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Archive for June, 2008

Stock Price Response to News of Securities Fraud Litigation:An Analysis of Sequential and Conditional Information

June 22, 2008 By: admin Category: Business, Management and Accounting, Social Sciences and Humanities

This study examines investor response to three events that help define a federal class action securities lawsuit, specifically, the announcement that names an issuer as a defendant in the lawsuit (at the class action filing date), the disclosure or accounting restatement that ‘corrects’ the information deficiency (at the end of the class period), and the date at which the fraud on the market allegedly begins (at the beginning of the class period). (more…)

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Modern Costing Innovations and Legitimation: A Health Care Study

June 22, 2008 By: admin Category: Business, Management and Accounting, Social Sciences and Humanities

This article is a study of the introduction of a modern costing technology - activity based costing (ABC) - into a health care organization which is undergoing change. The transformation of this organization is of particular interest as it focused on the experience of a service which had always existed by collecting blood, which is given as a free donation (the gift), and which is then converted into a variety of health care products. (more…)

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Learning about economic development from Africa

June 22, 2008 By: admin Category: Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences and Humanities

This article reviews the author’s acquaintance with the literature of economic development, with particular reference to Africa, over the last 50 years. The belief that this development is propelled by the supply of capital, effectively of international aid, is criticized, and emphasis put instead on the effective demand for capital. This demand has been low in Africa; hence much capital investment has been of low or no productivity, and aid has generally failed to fulfil expectations. Aid continues nonetheless, since it serves donor as well as recipient interests and political opposition to it is weak. (more…)

A reconfiguration of political order? The state of the state in North Kivu (DR Congo)

June 22, 2008 By: admin Category: Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences and Humanities

This paper argues that warlord or ‘non-state’ politics have not brought about as fundamental a political transformation as recent discourses about violent ’state collapse’ in Africa seem to suggest. In the context of the territorial break-up of the central state in the DR Congo, it examines the reconfiguration of political power in North Kivu (more…)

A wondrous God:Miracles in contemporary Africa

June 22, 2008 By: admin Category: Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences and Humanities

Events or occurrences perceived as miracles are a feature of all religious traditions, although not to the same degree. The perception of a miracle is closely connected to ideas that are extant concerning the relations between the material world and the invisible world. Recent decades appear - at least from fragmentary evidence - to have seen an increase in the number of occurrences perceived as miracles in Africa, in Christian, Muslim and indigenous traditions. (more…)

Safiyya and Adamah: Punishing adultery with sharia stones in twenty-first-century Nigeria

June 22, 2008 By: admin Category: Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences and Humanities

In the year 2000, a new phase of the dysfunctional power of religion exploded into the modern public space in Nigeria. Some regional states in the north of the country exploited a loophole in the 1999 constitution to declare themselves as sharia states. Debate on the constitutional legality, political, socio-economic and gender implications of this development became complicated by ethnicity and regionalism. (more…)

‘Be not afraid, only believe’: Madagascar 2002

June 22, 2008 By: admin Category: Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences and Humanities

The 1990s witnessed the beginning of a tortuous process of transition in Madagascar, from a planned to a liberal economy and from an authoritarian political regime to democracy. The final act of the transition was the presidential election of 16 December 2001 which pitted Admiral Didier Ratsiraka, aged 69, in power for some 25 years, against a businessman, Marc Ravalomanana, whose only political experience was as mayor of the capital city (more…)

Changing population mobility in West Africa:Fulbe pastoralists in Central and South Mali

June 22, 2008 By: admin Category: Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences and Humanities

Mobility is the most important response by the inhabitants of the Sahel to climatic adversity. This ‘condition sahélienne’, characterized by unstable climatic circumstances, irregular rainfall patterns and periods of drought, has an important influence on people’s decision-making processes regarding their livelihood. Migration studies mainly focus on labour migration to urban areas. (more…)