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Faculty Research Opportunities
CIBER welcomes and encourages faculty research on "international" topics
related to their own disciplines and encourage their participation at the
following CIBER network research opportunities.
The 10th
Annual International Business
Research Forum
April 10-11, 2010, Temple
University CIBER
International business focuses on a
group of firms that face distinctive
decision making problems. Multinational
enterprises (MNEs) control value chains
that are disrupted by country-specific
transport costs, government restrictions
differences in tastes and production
conditions. Such firms face two
fundamental challenges. The first
concerns controlling the costs that
arise from the complexities of
multinational activity. These
include a diverse set of tasks such as
managing the impact of exchange-rate
variations, differences of national
culture, customs and law, practices that
constrain employee compensation,
evaluation practices and so on.
The second concerns creating value
through leveraging their international
networks to foster innovation and
knowledge. This includes using
their subsidiary networks, which serve
as local extensions that tap into
knowledge clusters, or develop into
geographic centers of excellence.
Thus, the subsidiary network can serve
as a means of creating new
technological, managerial and marketing
competencies.
The Research Forum encourages the
submission of cutting edge research
aimed at defining the future of the
multinational enterprise.
Submission deadline: January 30, 2010.
Offshoring Research Network
Duke University CIBER
Duke CIBER at the Fuqua School of Business and Booz Allen Hamilton are conducting joint-research on the subject of offshoring
Business Processes, Information Technology, and other knowledge-based functions. In 2004 and 2005, the research was sponsored by
Archstone Consulting. The study not only collects data on companies currently offshoring, but those considering it along with those
who have decided not to offshore. The goal of the research is to track firm level data on key performance metrics and the current
perceptions of financial, operational and political risks associated with the five leading offshore operational models. Results from
the survey are published in leading business and academic publications and will form the basis of regular professional workshops
at Duke University (Fuqua School of Business) and detailed case studies of Offshoring successes and failures.
The project is co-sponsored by the Smith School CIBER, thus Smith faculty have access to the complete
research database for use in their own research. Please contact
Dr. Kislaya Prasad, CIBER Director, if interested.
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