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Channels - Understanding Illiberalism Through Economic Practice: Four Cases :: FRELIP Discovery
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An Immodest Rejoinder: Illiberalism and Postliberalism, But Still Neoliberalism
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The Other Half of the Ass: A Manifesto for Anthropology in Neo‐Illiberal Times
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The Coin's Third Side: Illiberal Money and the Sociality of a Community Currency
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“If It Is Stocks, It Is Not Supposed to Be a Pyramid Scheme!” Financial Consultants, Illiberal Economies, and State‐Led Financialization in Postsocialist Kazakhstan
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Conceptual understanding of linear regression among economics students at the university center of Tipaza, Algeria
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Economic Anthropology
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Empirical welfare economics
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Short‐Term Sustainability: Neoliberal Philanthropy, Dependency, and Divine Economics in Islamic Zanzibar
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Financial development and economic growth in Botswana: New evidence from disaggregated data
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Economic viability of youth agribusiness as a key issue for effective development of the agricultural sector in developing countries
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Informality and Social Networking: The Huan Qian Practice of the Chinese Business Community in Morocco
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Addressing student–teachers’ needs for innovative pedagogy and creativity through entrepreneurship education
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The impact of public debt on economic growth in Côte d'Ivoire: New evidence from linear and non-linear ARDL approaches
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“Having Experience of What to Do to Succeed”: Unsettling Neoliberalism Through the Lived Experiences of Microcredit Trader‐Borrowers in Ibadan
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Fostering entrepreneurial intent: how entrepreneurial education moderates the subjective norms–intention relationship through self-efficacy
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Digital Business Incubators and Digital Entrepreneurship: The case of Digital Incubation Center in Qatar
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Sixth generation (6G) and the future of telecommunications entrepreneurship: innovation, ecosystems, and emerging use cases
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Host–guest interactions and senior residents’ well-being in rural tourism: a case study of Qiaoxiang village in China
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Determinants of new product market success in food processing company and its implication to microalgae-based nutritional supplement and food commercialization in case of Bahir Dar city, evidence from Ethiopia
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In Memoriam Keith Hart, 1943–2025
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Entrepreneurial Becomings: Transformation, Crisis, and Aspiration in the Global Rise of Microentrepreneurship
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We Hear, for You: The Value of Listening to Our Corporate Colleagues
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A Modest Proposal for University Reform: It's Time We Stop Half‐Assing Neoliberalism and Start Whole‐Assing It
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Forest Lost: Producing Green Capitalism in the Brazilian Amazon. By Maron E. Greenleaf, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2024. 304 pp. Paper $27.95; Hardcover $104.95. Pages: 304; Illustrations: 21 illustrations; Published: November 2024. Paper ISBN: 978‐1‐4780‐3108‐6 / Hardcover ISBN: 978‐1‐4780‐2685‐3 / eISBN: 978‐1‐4780‐6007‐9.