Browsing Trinity Business School (Research Theses and Dissertations) by Sponsor "Trinity College Dublin (TCD)"
Now showing items 1-5 of 5
-
As good as gold? About the financial implications of gold and silver
(Trinity College Dublin. School of Business. Discipline of Business & Administrative Studies, 2017)International currency or production asset? Safe haven or classical commodity? This thesis offers insights into the financial implications of gold and silver by focusing on three distinct investigations motivated by a brief ... -
Key factors and underlying mechanisms for the enterprise systems lifecycle in public service organisations
(Trinity College Dublin. School of Business. Discipline of Business & Administrative Studies, 2017)This is a longitudinal Critical Realist case study in the Enterprise Systems (ES) area within the Information Systems (IS) domain. Based on the literature review, it is identified that the majority of the ES research is ... -
New Service Development in the Publicly Funded University: Overcoming Barriers and Developing Enablers
(Trinity College Dublin. School of Business. Discipline of Business & Administrative Studies, 2018)Today universities operate in an exceptionally difficult funding environment and in a context characterised by financial constraints, state imposed restrictions on critical strategic and operating issues and at the same ... -
A QUALITATIVE EXPLORATION OF THE PSYCHOLOGICAL, SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC FACTORS INFLUENCING EDUCATOR WORKAHOLIC BEHAVIOUR
(Trinity College Dublin. School of Business. Discipline of Business & Administrative Studies, 2020)There is a necessity for multi-level multidisciplinary research within the field of workaholism research. Disagreement on how to define workaholism and how to measure it prevails. The ambiguity surrounding conceptualisation ... -
The Role of Financial Markets in Incentivising Corporate Social and Environmental Performance
(Trinity College Dublin. School of Business. Discipline of Business & Administrative Studies, 2022)The central topic of this thesis is the role played by financial markets in incentivising firms to alter their impact on society through non-market strategies relating to environmental and social performance. The thesis ...