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Ítem La proyección de la Alianza del Pacífico hacia el Asia Pacífico: logros y oportunidades(2017-05-01) Perez, Camilo Alberto; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem Program: A contribution for the dissemination of the global compact in Medellín, Colombia(Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 2015-01-01) DIAZ, JUAN CARLOS; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem The Quest for Sustainable Development Goals: the power and perils of global development goals(2016-02-01) Escobar, Natalia; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem Global environmental governance in the Anthropocene: Setting and achieving global goals(2017-06-01) Escobar, Natalia; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem Millennium Development Goals(2015-11-01) Escobar, Natalia; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem Multilingual Education for International Business: Insights on Undergraduate Program Design From Colombia.(2019-01-01) AGUILAR, SARA CRISTINA; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem The rise and fall of an international new venture: The case of an online medical tourism platform.(Palgrave Macmillan, 2018-09-01) Fuerst, Sascha; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesThomas moves to Colombia. He teams up with Daniel to create an Internet platform on which hospitals, clinics, and doctors from Colombia can offer their services to patients from the US. The promotion of medical tourism is a priority for the local government. Thomas decides to outsource the design and programming of Flyclinic’s Internet platform. This proves to be challenging. The initial launch of the website is delayed by eight months, and making hospitals and clinics sign the contract for use of the platform proves to be difficult. This causes Thomas to rethink the business model. Thomas questions whether the health-care providers in Colombia are interested in medical tourism at all. Flyclinic eventually enters into what Thomas calls a “starvation mode.” © The Author(s) 2019.Ítem Multilingual education for international business: insights on undergraduate program design from colombia(IGI GLOBAL, 2018-03-13) Díaz, J.C.; AGUILAR, SARA CRISTINA; Marc, Heiko; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesEducation for future international business (IB) practitioners must be linked to a clear multilingual and multicultural approach.Ítem Strategic Capabilities of Colombian Firms(2020-10-01) Alejandra Gonzalez-Perez, Maria; Gomez, Ana Maria; Manotas, Eva Cristina; Perez Restrepo, Camilo; Juan Fernando Vélez Ocampo; Teresa Uribe-Jaramillo, Maria; Duque, Veronica; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem Standards Certifications and Exports Performance: Evidence from the Processed Food Industry in Colombia(IGI Global, 2016-05-31) Aguilar, S.; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem International Business, Trade and the Nagoya Protocol: Best Practices and Challenges for Sustainability in Access and Benefit-Sharing(Springer, 2020-01-01) Escobar-Pemberthy N.; Calle Saldarriaga M.A.; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesBiodiversity is critical for international trade, businesses and investment. However, the issue of their ownership and exploitation has been a matter of debate. Specifically, the access to biodiversity resources and the distribution of the associated benefits are at the core of the environmental economics debate. Since 1992, the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) established regulations for the access and benefits-sharing of genetic resources, which materialized in the 2010 Nagoya Protocol. In 2015, as part of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Goal 15 renewed countries’ commitment to the promotion of appropriate access to genetic resources, and equitable and fair sharing of the associated benefits, calling for countries to adopt the policy and strategic frameworks to implement the ABS regime. Using examples from developing countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, this chapter explains how the ABS regime is being implemented in relation to international business and trade, and analyzes how it brings opportunities, best practices and challenges in order for these countries to improve the balance in the relationship between biodiversity conservation and economic activities. These new circumstances support the identification of actions that governments and international business actors can follow to effectively use the ABS regime as a policy instruments that contribute to sustainability through the implementation of economic and environmental regulations. © 2020, Springer Nature Switzerland AG.Ítem Integración Comercial en la Alianza del Pacífico(Fondo Editorial Universidad EAFIT, 2015-06-01) Perez, Camilo Alberto; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem China y América Latina post 2015: cambios en las relaciones comerciales en un contexto de menor crecimiento y reformas estructurales.(2017-01-01) Perez, Camilo Alberto; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem Global Environmental Governance in the Anthropocene: Setting and Achieving Global Goals(HART PUBL, 2017-01-01) Ivanova, Maria; Escobar-Pemberthy, Natalia; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem Kratos universidad EAFIT: A new platform to live learning experiences(Springer International Publishing, 2019-01-01) Aguilar-Barrientos S.; Arias-Salazar A.; Escalante J.E.; Barbosa J.; Acevedo-Jaramillo M.E.; Román-Calderón J.P.; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios Internacionales[No abstract available]Ítem Factors Relating the Acquisition Of CQ- Insights for the Recruitment and Selection of Interns and Young Graduates from International Business Programs(Auflage, 2016-06-30) Aguilar, S.; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem THE BERLIN OLYMPICS, 1936(ROUTLEDGE, 2017-01-01) Large, David Clay; Large, Joshua J. H.; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem Hospital Pablo Tobon Uribe: Soulful Health Care Services from Colombia to the World(Palgrave Macmillan, 2014-01-01) Ardila J, Clemencia; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem Colombia(SAGE, 2009-01-01) Fuerst, S.; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesÍtem Colombian coffee: Issues of sustainability?(Cambridge University Press, 2013-01-01) Stringer, C.; Roldán-Pérez, A.; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Administración; Estudios InternacionalesColombia is renowned internationally for growing high quality Colombia mild Arabica coffee beans, characterised by a rich flavour and aroma. (Colombia mild Arabica coffee is an official type of coffee designated by the International Coffee Organisation.) Principally grown for the export market, Colombian coffee commands a premium price internationally, and is widely sought after by buyers. In 2007, the European Union granted a ‘Protected Designation of Origin’ order for Colombian coffee. In recent years, Colombia’s ranking in production terms has dropped from second to fourth place, with the country losing ranking first to Vietnam in 1999 and more recently to Indonesia in 2009. The drop in ranking is largely a result of changing climatic conditions. Coffee exports from Colombia declined for a second consecutive year, from 12.5 million bags in 2007 to 7.8 million bags in 2011 (ICO 2013). The 2009 production level was the industry’s lowest since 1976 (USDA 2010), and much lower than initial forecasts of 11 million bags for 2010. Between 2005 and 2008, production levels averaged 11.71 million bags, guaranteeing surety of supply for international buyers. The decrease of three million bags of coffee represented a substantial loss of income not only for the local industry, but also for international traders and buyers – many of whom were unable to deliver the coffee for which they had entered into a forward purchase agreement and that they had on-sold due to the special characteristics of Colombian coffee. On the quality dimension, however, at the same time as production has been decreasing, quality has been increasing, due to the industry’s focus on improving quality. © Cambridge University Press 2013.
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