Examples of corporation in the following topics:
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- Corporations have powerful legal rights, and some have revenues that exceed the revenues of sovereign nations.
- Once incorporated, a corporation has artificial personhood everywhere it operates, until the corporation is dissolved.
- A multinational corporation (MNC) is a corporation that either manages production or delivers services in more than one country .
- Anti-corporate advocates express the commonly held view that corporations answer only to shareholders, and give little consideration to human rights, environmental concerns, or other cultural issues.
- Multinational corporations are important factors in the processes of globalization .
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- A multinational corporation (MNC) is a business enterprise that manages production or delivers services in more than one country.
- A multinational corporation (MNC) or multinational enterprise (MNE) is a corporate enterprise that manages production or delivers services in more than one country.
- Multinational corporations can have a powerful influence in local economies, and even the world economy.
- These patents often allow multinational corporations to exercise a monopoly in the local economy, preventing local enterprises from developing.
- Walmart is an example of a large multi-national corporation, with stores and manufacturing facilities all over the world.
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- The current pattern suggests much lobbying is done by corporations although a wide variety of coalitions representing diverse groups are possible.
- Corporations which lobby actively tend to be large corporations, few in number, and often they sell to the government.
- Most corporations do not hire lobbyists.
- Corporations considering lobbying run into substantial barriers to entry: Corporations have to research the relevant laws about lobbying, hire lobbying firms, and cultivate influential people and make connections.
- For example, when an issue regarding a change in immigration policy arose, large corporations that were currently lobbying switched focus somewhat to take account of the new regulatory world, but new corporations—even ones likely to be affected by any possible rulings on immigration—stayed out of the lobbying fray, according to the study.
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- The term is generally applied to behaviour within civil governments, but politics has been observed in all human group interactions, including corporate, academic, and religious institutions.
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- There are a number of institutions where sociologists find employment, including: schools, churches, hospitals, corporations, government, and social service agencies.
- Corporations want and need to understand their customers' habits and preferences in order to anticipate changes in their markets.
- This drive to understand consumers is called consumer research and is a growing interest of corporations.
- This particular niche may be the single largest opportunity for sociologists in the corporate world.
- Another key to succeeding in the corporate world with a degree in Sociology is to market your specific skill set.
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- Another factor favoring large corporate day cares is the existence of childcare facilities in the workplace.
- Large corporations will not handle this employee benefit directly themselves and will seek out large corporate providers to manage their corporate daycares.
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- White-collar crime, is similar to corporate crime, because white-collar employees are more likely to commit fraud, bribery, ponzi schemes, insider trading, embezzlement, cyber crime, copyright infringement, money laundering, identity theft, and forgery .
- Corporate crime deals with the company as a whole.
- The relationship that white-collar crime has with corporate crime is that they are similar because they both are involved within the business world.
- Their difference is that white-collar crime benefits the individual involved, and corporate crime benefits the company or the corporation.
- One common misconception about corporate crime is that its effects are mainly financial.
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- Suppose that I was interested in drawing a graph of which large corporations were networked with one another by having the same persons on their boards of directors.
- Can you think of a kind of relation among large corporations that would be better represented with directed ties?
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- The term is generally applied to behavior within civil governments, but politics has been observed in all human group interactions, including corporate, academic, and religious institutions.
- Through positions in corporations, corporate boards, and policy-planning networks, members of the "elite" are able to exert significant power over the policy decisions of corporations and governments.
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- Today, Russia may be considered a de facto oligarchy: Since the collapse of the Soviet Union on 31 December 1991, privately owned Russia-based multinational corporations, including producers of petroleum, natural gas, and metal have become oligarchs.
- One example of this is a corporate oligarchy, or corporatocracy—a system in which power effectively rests with a small, elite group of inside individuals, sometimes from a small group of educational institutions, or influential economic entities or devices, such as banks, commercial entities, lobbyists that act in complicity with, or at the whim of the oligarchy, often with little or no regard for constitutionally protected prerogative.
- Today's multinational corporations function as corporate oligarchies with influence over democratically elected officials.