grant and research

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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
Kun Liu

(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