Previously Funded Projects
Each academic year, limited faculty grants are awarded through the Rocky Mountain CIBER by the US Department of Education for research projects, case studies, instructional innovations and/or curriculum development. Grants are typically $1500 provided by RMCIBER with a $1500 match provided by the member school. Successful abstracts may be included on the RMCIBER, BYU and/or UC Denver CIBER websites and presented at a Rocky Mountain CIBER conference.
Date |
RMCIBER School |
Grant Recipient |
Title |
Project |
2009 |
University of Nevada Las Vegas |
Michael Sullivan |
Professor of Finance |
Corporate Governance, Ownership Structure and the Pay-Performance Relationships in Thailand |
2009 |
University of Nevada Las Vegas |
John Puthenpurackal |
Associate Professor of Finance |
The Rise and Fall of Satyam Computers Ltd. Case Study |
2009 |
Community College of Denver |
Allana Farley |
Adjunct Faculty of Business |
Global Trade/ International Logistics Certificate |
2008 |
Universtiy of Nevada Las Vegas |
Vincent Hsu (Chin-Chun Hsu) |
Assistant Professor of Management |
Foreign Market Expansion Behavior of International SMEs from Emerging Markets |
2007 |
Utah State University |
John Gilbert |
Associate Professor |
An Online Resource for International Trade Simulations |
2007 |
Utah State University |
Stacey Barlow Hills |
Assistant Professor of Marketing |
Developing an Applied International Marketing Research Course |
2006 |
University of Nevada Las Vegas |
Pui Wan Lee |
Assistant Professor of Marketing |
Managing the Challenge of Globalization through Knowledge Transfer and Knowledge Creation: From A Network and Contingency Perspective |
2004 |
University of Utah |
William S. Hesterly (PhD Student) |
Professor of Management |
Search for Problem and Solution in International Alliances |
2004 |
University of Nevada Las Vegas |
Chin-Chun Hsu |
Assistant Professor of Marketing |
An Empirical Study of Internationalization Strategy of the Multinational Enterprises |
2004 |
Utah Valley State College |
David McArthur |
Assistant Professor of International Business and Strategy |
A theory of international technology transfer: "Completing the loop" by examining the process in foreign technology-receiving firms |