Institution
BI Norwegian Business School
Education•Oslo, Norway•
About: BI Norwegian Business School is a education organization based out in Oslo, Norway. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Corporate governance & Computer science. The organization has 525 authors who have published 2766 publications receiving 55406 citations. The organization is also known as: Handelshøyskolen BI.
Topics: Corporate governance, Computer science, Context (language use), Personality, Project management
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors suggest that if all nations reduce their GHG emissions per unit of GDP by 5% per year, the global GHG emission will be 50% lower in 2050 than in 2010, as long as the global economy continues to grow at its historical rate of 3.5%.
58 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate how audit quality and audit pricing vary with audit firm and office size, using disciplinary sanctions issued against auditors not compliant with auditors' policies.
Abstract: Using Swedish data, we investigate how audit quality and audit pricing vary with audit firm and office size. In contrast to prior studies, we use disciplinary sanctions issued against auditors not ...
58 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an accepted, refereed manuscript to the article, which is also available from www.ssrn.com and can be used as a reference.
58 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that project management may be seen from different perspectives, and that every project has to decide at the outset which project management perspective shall rule the work of the project.
58 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that small shifts in representation can affect policy in proportional election systems, and that a larger left-wing party leads to more property taxation, higher child care spending, and less elderly care spending.
Abstract: We show that small shifts in representation can affect policy in proportional election systems. Using data from Norway, we find that a larger left-wing party leads to more property taxation, higher child care spending, and less elderly care spending, while local public goods appear to be a non-partisan issue. These effects are partly due to shifts in bloc majorities, and partly due to changes in the left-right position of the council, keeping the majority constant. The estimates on spending allocations are rather imprecise, but they are consistent with evidence on politicians’ fiscal preferences and patterns in media attention.
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57 citations
Authors
Showing all 556 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Adrian Furnham | 131 | 1490 | 74648 |
Peter C. Verhoef | 64 | 192 | 23390 |
Mark Brown | 62 | 691 | 21457 |
Steven Ongena | 59 | 401 | 14490 |
Fabio Canova | 57 | 213 | 13248 |
Håkan Håkansson | 53 | 152 | 23941 |
Henrich R. Greve | 52 | 138 | 16423 |
Ralf Müller | 50 | 406 | 11195 |
Ole-Kristian Hope | 50 | 147 | 9511 |
Anders Gustafsson | 47 | 137 | 12013 |
Björn Asheim | 45 | 149 | 12862 |
Morten Huse | 45 | 119 | 9896 |
Koen Pauwels | 42 | 118 | 10024 |
Carlos Velasco | 42 | 220 | 6186 |
Hans Georg Gemünden | 41 | 174 | 7523 |