Institution
HEC Paris
Education•Jouy-en-Josas, France•
About: HEC Paris is a education organization based out in Jouy-en-Josas, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Market liquidity & Entrepreneurship. The organization has 584 authors who have published 2756 publications receiving 104467 citations. The organization is also known as: Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales & HEC School of Management Paris.
Topics: Market liquidity, Entrepreneurship, Investment (macroeconomics), Portfolio, Corporate governance
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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26 May 2009TL;DR: In this paper, auteurs avancent l'idee that les informations publiees par l'organisation sur son comportement environnemental constituent des signaux qui auront des impacts differencies sur la reputation organisationnelle en fonction de leur nature, leur visibilite and leur coherence.
Abstract: Dans cet article, les auteurs avancent l'idee que les informations publiees par l'organisation sur son comportement environnemental constituent des signaux qui auront des impacts differencies sur la reputation organisationnelle en fonction de leur nature, leur visibilite et leur coherence. Les resultats indiquent que la conformite, la copresence de signaux conformes et non conformes, et la visibilite du signal rejaillissent favorablement sur la reputation. Enfin, l'impact des signaux de conformite peu visibles depend de la reputation anterieure de l'organisation, et ce a l'avantage des organisations beneficiant d'une reputation plus elevee que la moyenne. Ces resultats permettent ainsi de contribuer a la fois a la litterature sur la communication environnementale et a celle sur le management de la reputation.
20 citations
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08 Mar 2017TL;DR: Cultivation is a sociocultural theory regarding the role of television in shaping viewers' perceptions, beliefs, attitudes, and values (Gerbner & Gross, 1976) as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Cultivation is a sociocultural theory regarding the role of television in shaping viewers’ perceptions, beliefs, attitudes, and values (Gerbner & Gross, 1976). In its original conceptualization, it was part of a more general cultural indicators project that addressed the broader question of the role of media in shaping a culture, primarily through the media’s storytelling function. Although a number of studies have since examined cultivation effects in non-US contexts, the original theory pertained to the overwhelming influence of US media in shaping US culture (Shanahan & Morgan, 1999). The cultural indicators project consisted of three components: an institutional process analysis that focused on how media messages are produced and disseminated, a message system analysis that focused on what actual messages were conveyed by the media, and a cultivation analysis that focused on how exposure to media messages influences recipients’ conceptions of the real world. Moreover, because at the time of the development of cultivation theory television was the dominant storytelling medium, most of the theory’s development and testing has focused on the influence and effects of television on viewers’ perceptions of social reality. As cultivation is a sociocultural theory, the three components—media institutions, message production, and message effects on viewers—are inextricably intertwined. However, the third component, cultivation analysis, has been the primary focus ofmost media research. In its simplest form, a cultivation effect is the relationship between the amount of time people spend watching television and the beliefs those viewers hold about the world. The primary hypothesis is that the more people watch television, the more their views of the world reflect the dominant narrative messages transmitted by television. More specifically, cultivation theory holds that the storytelling function of television is extremely powerful. Although the messages conveyed by television may at first seem incredibly diverse (many different themes, many different types of programs that convey these themes, and many different types of people that convey them), systematic analyses of these messages indicates a remarkable consistency in general value systems. It is the consistency of the TV message coupled with the high frequency with which these messages are viewed that give television the power to shape both individual and societal values, and in Gerbner’s view make it the dominant socializing force in American society.
20 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the interactions that may arise from the European institutions' increasing reliance on ex ante evaluation mechanisms of proposed legislation, such as Impact Assessment (IA), and ex post judicial review of adopted legislation.
Abstract: This article aims at exploring the interactions that may arise from the European institutions' increasing reliance on ex ante evaluation mechanisms of proposed legislation, such as Impact Assessment (IA), and ex post judicial review of adopted legislation. IA, the privileged ex ante evaluation tool adopted by the EU to identify the expected effects of new legislation, by offering a ‘legality check’ of each Commission proposal well before its adoption, may serve – as illustrated by the recent judgments in Vodaphone and Afton – not only as ‘aid to the legislator’, but also as an ‘aid to the parties’ and an ‘aid to court’ within the ex post review of adopted legislation. After systematizing the different encounters that might occur between IA and judicial review, this article anticipates, by relying on a few examples, a ‘meeting of minds’ between the EU legislature and the judiciary on impact assessment.
20 citations
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TL;DR: This article conducted a comparative study of managers in six European countries and found that the regional culture of decision-makers has a strong effect on their choice of recruitment and promotion candidates, and identified key sales personnel characteristics for international staffing policies.
20 citations
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20 citations
Authors
Showing all 605 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Sandor Czellar | 133 | 1263 | 91049 |
Jean-Yves Reginster | 110 | 1195 | 58146 |
Pierre Hansen | 78 | 575 | 32505 |
Gilles Laurent | 77 | 264 | 27052 |
Olivier Bruyère | 72 | 579 | 24788 |
David Dubois | 50 | 169 | 12396 |
Rodolphe Durand | 49 | 173 | 10075 |
Itzhak Gilboa | 49 | 259 | 13352 |
Yves Dallery | 47 | 170 | 6373 |
Duc Khuong Nguyen | 47 | 235 | 8639 |
Eric Jondeau | 45 | 155 | 7088 |
Jean-Noël Kapferer | 45 | 151 | 12264 |
David Thesmar | 41 | 161 | 7242 |
Bruno Biais | 41 | 144 | 8936 |
Barbara B. Stern | 40 | 89 | 6001 |