia Southern University DBA 7240-09B-2B11-S1 Doctoral Writing and Inquiry Into Research Evaluating the Federal Student Loan Debt in Regards to the Status Quo of the United States Economy Introduction In conducting research of the concept of student loan debt it was evident that there were concerns at all fiscal levels
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the base of what our current system looks like today2. The Glass-Steagall Act (GSA) was designed to separate investment and commercial banking activities3. The Act had many detractors, with many claiming it to be an over-reaction to the financial crisis in the 1930s. It was repealed in 1999 with the establishment of the Financial Modernization Act (also known as the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act), which “repealed all
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1.) In the featured article “The Precautionary Principle as a Basis for Decision Making”, the author, Cass R. Sunstein provides his view on the practicality of the Precautionary Principle and the impact it could have on major policies across the world. The basic underlying principle of the Precautionary principle is that “it is better to be safe than sorry”. The principle can be adopted in many scenarios and it different aspects. An example of the strong application of the precautionary principle
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National Institute of Securities Markets Assessment of Long Term Performance of Credit Rating Agencies in India July 2009 5th Floor, Plot No.82, Sector 17, Vashi, Navi Mumbai 400 705 1 Contents Terms of Reference Executive Summary Acknowledgements CRAs: Relevance and Perspective Raters and Ratings: Evolution and the Current State of the Art Critical Evaluation of Ratings Rating Transition and Default Study Emerging Trends and Alternate Approaches Conclusions and Recommendations References
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............................. 3 STRUCTURES OF HEDGE FUNDS ........................................................................................................................................ 6 ROLE OF PRIME BROKERS ................................................................................................................................................... 9 FEE STRUCTURES OF HEDGE FUNDS ......................
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Current Financial Crisis and its Implications for Regulation Anil Kashyap (University of Chicago) Raghuram Rajan (University of Chicago) Jeremy Stein (Harvard University) Where did the current financial crisis come from? Who or what is to blame? How will it be resolved? How do we undertake reforms for the future? These are the questions this paper will seek to answer. The analysis will have three parts. The first is a rough and ready sketch of the global roots of this crisis. Second, we will
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7 11 16 19 21 Point of view Point of view • Cost management is a key issue today and for the foreseeable future – The market is experiencing a severe liquidity crunch and the explosion of a global asset bubble well beyond sub-prime. At the root of this crisis is not only asset values, but the amount of capital in the financial system today versus the size and liquidity of the balance sheets (and off-balance sheet commitments) of financial institutions. This situation is not likely to reverse
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