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Populist politics and international business policy: problems, practices, and prescriptions for MNEs
In this editorial introduction to the Special Issue on populism, we discuss different approaches to defining populism in ways relevant to multinational enterprise (MNE) strategy and organization. In addition, we demonstrate how populist host-country government policies often target MNEs in ways that...
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Published in: | Journal of International Business Policy 2024-03, Vol.7 (1), p.12-18 |
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container_title | Journal of International Business Policy |
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creator | Hartwell, Christopher A. James, Barclay Lindner, Thomas Müllner, Jakob Vaaler, Paul M. |
description | In this editorial introduction to the Special Issue on populism, we discuss different approaches to defining populism in ways relevant to multinational enterprise (MNE) strategy and organization. In addition, we demonstrate how populist host-country government policies often target MNEs in ways that give rise to distinctly new forms of discriminatory treatment. This theoretical background sets the stage for the papers of this Special Issue, explaining the origins of these populist host-country government policies and the impact of such policies on FDI and international trade. We conclude with various suggestions for advancing IB policy research on populism, including building a better model of where populism comes from, how various conceptions of populism operate, and how they affect MNEs. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1057/s42214-023-00181-0 |
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source | International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Springer Nature; PAIS Index; Alma/SFX Local Collection |
subjects | Business and Management Business Strategy/Leadership Editorial Editorials Emerging Markets/Globalization Foreign investment Government International Business International trade Multinational corporations Policy analysis Populism Prescription drugs Public policy |
title | Populist politics and international business policy: problems, practices, and prescriptions for MNEs |
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