Institution
Stockholm School of Economics
Education•Stockholm, Sweden•
About: Stockholm School of Economics is a education organization based out in Stockholm, Sweden. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Cost effectiveness. The organization has 1186 authors who have published 4891 publications receiving 285543 citations. The organization is also known as: Stockholm Business School & Handelshögskolan i Stockholm.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the LISREL model was used to investigate the effect of HQ and subsidiary managers' perceptions about the role of the subsidiary in the multinational corporation and found that such differences have important implications for the management of the HQ-subsidiary relationship.
179 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimate the distribution of exit reservation prices in a dictator game and show that the mean exit reservation price equals 82% of the dictator game endowment and only 36% of subjects have prices consistent with selfish or social preferences.
179 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a homogenous series of top income shares in Sweden over the period 1903-2004, and find that, starting from levels of inequality approximately equal to those in other Western countries at the time, the income share of the Swedish top decile drops sharply over the first eighty years of the twentieth century.
179 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, cultural theory is used to explain universal bias by way of a general typology of group formation and a concomitant cosmology or world view, and the study of hazards as culturally construed phenomena.
Abstract: ’Cultural theory’, launched by social anthropologist Mary Douglas, has been highly influential in the inter‐disciplinary field concerned with the study of risk perception and risk communication. The theory derives from the grid‐group analyses that Douglas developed in the 1970s. Cultural theory aims to explain universal ‘cultural bias’ by way of a general typology of group formation and a concomitant cosmology or world view. This article critically examines cultural theory and the study of hazards as culturally construed phenomena.
179 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors develop and test a model of an individual's intention to reenter entrepreneurship following business exit, using prospect theory and self-efficacy as two long-standing theories.
Abstract: This paper develops and tests a model of an individual's intention to reenter entrepreneurship following business exit. Two long–standing theories, prospect theory and self–efficacy, seem to develo...
179 citations
Authors
Showing all 1218 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Magnus Johannesson | 102 | 342 | 40776 |
Thomas J. Sargent | 96 | 370 | 39224 |
Bengt Jönsson | 81 | 365 | 33623 |
J. Scott Armstrong | 76 | 445 | 33552 |
Johan Wiklund | 74 | 288 | 30038 |
Per Davidsson | 71 | 309 | 32262 |
Julian Birkinshaw | 64 | 233 | 29262 |
Timo Teräsvirta | 62 | 224 | 20403 |
Lars E.O. Svensson | 61 | 188 | 20666 |
Jonathan D. Ostry | 59 | 232 | 11776 |
Alexander Ljungqvist | 59 | 139 | 14466 |
Richard Green | 58 | 468 | 14244 |
Bo Jönsson | 57 | 294 | 11984 |
Magnus Henrekson | 56 | 261 | 13346 |
Assar Lindbeck | 54 | 234 | 13761 |