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‘Stuck’ in the Waiting Room: African and Haitian Migrants Between Liminality and Mobility in a Mexican Border Town
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Building or stumbling, blocks anyhow: a comparative approach of regional labour mobility frameworks towards global solutions
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Journeys of Emancipation, Struggle, or Both? Accounts from Professional Egyptian Migrant Women in Germany
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The political economy of migrant smuggling: The case of conflict in Mali
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Residential mobility practices in low-income communities of Tamale, Ghana
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Towards an understanding of the strategic use of mobile ICT in small and medium enterprises
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Moving through the Violence: Yemeni Migrants and the Reconstruction of Lifeworlds in Cairo
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Congolese immigrant workers in pretoria, south Africa : a sociological approach in the age of migration
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Climate Change and Migration to South Africa : Exploring the Role of Climate- and Environment-Related Adversities in Mobility Decision-Making
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Mobile banking capabilities required to serve the unbanked market in South Africa
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Mobilizing dissent: community organizing for informal housing
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Disenchanting the American dream : the interplay of spatial and social mobility through narrative dynamic in Fitzgerald, Steinbeck and Wolfe
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Stakeholders' perception of fund mobilization in Nigerian public universities
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Niger as a transit country for Nigerian and other West African migrants.
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Management of urban in-migration in South Africa
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Seamless mobility in IoT world using software defined networks
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The use of mobile technologies for mobile service delivery at Makerere University Library : a pilot study
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Comparative evaluation of the Mobile Protocol 6 Suite
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Mobile banking or m-banking is becoming a prominent feature in banking operations in Nigeria with more and more banks adopting this technology in order to provide the growing population of their customers with fast, accessible, reliable and quality services. The technology of mobile banking has emerged as a possible powerful provider of bundle of banking services. The mobile banking system involves the use of a mobile device (e.g. phone) to pay for goods or services either at the point of sale or conduct of banking transactions anywhere and anytime. The study evaluated the attitude of bank customers towards the adoption of M-banking services and challenges of mobile phone in conducting banking transactions in Nigeria with analytical focus on Enugu State. The survey research approach was adopted and data were collected from 200 respondents that include bank staff and customers of selected banks in Enugu metropolis. The analysis of data was conducted using descriptive statistical technique. The study revealed that the level of adoption of mobile banking in Enugu State is still low among the middle aged respondents compared to the aged. A massive awareness program to publicize the purpose and benefits derivable from the use of mobile banking should be encouraged. This, it is hoped, will boost the level of adoption of mobile banking services because of the convenience and accessibility offered by this banking platform.
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Mobile devices : taxation students' perception and acceptance of engaging with mobile learning environment
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The impact of mobile money on Rwandan household consumption
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Reflections on the constellation of Mousikē,
politics and ethics in Plato’s dialogues
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A structured approach to the identification of the significant risks related to enterprise mobile solutions at a mobile technology component level
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Does mobile money have a part to play in poverty reduction within South Africa?