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Emerging Artificial Intelligence Methods for Predicting SME Growth: Opportunities and Challenges
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: genèse et fonction sociale d’un discours dans la France des années 1980
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Green bonds and certification: is getting certified always optimal?
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Toiling from the homespace, longing for the workplace : gendered workplace imaginaries in an (in)flexible work scenario
International audienceFlexible work arrangements (FWAs) promise both emancipation and loss: freedom from workplace constraints also strips away protective work-life boundaries. To date, very little is understood about how flexible work shapes workplace imaginaries. Drawing on a sample of 44 managers from a Middle Eastern firm, we explore their evolving internal representations of the workplace and domestic space under (in)flexible conditions. Findings suggest that (in)flexible work arrangements fashion and amplify subjective, organizational, and gender-specific workplace imaginaries. While both genders in this study imagined the workplace as a site of ‘salvation,’ it became a haven from domestic labor for the women, while for the men it provided a crucial extension of individual managerial identity. Such distinctions provide glimpses into how (in)flexible scenarios influence and shape neoliberal workplace imaginaries that may sustain gendered career trajectories and the perpetuation of FWAs as a misleading panacea for individual freedom and happiness in the workplace.<br /
People on the tweets : Online collective identity narratives and temporality in the #LebaneseRevolution
International audienceOur study examines collective identity development in the early stages of a social movement as it narratively unfolded on Twitter during the 2019 October revolution in Lebanon. Based on a sample extraction of Twitter content from the first month of the revolution and using both thematic and narrative analyses, our study uncovers an entangled temporality where past, present and future strands of narrative time intervene in online identity narratives. Disentangling these digital narratives enabled us to identify three temporal-thematic categories that outline the contours of the emergent online identity: a revisited narrative past evoking collective nostalgia, a disruptive narrative present creating an urgent “presence in the now,” and a prefigurative narrative future that allows online members to collectively re-imagine and co-create their collective selfhood. Taken together, these findings support better understandings of collective identity emergence in digitally-mediated social movements in three different ways. First, building on the organizational literature on temporality in collective identity formation, we highlight how temporal narratives online support and accelerate a nascent collective identity through their immediacy and global reach. Second, by approaching narrated time theoretically and not chronologically, we address recent calls that challenge linear temporal narratives. We highlight how entangled temporality contributes to the emergence of a social movement’s online collective identity. Ultimately, from a methodological perspective, we offer an approach for “disentangling” digital temporality and propose (ante)narrative theory as a useful interpretive lens for better apprehending identity-relevant social media content.<br /
Modern post-Keynesian approaches: continuities and ruptures with monetary circuit theory
International audienceStock-flow-consistent models (SFC) and modern monetary theory (MMT) are growing in popularity. Both are part of post-Keynesian theory and provide it with a modeling tool for the former and political proposals for the latter. However, these new modern post-Keynesian approaches share features with monetary circuit theory: their accounting framework, the hierarchy of agents and economic flows, and the importance of the Keynes’s finance motive. This article examined the fundamental elements of these new approaches to establish their links with monetary circuit theory
Organization as time
International audienceFrom the perspectives of process philosophy and some phenomenologies, time and temporality can be described as organization and organizing process. In this edited book, contributors discuss the implications of this idea for Management & Organization Studies. In particular, they analyze how power and the politics of organizing can be re-visited by means of a metaphysics of time as organization. This results in a generative area of confluence for process and critical scholars who can build an interesting common agora around this discussion
The Gulf’s shifting geoeconomy and China’s structural power: From the petrodollar to the petroyuan?
International audienceOil trade-related monetary arrangements have far-reaching impacts on the international monetary system and the global financial circuit. Current arrangements were set in the mid-1970s through the establishment of the petrodollar regime. This article empirically assesses the effective and potential impacts of the change in the integration pattern of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries in the global economy on the two pillars of the petrodollar: recycling oil export revenue into the US economy and invoicing oil exclusively in dollars. The results show that the effectiveness of the petrodollar regime has been significantly reduced as China has overtaken the United States as the largest destination for the recycling of the oil receipts from the GCC through the trade channel. This article investigates the possible further expansion of oil settlements in the renminbi (RMB), based on China–GCC relations, following China’s release of the petroyuan contracts. The structure and the weight of their trade and investment relations constitute solid grounds to settle bilateral oil trade in RMBs. Moreover, China’s targeted and regulated financial opening provides operating channels for overseas holders of RMBs to invest in China’s relatively attractive assets. To better discern the GCC’s inclination to change their oil-invoicing arrangements, this article analyses their participation in the RMB internationalization channel