16 results on '"Gregory T"'
Search Results
2. Modernizing Competition Policy and Law: The Impact of Marketing Developments on the Legal Treatment of Price Maintenance in the United States, the European Union, and China.
- Author
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Krotz, Riley T., Gundlach, Gregory T., and Moss, Diana L.
- Subjects
ANTITRUST law ,MARKETING laws ,UNITED States economy ,LEGAL education ,INDUSTRIAL concentration ,PRICE maintenance ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SERVICE contracts - Abstract
Competition policy and law toward price maintenance (e.g., resale price maintenance, unilateral price policies, minimum advertised prices) draws on scholarly perspectives and theory developed over a half century ago. Since that time, changes to marketing practice have caused scholars to question the practical relevance of the perspectives and theory and to call for the modernization of competition policy and law toward price maintenance. Responding to these calls, the authors examine three important developments in contemporary marketing practice and assess their impact on the legal treatment of price maintenance in the three largest economies: the United States, the European Union, and China. Their analysis reveals significant differences in how each jurisdiction is responding to (1) increasing market concentration and accompanying shifts in interfirm power, (2) advances in information technology and the commercial use of the internet, and (3) developments in cross-channel shopping and the rise of omnichannel distribution. Their findings pose implications for future public policy, marketing practice, and academic scholarship and contribute to the modernization of competition policy and law. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. An uncomfortable truth: Canada's wary ambivalence to Chinese corporate takeovers.
- Author
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Chin, Gregory T.
- Subjects
MERGERS & acquisitions ,FOREIGN investments (International law) - Abstract
This article examines the behavioural patterns of successive Canadian governments in responding to three takeover attempts of iconic high-value Canadian corporates by large state companies from China. The first is China Minmetals Corporation's attempt to acquire Noranda in 2004-2005 during the Liberal government of Paul Martin, the second is China National Offshore Oil Corporation's acquisition of Nexen in 2012 during the Conservative government of Stephen Harper, and the third is China Communications Construction Corporation International's bid for Aecon Group in 2017-2018. This analysis highlights some important similarities in the behavioural response of the Canadian governments across the three cases: ambivalence and wariness. Policy lessons are addressed in the conclusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. China's Bold Economic Statecraft.
- Author
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CHIN, GREGORY T.
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL agencies , *DEVELOPMENT banks , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC policy ,ECONOMIC conditions in China - Abstract
The article discusses the efforts of China to change its economy through creating new international institutions as of 2015. Topics include how the decisions of the Chinese leaders to push for an alternative order shape their interaction with real-world dynamics, risks of China's growing global presence, and the launch of multilateral banks, the New Development Bank and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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5. ASEAN-China Free Trade Agreement and East Asian Regionalism.
- Author
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Chin, Gregory T. and Stubbs, Richard
- Subjects
- *
COMMERCIAL treaties , *FREE trade , *INTERNATIONAL economic relations , *INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
The ASEAN-China Free Trade Agreement (ACFTA) has become a major institutional linkage within the ASEAN Plus Three framework. This paper will employ an historical institutional approach to examine the development of the ASEAN-China linkage. The origins of the ACFTA and the sequence of events that has promoted the linkage will be analysed. The extent to which the positive economic and political feedback process as well as the timing and sequence of events have helped to reinforce the relationship will be assessed. It is argued that the resulting trajectory of the ACFTA underscores the political nature of the emerging association and makes it difficult, although not impossible, for other relationships to supersede the ASEAN-China linkage at the centre of the APT framework. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
6. Understanding Currency Policy and Central Banking in China.
- Author
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Chin, Gregory T.
- Subjects
- *
CENTRAL banking industry , *MONETARY policy , *FOREIGN exchange , *RESERVE assets , *TWENTY-first century ,ECONOMIC conditions in China, 2000- ,CHINESE economic policy - Abstract
China's trade and financial surpluses, exchange rate, and currency reserves make headlines, daily, around the world. As such, it is more imperative than ever to understand the inner workings of currency policy in China. Yet the exercise of power and decision making in these areas has received surprisingly little attention in Chinese politics, political economy, and, arguably, economics. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. SECURING A RURAL LAND MARKET: POLITICAL-ECONOMIC DETERMINANTS OF INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE IN CHINA'S AGRICULTURE SECTOR.
- Author
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Chin, Gregory T.
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL economics ,SOCIAL conflict ,LAND use ,LAND tenure ,RULE of law ,SOCIALISM - Abstract
The dimension of China's farm economy that has been least altered since the onset of the reforms in the early 1980s is the rural land system. However, in the face of mounting rural social tension and concerns over the impact of heightened trade liberalization on the domestic agricultural sector, Chinese authorities have recently undertaken a reform program to fundamentally alter the nature of agricultural land rights in the country. In the name of protecting farmers' rights and interests, new institutions are being established to certify rural land use rights and strengthen enforcement of these rights; facilitate the trade of these land use rights according to market principles; and settle disputes over tradable land use rights. These institutional reforms in the agricultural land management system are giving rise to a rural land market in China, based not on private land ownership but on a two-tiered rural land system that combines public ownership with the private leasing of user rights. These reform measures strengthen adherence to the rule of law in rural society and the market orientation of the rural economy, while at the same time reflect efforts to preserve China's state socialism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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8. THE WORLD'S HOTTEST COMPUTER LAB.
- Author
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Huang, Gregory T.
- Subjects
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LABORATORIES , *RESEARCH institutes , *INDUSTRIAL research - Abstract
This article focuses on the initiatives taken by Microsoft Corp. at its laboratory in Beijing, China, in relation to computer science. At Microsoft Research Asia, the drive to succeed is allegedly as intense as the traffic that roars by the front door in unbridled, chaotic fury. If the other facilities of the company around the globe seem idyllic, the one, in Beijing, China, is pure street. Nearby high-rises compete with smokestacks for skyline supremacy. Run-down buildings sit next to bustling consumer electronics markets and the Beijing Satellite Manufacturing Factory, where China conducts its spaceflight research. Microsoft's mantra, which is work hard to get in the door, work harder to survive, then work even harder because the real work, that of an information technology world leader, is just beginning. Harry Shum, the laboratory managing director, is hearty, engaging, and surprisingly young. Shum's long-time colleague Hongjiang Zhang heads the laboratory's Advanced Technology Center, a division launched late 2003 to accelerate new technologies into Microsoft's product pipeline. Together, Shum and Zhang lead an organization that looks like a typical corporate laboratory but feels like a startup.
- Published
- 2004
9. Master of qubits.
- Author
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Huang, Gregory T.
- Subjects
- *
QUANTUM computers , *QUANTUM theory , *COMPUTER science - Abstract
The article discusses the efforts of Jian-Wei Pan, a Chinese scientist, to develop a quantum supercomputer. A brief overview of the principles and challenges involved in using quantum mechanics for computing is presented and the international competition to create such devices is noted. The efforts of the communist Chinese government to lure top-level researchers to China are also analyzed.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Going online behind the Great Firewall of China.
- Author
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Huang, Gregory T.
- Subjects
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INTERNET , *COMMUNISM & technology , *CENSORSHIP - Abstract
The article discusses the internet in China, focusing on the distinctively Chinese web sites such as Baidu, a search engine similar to Google which is good at finding names written in Chinese characters, social networking sites such as Xiaonei and games such as Fantasy Westward Journey by NetEase. The censorship of political discussion and pornography by the communist Chinese government is also noted.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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11. China: Growing pains of a superpower.
- Author
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Aldhous, Peter and Huang, Gregory T.
- Subjects
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GLOBALIZATION , *GLOBAL warming , *LEAD based paint , *TWENTY-first century ,CHINESE economic policy ,ECONOMIC conditions in China, 2000- ,CHINESE politics & government, 2002- - Abstract
The author reflects on the importance of China, addressing global economic trends and the theory that China will try to dominate the 21st century. The significance of China's exports, including poisoned pet food and lead-painted children's toys, is discussed and the impact that increasing Chinese consumption of oil is likely to have on fuel prices and global warming is noted. Speculation about the possible future of China's communist dictatorship is also presented.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Web Dynasty.
- Author
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Huang, Gregory T.
- Subjects
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EXECUTIVES , *WEB portals , *INTERNET industry - Abstract
This article features Ben Tsiang, executive vice president of product development for China's largest Web portal, Sina. Tsiang is a seasoned veteran of the Internet boom and navigates startups as deftly as he does the traffic around his company's financial headquarters. In his mid-30s, he is the face of a new generation of developers in the world's fastest-growing Internet community. Historically, sources of news and information for Chinese citizens have been limited to state-run TV and radio. Tsiang and his peers have made their names creating homegrown Web browsers, portals and search engines that offer more in-depth content and services that can usually be found on Chinese versions of American web sites. Like the rest of Sina's top brass, which includes executives Yan Wang, Charles Chao, and Hurst Lin, Tsiang was trained in the West, which seems to have shaped his attitudes about information and business. From a prominent family--his grandfather was secretary general for Taiwanese leader Ching-kuo Chiang--Tsiang was born in California but grew up and went to college in Taiwan. As a graduate student at Stanford University in 1995, he cofounded Sinanet, an online news service directed at Chinese-language readers outside China. Tsiang's experience holds broader lessons for Web companies across the globe. He says it is not enough to get the technology and business model right--you also have to understand local pockets of culture. Those companies that capitalize on this knowledge stand to do well in China and beyond.
- Published
- 2005
13. China's Clever Classroom.
- Author
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Huang, Gregory T.
- Subjects
- *
SMART structures , *ASSISTIVE computer technology , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *DISTANCE education - Abstract
This article describes the smart classroom of Tsinghua University professor Yuanchun Shi, which displays photographs of students at other universities across China who have logged in. Shi poses a question and calls on a remote student by shining a laser pointer on the student's photo. The student's picture switches to live video and audio as the student answers. Also, Shi writes on a digital whiteboard that transmits her handwriting to the students' computers, complementing audio and visual feeds from cameras and microphones. Allegedly, Shi's smart classroom is one of the most advanced in the world. Allegedly, wide-scale testing is under way, and commercialization is planned, initially within China. Apparently, most smart classrooms for distance learning have required teachers to use desktop computers to run their classes. But such version allows Shi to lecture and interact with remote students more naturally, using speech, gestures, and handwriting. Further, Shi's classroom allegedly relies on some technological wizardry. In the back of the room, behind a curtain, is a rack of seven computers. Computer-vision algorithms coordinate eight video cameras that track the teacher's movements, switching views as she points to a page in a textbook or writes on the whiteboard.
- Published
- 2004
14. Incidence and Outcomes of CNS Tumors in Chinese Children: Comparative Analysis With the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program.
- Author
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Liu APY, Liu Q, Shing MMK, Ku DTL, Fu E, Luk CW, Ling SC, Cheng KKF, Kwong DLW, Ho WWS, Ng HK, Gajjar A, Yasui Y, Chan GCF, and Armstrong GT
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, China epidemiology, Hong Kong epidemiology, Humans, Incidence, SEER Program, United States epidemiology, Central Nervous System Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Purpose: Despite being the most common pediatric solid tumors, incidence and outcome of CNS tumors in Chinese children have not been systematically reported. We addressed this knowledge gap by comparing the epidemiology of pediatric CNS tumors in Hong Kong and the United States., Patients and Methods: Data between 1999 and 2016 from a population-based cancer registry in Hong Kong, China, on patients < 18 years old with CNS tumors (Hong Kong cohort) and from the US SEER Program (Asian/Pacific Islander and all ethnicities) were compared. Incidence and overall survival (OS) by histology were evaluated., Results: During the study period, 526 children were newly diagnosed with CNS tumors in Hong Kong (crude incidence rate, 2.47 per 100,000; 95% CI, 2.26 to 2.69). Adjusted incidences were significantly lower in the Hong Kong (2.51; 95% CI, 2.30 to 2.74) than in the SEER (Asian/Pacific Islander: 3.26; 95% CI, 2.97 to 3.57; P < .001; all ethnicities: 4.10 per 100,000; 95% CI, 3.99 to 4.22; P < .001) cohorts. Incidences of germ cell tumors (0.57 v 0.24; P < .001) were significantly higher, but those of glial and neuronal tumors (0.94 v 2.61; P < .001), ependymomas (0.18 v 0.31; P = .005), and choroid plexus tumors (0.08 v 0.16; P = .045) were significantly lower in Hong Kong compared with SEER (all ethnicities) cohorts. Compared with the SEER (Asian/Pacific Islander) cohort, histology-specific incidences were similar except for a lower incidence of glial and neuronal tumors in Hong Kong (0.94 v 1.74; P < .001). Among cohorts, OS differed only for patients with glial and neuronal tumors (5-year OS: Hong Kong, 52.5%; SEER [Asian/Pacific Islander], 73.6%; SEER [all ethnicities], 79.9%; P < .001)., Conclusion: We identified important ethnic differences in the epidemiology of CNS tumors in Chinese children. These results will inform the development of pediatric neuro-oncology services in China and aid further etiologic studies.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Cost effectiveness of cervical cancer screening among Chinese women in North America.
- Author
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Thompson B, Thompson AL, Chan NL, Hislop GT, and Taylor VM
- Subjects
- China ethnology, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Delphi Technique, Education, Continuing economics, Female, Humans, North America epidemiology, Mass Screening economics, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms economics, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Chinese North American women have high invasive cervical cancer rates and low screening rates. The cost-effectiveness of strategies to improve Pap testing rates for Chinese women living in Seattle, Washington and Vancouver, British Columbia was examined., Objectives: To calculate the costs and cost-effectiveness of implementing two strategies to motivate women to obtain a Pap smear., Research Design: A three-armed randomized, controlled trial was conducted. Women in each of two interventions (high-intensity outreach and low-intensity mailing intervention) were compared to a group of women who received usual care., Measures: Costs were captured via a group discussion of costs, accounting records, sampling of staff time logs, and estimation of costs and task times. Effectiveness was measured as the proportion of women in each intervention arm who reported receiving a Pap smear since the trial began. Cost-effectiveness was calculated as the incremental cost of screening each additional woman between an intervention arm and the control arm., Results: A greater percentage of women who received the outreach intervention had a Pap test than women who received mailed materials or women who were in the usual care arm. The intent-to-treat cost for each additional woman to be screened for a Pap test was $415 in the Outreach arm and $676 for the Direct Mailing arm. The outreach worker intervention, though more expensive overall, was more cost-effective than the mailing intervention., Conclusions: Outreach intervention is cost-effective for sponsors and should be considered as a strategy to motivate Chinese women living in North America to seek cervical cancer screening.
- Published
- 2007
16. Expression of multiple drug resistance conferring proteins in normal Chinese and Caucasian small and large intestinal tissue samples.
- Author
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Wang Q, Bhardwaj RK, Herrera-Ruiz D, Hanna NN, Hanna IT, Gudmundsson OS, Buranachokpaisan T, Hidalgo IJ, and Knipp GT
- Subjects
- ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B analysis, ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 11, ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters analysis, Adult, Asian People, China, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Humans, Immunoblotting, Immunohistochemistry, Intestine, Large chemistry, Intestine, Large cytology, Intestine, Small chemistry, Intestine, Small cytology, Multidrug Resistance-Associated Protein 2, Multidrug Resistance-Associated Proteins analysis, Reference Values, White People, ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B biosynthesis, ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters biosynthesis, Intestine, Large metabolism, Intestine, Small metabolism, Multidrug Resistance-Associated Proteins biosynthesis
- Abstract
Multidrug resistance conferring proteins (MDRCP) are ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters known to significantly influence the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and elimination (ADME) and toxic behavior of many therapeutic agents. Research in the pharmacogenomics area has suggested that mutations and variable expression patterns of these MDCRPs may exist in tissue samples from different ethnic groups. The goal of this study was to examine the expression of P-glycoprotein (PGP), sister of PGP (S-PGP), multidrug resistance protein 3 (Mdr3), multidrug resistance like proteins 1-5 (MRP 1-5), and lung resistance associated protein (LRP) in tissue slides and protein lysates derived from normal adult small or large intestines of Caucasian or Chinese origin. Our results demonstrated ubiquitous expression of PGP, MRP 1, MRP 4, and LRP in the small and large intestinal epitheliums originating from both Caucasian and Chinese origin. S-PGP, Mdr3, MRP 2, and MRP 3 exhibited variable expression in the tissue slides and protein lysates derived from the Chinese and Caucasian small and large intestines. MRP 5 was not observed in any of the samples studied. The results suggest that MDCRPs may have distinct expression profiles in the small and large intestines that potentially vary with genetic background. These studies provide a foundation for further investigations to verify these findings across a wider number of patients of different ethnic backgrounds.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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