Essays about: "no exit"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 68 essays containing the words no exit.
-
1. Buying for the Sake of Building? A Qualitative Study on Buy-and-Build Strategies in the Nordic Private Equity Market
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för finansiell ekonomiAbstract : We examine how buy-and-build strategies are executed in the Nordic private equity market. Particularly, we analyze the role of buy-and-build in creating value, key elements contributing to a successful strategy, and how the quality of the implementation is reflected in exit considerations. READ MORE
-
2. DIOSES EN LA TIERRA E EL INGENIOSO HIDALGO DE LA MANCHA : VELÁZQUEZ’S SUBVERSION OF THE HABSBURG MYSTIQUE OF POWER
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Konstvetenskapliga institutionenAbstract : Sometimes the concrete form and skill of a work of art stand in a non-arbitrary or non-contingent relationship with the social circumstances of its facture. I hypothesise that this form and such skill was used by Diego Velázquez for artistically, socially and politically subversive purposes. READ MORE
-
3. Exit vs. Voice
University essay from Lunds universitet/Nationalekonomiska institutionenAbstract : This thesis examines the relationship between fund performance and the choice of strategy when an invested asset is reclassified to a fund’s exclusion’s list. The two choices of strategy are divesting the asset or using active ownership methodology by communicating with the asset. READ MORE
-
4. "The family cannot help. The government does not help. There is no help." : The exit process of sex trafficking survivors upon returning to their home country, Uganda
University essay from Mittuniversitetet/Institutionen för psykologi och socialt arbeteAbstract : .... READ MORE
-
5. Explainable Reinforcement Learning for Gameplay
University essay from KTH/Skolan för elektroteknik och datavetenskap (EECS)Abstract : State-of-the-art Machine Learning (ML) algorithms show impressive results for a myriad of applications. However, they operate as a sort of a black box: the decisions taken are not human-understandable. READ MORE