I
Ibrahim Ndoma
Researcher at University of Malaya
Publications - 23
Citations - 180
Ibrahim Ndoma is an academic researcher from University of Malaya. The author has contributed to research in topics: Economic impact analysis & Opposition (politics). The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 23 publications receiving 176 citations.
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How Rich Countries Got Rich … and Why Poor Countries Stay Poor
TL;DR: The wealth and poverty of nations has long been accepted as a normal phenomenon in economic development as discussed by the authors, however, questions have been ceaseless with respect to whether this is the case.
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Civil Society Organizations in Opposition to Healthcare Commercialization: Protecting Access for the Poor and Middle Class in Malaysia:
TL;DR: Against the odds, the evidence suggests that a significant presence of CSOs has emerged to challenge healthcare commercialization in Malaysia.
Posted Content
How Crime Affects Economic Performance: The Case of Guatemala
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors set forth a model based on the economics of crime monitoring model (ECM-Model) to evaluate the impact of crime on economic performance in a small developing country.
Journal ArticleDOI
How crime affects economic performance: The case of Guatemala
TL;DR: This paper used the economics of crime monitoring model, a new economic instrument that could be used to evaluate the impact of crime on economic performance, and demonstrated the applicability of the model from where analyses provided a coherent evaluation of the degree to which crime can affect a country's economic performance.
Posted Content
Virtual Civil Society: Malaysia's 2008 General Elections Revisited
Ibrahim Ndoma,Makmor Bin Tumin +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined how the internet contributed to the remarkable political change never experienced in the history of this country, where the ruling coalition, Barisan Nasional lost its two-thirds parliamentary majority seats it had enjoyed since 1969, while the opposition that capitalized on the internet in the run up to the elections returned to full political limelight.