The aim of the course is to provide
students with an understanding of international business and trade,
providing students with the necessary background theories and
concepts that they will need during the concentration. It will
focus on providing a ‘toolkit’ to students of frameworks, theories
and concepts that will facilitate the understanding of the complex
environment within which the multinational corporation operates.
This includes international business and trade theories, political
economy, government policies and regulations, cross-cultural
differences as well as supra-national institutions such as the
World Trade Organization.
- Familiar with various theories related to international
business
- Able to relate these theories to each other
- Abel to use them to understand and analyse the international
business enviromentC
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The
International Business Environment: Strategy, Policy, and
Organisation:
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Type of test |
Term Paper |
Marking scale |
7-step scale |
Second examiner |
External examiner |
Exam period |
Autumn Term and December/January |
Aids |
Please, see the detailed regulations
below |
Duration |
Please, see the detailed regulations
below |
Individual exam; each student will
submit a scientific paper of 15 (fifteen) pages. The exam question
will be issued one week before the submission deadline. Students
are expected to address many issues covered in the course. The
scientific paper will be assessed by examiner and external censor.
The regular exam will take place in November. Make-up/ re-exam
takes place in January. If a student is ill during the regular
exam, he/she will be able to re-use the scientific paper at the
make-up/re-exam. If the student did not pass the regular exam a new
or revised scientific paper, confer advice from the examiner at the
regular exam, must be handed in to a new deadline specified by the
programme secretariat
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The course sheds light on what managers of internationally
active firms do to remain competitive in diverse business
environments. The course presents conceptual frameworks that make
sense of the linkages between national economic and developmental
policies, and domestic and foreign firm strategies. Finally, it
addresses whether contemporary capitalism is characterized by
inexorable trends toward a truly global market or by resilient
national differences. The course is divided into three distinct
components. The first component provides a basic set of ‘tools’ and
theories from international trade, international business,
economics, and management that will empower the student throughout
the concentration. The second component presents elements of the
‘macro’ external environment that the multinational firm faces,
combining concepts from technology policy, economic geography and
political economy.
The third component examines the particular challenges managers
face within their organizations. This component discusses the
various options available to managers in responding to
organizational, managerial, and technical complexities that the
forces of rapid globalization and intense cross-border competition
present.
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Cantwell, J. and Narula, R. (2001) The Eclectic Paradigm in the
Global Economy, International Journal of the Economics of Business,
Vol 8, pp 155-172
Cavusgil, S.T.; Knight, G. and Riesenberger, J.R. (2008)
International Business: Strategy, Management and the New Realities.
New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
Frost, Tony S. & Birkinshaw, Julian M. & Ensign, Prescott
C. (2002) Centres of Excellence in Multinational Corporations.
Strategic Management Journal. 23(11), 997-1018.
Hall, P. and Soskice, D. (2001). Varieties of Capitalism: The
Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Hofstede, G. and Bond, M.H. (2001). The Confucius connection: From
cultural roots to economic growth. In Gannon, M.J. (ed) Cultural
Metaphors: Readings, Research Translations and Commentary. London:
SAGE. 31-53
Krugman, P. (1997) What Should Trade Negotiators Negotiate About?,
Journal of Economic Literature 35, 113-120
Krugman, P. and Obstfeld, M. (2000) ‘The Political Economy of
Trade Policy’, International Economics: Theory and Policy. Reading
Massachusetts: Addison Wesley.
Ooi, C.S. (2007) "Un-packing packaged cultures: Chinese-ness
in International Business", East Asia: An International
Quarterly, 24(2): 111-128.
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