Institution
HEC Montréal
Education•Montreal, Quebec, Canada•
About: HEC Montréal is a education organization based out in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Context (language use) & Vehicle routing problem. The organization has 1221 authors who have published 5708 publications receiving 196862 citations. The organization is also known as: Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales de Montreal & HEC Montreal.
Topics: Context (language use), Vehicle routing problem, Corporate governance, Heuristic (computer science), Computer science
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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01 Jul 2006TL;DR: This paper provides a foundation towards the development of a theoretical framework for the implementation of e-government systems via extensive literature review, which resulted in a synthesis of existing empirical findings and theoretical perspectives related to e- government adoption and development of the premises of a conceptual model that would reflect the multi-level and multi-dimensional nature of e -government systems acceptance.
Abstract: Despite increased research interest on e-government, the field currently lacks sound theoretical frameworks that can be useful in addressing two key issues concerning the implementation of e-government systems: (1) a better understanding of the factors influencing the adoption of e-government systems, and (2) the integration of various e-government applications. The objective of this paper is to provide a foundation towards the development of a theoretical framework for the implementation of e-government systems via extensive literature review, which resulted in (1) a synthesis of existing empirical findings and theoretical perspectives related to e-government adoption, and (2) development of the premises of a conceptual model that would reflect the multi-level and multi-dimensional nature of e-government systems’ acceptance.
194 citations
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TL;DR: A tabu search heuristic for the problem of selecting and scheduling the requests to be satisfied, under operational constraints is described, and an upper bounding procedure based on column generation is used to evaluate the quality of the solutions.
194 citations
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TL;DR: This paper proposed a cyclical theory of public entrepreneurship that is rooted in contextual conditions, arguing that today's public entrepreneurs are teams and their actions are systemic, and they slowly reinvent their organizations and transform the systems that control government effectiveness and efficiency.
Abstract: This article proposes a cyclical theory of public entrepreneurship that is rooted in contextual conditions. The authors use material presented to the Institute of Public Administration of Canada for the annual innovation award, as well as an extensive literature review, to illustrate a new model for public entrepreneurship, arguing that today’s public entrepreneurs are teams and their actions are systemic. Public entrepreneurs do not create new artifacts, nor do they design grandiose projects, but they slowly reinvent their organizations and, in so doing, transform the systems that control government effectiveness and efficiency. The authors generalize and contextualize the idea of public entrepreneurship and structure the emergence of entrepreneurs into a cycle theory. The individual entrepreneur dominates when the organization is new or there is a need for novel activities. As the organization matures and the need for efficiency takes over, dominant individual entrepreneurship disappears, and with time, a new systemic entrepreneurship arises to tackle them.
193 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors employ a typology of family firm evolutionary development to illustrate how changes in patterns of family involvement in the business can influence several socioemotional wealth priorities and how these in turn can shape the board composition required to enhance firm survival.
Abstract: The differences among family firms can be as telling as their overall distinctiveness from other forms of enterprise. In order to advance and condition the arguments of Wilson, Wright, and Scholes, we employ a typology of family firm evolutionary development to illustrate how changes in patterns of family involvement in the business can influence several socioemotional wealth priorities and how these in turn can shape the board composition required to enhance firm survival. We conclude by arguing how public listing and environmental competitive circumstances can condition these relationships.
193 citations
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TL;DR: This paper investigated the role of family involvement in the relationship between corporate social responsibility reporting and firm market value using a longitudinal archival data set in the French context and found that family firms report less information on their CSR duties than do non-family firms.
193 citations
Authors
Showing all 1262 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Danny Miller | 133 | 512 | 71238 |
Gilbert Laporte | 128 | 730 | 62608 |
Michael Pollak | 114 | 663 | 57793 |
Yong Yu | 78 | 523 | 26956 |
Pierre Hansen | 78 | 575 | 32505 |
Jean-François Cordeau | 71 | 208 | 19310 |
Robert A. Jarrow | 65 | 356 | 24295 |
Jacques Desrosiers | 63 | 173 | 15926 |
François Soumis | 61 | 290 | 14272 |
Nenad Mladenović | 54 | 320 | 19182 |
Massimo Caccia | 52 | 389 | 16007 |
Guy Desaulniers | 51 | 242 | 8836 |
Ann Langley | 50 | 161 | 15675 |
Jean-Charles Chebat | 48 | 161 | 9062 |
Georges Dionne | 48 | 421 | 7838 |