News


  • 14.11.2016

    The story of the rise and fall of EAC

    One day in late March 2015 a major flagship of Danish business and industry closed its doors for the last time. With unlimited access to the company’s archives, professor and business historian Martin Iversen recounts what went wrong in Scandinavia’s largest international company in his new book, “Vision: EAC, Denmark and the world”.
  • 19.08.2016

    Inadequacy pushes consumers toward alternative dietary lifestyles

    Alternative dietary lifestyles are shooting up everywhere going against official dietary recommendations and bypassing traditional food brands. Researchers believe, however, that there is huge market potential in alternative dietary lifestyles if the food industry would just wake up.
  • 14.07.2016

    From Weimar to the Euro: New book on the European crisis

    The new book Critical Theories of Crisis in Europe – From Weimar to the Euro provides a truly interdisciplinary analysis, bridging the gap between humanities, legal and social science approaches to the ongoing crisis in Europe.
  • 14.07.2016

    When companies take cooperation too far

    ’Cartelization’ is the official term when companies collaborate in a manner that suspends competition. In his new book, Hubert Buch-Hansen explains how cartelization works and how it is exposed and penalised.
  • 18.04.2016

    Dragon boat accident – why didn’t anyone intervene?

    How can an undertaking as risky as rowing out in a dragon boat on a cold, windy day in February appear to make such perfectly good sense to an organisation that no-one intervenes? CBS-researcher Morten Thanning Vendelø analyses the Præstø Fjord accident from the point of view of Karl Weick's theory of sensemaking in organisations.
  • 12.04.2016

    Customer pressure to make shipping more environmentally friendly

    The most environmentally friendly mode of transport is not quite so friendly after all. Research now shows that greater pressure from shipping customers and increased global regulation are necessary for pushing maritime shipping in a more environmentally-friendly direction.

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