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  • ​Trust the teachers

    ​Trust the teachers

    Swedish schools have great potential for educational development work, but teachers need to be able to organise their time differently. These are some of the conclusions of Helen Avery, a new PhD at the School of Education and Communication, Jönköping University. The study examines conditions for intercultural school development.

  • ​A new tool for clinical assessment

    ​A new tool for clinical assessment

    Difficulties in the development of valid and reliable assessment measures in nursing competency continue to pose a challenge in nursing education. In a new thesis from School of Health and Welfare, Jönköping University, Vivien Xi Wu has developed a holistic clinical assessment tool to meet the needs of clinical education.

  • Enduring and exit strategies - new research on family business portfolios

    Enduring and exit strategies - new research on family business portfolios

    ​How do family businesses endure over time and generations? What strategies do they adopt and what is the role of emotions? In a new PhD thesis from Jönköping International Business School, Jönköping University, Naveed Akhter studies family businesses in Pakistan to find out what strategies are successful and what makes a business survive through good and bad times.

  • Early intervention strengthens children's mental health

    Early intervention strengthens children's mental health

    ​Is it possible to detect behavioural disorders at an early age and what efforts can then be made? On behalf of the National Board of Health and Welfare, the research group CHILD at Jönköping University has studied this in the project "Early detection - early intervention."

  • ​Globalisation as a hybrid process

    Should the main goal for emerging economies really be to try and copy the way of the West? In a new doctoral thesis, Zehra Sayed challenges the view of “developed” and “developing” countries. As an example she has studied knowledge transfer and knowledge spillover in the media industry, specifically from Reuters to its subsidiaries in India.

  • ​Swedish companies get help from JIBS students

    ​Swedish companies get help from JIBS students

    The Expanding Markets Award marks the end of the master course Advanced International Marketing, Trade and Export Management, at Jönköping International Business School, Jönköping University. Three student teams were rewarded for having presented the best export and marketing strategy for a Swedish company. The award is sponsored by Business Sweden, ALMI, EKN, SEK, and Swedfund.

  • ​Resources and discourses – two sides of entrepreneurial identity

    Immigrant women entrepreneurs are not a homogenous group, but their collective stories can tell us something about the intersection between ethnicity, gender and class, and bring together two separate tracks in entrepreneurship research. Huriye Aygören recently defended her PhD thesis at Jönköping International Business School, Jönköping University.

  • CHILD-project granted 560 000 SEK from STINT

    CHILD-project granted 560 000 SEK from STINT

    ​The Swedish researcher Karina Huus at Jönköping University and the South African researcher Shakila Dada from the South African partner University of Pretoria, both received an equal amount for the joint project Participation for children with disability.

  • JIBS is Sweden’s first double accredited business school

    JIBS is Sweden’s first double accredited business school

    Jönköping International Business School (JIBS) at Jönköping University, is the first and, so far, only institution in Sweden to be awarded the quality accreditation by AACSB. In March this year, JIBS received the EQUIS accreditation, which means that JIBS places itself among the top 0.1 % business schools in the world, and as the only double accredited by EQUIS and AACSB business school in Sweden.

  • ​Terrorist acts increase prejudice and hate crimes against Muslims

    ​Terrorist acts increase prejudice and hate crimes against Muslims

    Anti-Muslim prejudice and hate crimes increase in Europe and the USA as a consequence of Islamist terrorist attacks, a new study in the journal Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations reveals. But high-profile hate crimes against Muslims have paradoxical effects.

  • JIBS Assistant Professor rewarded with CEEMAN Champion Award

    JIBS Assistant Professor rewarded with CEEMAN Champion Award

    The JIBS Assistant Professor Marcela Ramirez-Pasillas is the first International (Mexican) researcher from the first Swedish university ever to be rewarded with the CEEMAN Champion Award, in the category Responsible Management Education.

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