Media Futures 2021
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-80488-6_3
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Imagination and Future Media

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“…More specifically, emerging markets are characterized by frequent and unexpected institutional changes 1 and transitions that result in constantly changing and new "rules of the game" (Rottig, 2016), and so constitute a more complex context for multinational corporations to navigate, particularly in regard to actions and behaviors that may or may not be perceived as organizational misconduct. A survey by Ernst and Young (Alexe, 2018;Ernst & Young, 2018), for example, found that over 52% of respondents (out of 1450 top executives of organizations working in 33 emerging markets as part of the study on fraud bribery and corruption trends) indicated that corruption, a key type of organizational misconduct, is more widespread in emerging markets (compared to only 20% in the context of developed markets) and had doubled compared to their 2012 edition of the survey despite an increased level of regulations and compliance efforts by the governments in these markets.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More specifically, emerging markets are characterized by frequent and unexpected institutional changes 1 and transitions that result in constantly changing and new "rules of the game" (Rottig, 2016), and so constitute a more complex context for multinational corporations to navigate, particularly in regard to actions and behaviors that may or may not be perceived as organizational misconduct. A survey by Ernst and Young (Alexe, 2018;Ernst & Young, 2018), for example, found that over 52% of respondents (out of 1450 top executives of organizations working in 33 emerging markets as part of the study on fraud bribery and corruption trends) indicated that corruption, a key type of organizational misconduct, is more widespread in emerging markets (compared to only 20% in the context of developed markets) and had doubled compared to their 2012 edition of the survey despite an increased level of regulations and compliance efforts by the governments in these markets.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%