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Collins G. Ntim

Researcher at University of Southampton

Publications -  175
Citations -  7001

Collins G. Ntim is an academic researcher from University of Southampton. The author has contributed to research in topics: Corporate governance & Stakeholder. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 161 publications receiving 4557 citations. Previous affiliations of Collins G. Ntim include University of Huddersfield & University of Glasgow.

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Do peer firms influence innovation

TL;DR: In this paper, a large sample of 4,545 US firms over the period 1968-2018 was used to find robust and significant positive peer effects on corporate innovation and showed that adopting peers' innovation policies is associated with improvements in long-term innovation outputs and product market performance.
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Individual’s financial investment decision-making in reward-based crowdfunding: evidence from China

TL;DR: Li et al. as discussed by the authors explored the antecedents of backers' decision to invest in projects from eight categories on a reward-based crowdfunding platform in China and found that feedback score, social capital, and project quality were key motivating factors in investment decision and subsequently, project success or failure.
Posted Content

Corporate Ownership and Market Valuation in South Africa: Uncovering the Effects of Shareholdings by Different Groups of Corporate Insiders and Outsiders

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the effect of shareholdings by different groups of corporate officers (insiders and outsiders) and market valuation in South Africa and found that total ownership by all corporate officers has a positive effect on market valuation.
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Firm- and country-level antecedents of corporate governance compliance and disclosure in MENA countries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the level of compliance with, and disclosure of, corporate governance best practice recommendations and the firm- and country-level factors that can explain discernible differences in the compliance with and disclosure in a number of Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) countries.
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Corporate Board Committees and Corporate Outcomes: An International Systematic Literature Review and Agenda for Future Research

TL;DR: This article reviewed the current body of international accounting literature regarding advisory/monitoring committees and corporate outcomes, synthesizing, appraising and extending current knowledge on the theoretical (i.e., economic, accounting/corporate governance, sociological and socio-psychological) perspectives and empirical evidence of the observable and less visible attributes at both the individual and committee levels.