Arcanum Ab Ovo


Book Description

ARCANUM AB OVO is Book 1 of a phenomenal series that leads modern day science fiction up to a higher level, in terms of events and scope. The novel takes us all the way from the deepest pre-geological eras of the Solar System to our near future, when the elite of the human kind will have to face an ancient and powerful foe. That mighty hostis hungers for one thing - absolute devastation. With its scope and impressiveness, this never-ending saga about people and their place in the Universe reveals some of the most magnificent aspects of Viktoria Wealth's artistry.







AMO AMAS AMAT & MORE


Book Description

A witty and entertaining guide to the use of Latin expressions for one's own advantage in the modern world.







The Monthly Microscopical Journal


Book Description










Transnational Business


Book Description

First Published in 1999. Small Businesses Trickling Up in Central and Eastern Europe argues that micro-, small, and medium-sized enterprises in selected countries of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) have been the key to economic growth rather than privatized large-scale enterprises. Small businesses have come to constitute the most dynamic element of growth in the emerging markets of the CEE region in the last decade. In 1989, most of the countries of the region were still under the political and economic domination of the Soviet Union. Since then a process of liberalization has been unleashed in the region to dismantle statist economic policies and replace them with free market policies. This has involved programs of privatization and restructuring of state-owned enterprises, as well as the promotion of policies to enable a private sector to develop. Small businesses are creating thousands of new jobs while large companies are retrenching and downsizing their workforce. In some countries of the region this process is much further along than in others. In each country, however, the small and medium enterprise (SME) sector has developed at a more rapid pace than has the privatization of the large public companies. The privatization of small and medium-sized state-owned enterprises has been rather more successful. With the economic transition there has been a flurry of new enterprises springing up throughout the region, some registered as legal entities but many micro-enterprises often remaining unregistered in the informal sector. Micro-enterprises are increasingly seen as an important element of this SME sector, although they were traditionally treated separately as belonging to the informal sector and a detriment to economic growth.