The Venture Caf?

The Venture Caf?
Title The Venture Caf? PDF eBook
Author Teresa Esser
Publisher Business Plus
Total Pages 221
Release 2002-03-14
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 0759527121

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Written for anyone interested in cutting edge entrepreneuship, this work offers an inside account of what business and technology mavericks are really talking about.

The Venture Cafe

The Venture Cafe
Title The Venture Cafe PDF eBook
Author Teresa Esser
Publisher Business Plus
Total Pages 292
Release 2002
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 9780446527835

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Filled with personal vignettes, war stories, and insider information, the creative minds of high technology share their wisdom, advice, and strategies, revealing what it takes to be successful in business.

African football migration

African football migration
Title African football migration PDF eBook
Author Paul Darby
Publisher Manchester University Press
Total Pages 197
Release 2022-01-25
Genre Sports & Recreation
ISBN 1526120291

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The global success of football icons like Samuel Eto’o, Didier Drogba and Mohamed Salah has fuelled the migratory projects of countless young men across the African continent who dream of following – literally and figuratively – in their footsteps. Drawing on over a decade of ethnographic research, African football migration captures and chronicles the aspirations, experiences and trajectories of those pursuing this highly prized form of transnational migration. In doing so, the book uncovers and traces the myriad actors, networks and institutions that affect the ability of young people across the continent to realise social mobility through football’s global production network. The book sheds critical light on the barriers to social mobility erected by neoliberal capitalism, and how these are negotiated by aspiring African footballers. It also generates original interdisciplinary perspectives on the complex interplay between structural forces and human agency, as young players navigate an industry rife with commercial speculation. While a select few reach the elite levels of the game and build a successful career overseas, the book vividly illustrates how for the vast majority, ‘trying their luck’ through football results in involuntary immobility in post-colonial Africa. These findings are complemented by rare empirical insights from transnational African migrants at the margins of the global football industry and those navigating precarious retirement from careers as players. African football migration offers essential coverage of why and how African youth and young men have become actors in the global football industry, revealing the complex implications of transnational mobility, both imagined and enacted.

Canadian Income Tax Act

Canadian Income Tax Act
Title Canadian Income Tax Act PDF eBook
Author Canada
Publisher CCH Canadian Limited
Total Pages 3174
Release 19??
Genre Income tax
ISBN 9781554961375

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Documents

Documents
Title Documents PDF eBook
Author Council of Europe: Parliamentary Assembly
Publisher Council of Europe
Total Pages 206
Release 2004-02-23
Genre Political Science
ISBN 9789287151773

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Venture Capital Guide for Development 2008

Venture Capital Guide for Development 2008
Title Venture Capital Guide for Development 2008 PDF eBook
Author
Publisher NCDO Business in Development
Total Pages 80
Release
Genre
ISBN 9074612113

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The Struggle for Canadian Sport

The Struggle for Canadian Sport
Title The Struggle for Canadian Sport PDF eBook
Author Bruce Kidd
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Total Pages 323
Release 2017-06-22
Genre Sports & Recreation
ISBN 1487516851

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Canadian sports were turned on their head during the years between the world wars. The middle-class amateur men's organizations which dominated Canadian sports since the mid-nineteenth century steadily lost ground, swamped by the rise of consumer culture and badly battered and split by the depression. In The Struggle for Canadian Sport Bruce Kidd illuminates the complex and fractious process that produced the familiar contours of Canadian sport today -- the hegemony of continental cartels like the NHL, the enormous ideological power of the media, the shadowed participation of women in sports, and the strong nationalism of the amateur Olympic sports bodies. Kidd focuses on four major Canadian organizations of the interwar period: the Amateur Athletic Union, the Women's Amateur Athletic Federation, the Workers' Sport Association, and the National Hockey League. Each of these organizations became focal points of debate and political activity, and they often struggled with each other - each had a radically different agenda: The AAU sought `the making of men' and the strengthening of English-Canadian nationalism; the WAAF promoted the health and well-being of sportswomen; the WSA was a vehicle for socialism; and the NHL was concerned with lucrative spectacles. These national organizations stimulated and steered many of the resources available for sport and contributed significantly to the expansion of opportunities. They enjoyed far more power than other Canadian cultural organizations of the period, and they attempted to manipulate both the direction and philosophy of Canadian athletics. Through their control of the rules and prestigious events and their countless interventions in the mass media, they shaped the dominant practices and coined the very language with which Canadians discussed what sports should mean. The success and outcome of each group, as well as their confrontations with one another were crucial in shaping modern Canadian sports. The Struggle for Canadian Sport adds to our understanding of the material and social conditions under which people created and elaborated sports and the contested ideological terrain on which sports were played and interpreted. Winner of the North American Society for Sports History (NASSH) 1997 book award