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It gives me great pleasure to present to you the newest issue of the Transnational Marketing Journal. This October 2019 release includes papers covering different and interesting topics that we think will appeal to a broad segment of readers. Tourism, beer marketing and destination marketing, entrepreneurial strategies, customer relationship management (CRM) and supply chain management are covered in this issue, which we hope you will find interesting to read.
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Remittances Review This issue of Remittance Review includes four articles that, taken as a whole, reveal the dynamic and sometimes unanticipated role migrant remittances can play for household, community and national development over time. Too often, remittances are defined in unambiguous, economic terms that are focused on one point in time. What movers return to their sending households is earmarked and invested in home life and to meet daily expenses. Following upon this assumption; the use of remittances over time and to different ends—for example to grow or start a business or to drive entrepreneurial activity—is not well understood.
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Remittances Review is the only dedicated peer-reviewed international scholarly outlet disseminating work on remittances and money transfers since 2016. Published independently with an open-minded approach to entice innovative research and scholarship to join the debates, Remittances Review constantly invites all scholars, practitioners and policy makers to submit their best work for publication.
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This special issue entitled “Politics, Policies and Diplomacy of Diaspora Governance: New Directions in Theory and Research” is a result of a workshop organised by Dr Bahar Baser (Coventry University, UK) and Dr Henio Hoyo (CIDE and UDEM, Mexico) at the Freud Museum on December 6, 2018, and funded by the British Academy / Newton Mobility Grant. Throughout the workshop, diaspora scholars from various fields explored diaspora politics and policies from a variety of perspectives with a special focus on home state policies towards mobilising diasporas. A central theme that has emerged throughout the discussions was the ascending importance of diasporas as non-state actors in international relations and the multifaceted relationships they form with their home and host states as well as other non-governmental organisations. The special issue contains case studies from different parts of the world, from Latin America to the Balkans, from Africa to the Middle East, revealing that there is a growing global trend of engaging diasporas to complex policy mechanisms at home and abroad.
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2020 SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR THE REVIEW “STUDIES OF SCIENCE AND CULTURE”
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