Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12469/1248
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Browsing Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu by Publication Category "Kitap Bölümü - Uluslararası"
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Book Part Are Web Designers Resisting the Inclusion of Social Cues When Creating Website's User Interface?(IGI Global, 2011) De Kervenoael, Ronan; Bisson, Christophe; Mark Palmer, MarkUsing the resistance literature as an underpinning theoretical framework this chapter analyzes how Web designers through their daily practices (i) adopt recursive adaptive and resisting behavior regarding the inclusion of social cues online and (ii) shape the socio-technical power relationship between designers and other stakeholders. Five vignettes in the form of case studies with expert individual Web designers are used. Findings point out at three types of emerging resistance namely: market driven resistance ideological resistance and functional resistance. In addition a series of propositions are provided linking the various themes. Furthermore the authors suggest that stratification in Web designers' type is occurring and that resistance offers a novel lens to analyze the debate. © 2012 IGI Global.Book Part The political economy of Turkey in the last two centuries(Taylor and Francis Inc., 2021) Selçuk, B.; Öztürk, M.[No abstract available]Book Part Mare Clausum: War and Diplomacy on the Black Sea, 1939 - 91(De Gruyter, 2024) Işçi, O.[No abstract available]Book Part Public Intimacy and the New Face (Book) of Surveillance: The Role of Social Media in Shaping Contemporary Dataveillance(IGI Global, 2009) Baruh, Lemi; Soysal, LeventIn recent years, social media have become an important avenue for self-expression. At the same time, the ease with which individuals disclose their private information has added to an already heated debate about the privacy implications of interactive media. This chapter investigates the relationship between disclosure of personal information in social media and two related trends: the increasing value of subjective or private experience as a social currency and the evolving nature of automated dataveillance. The authors argue that the results of the extended ability of individuals to negotiate their identity through social media are contradictory. The information revealed to communicate the complexity of one’s identity becomes an extensive source of data about individuals, thereby contributing to the functioning of a new regime of surveillance. © 2025 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.Book Part The Role of Youth in Ethnopolitical Conflicts(Taylor and Francis, 2022) Dizdaroglu, C.; Özerdem, A.[No abstract available]Book Part Citation - Scopus: 2Emotions and Islandness: Exploring Interactions of Urban Activist Communities in the Prince Islands of Istanbul(Springer Nature, 2025) Bahçekapılı, Y.; Yalçıntan, M.C.The 2000s will be remembered with the neoliberal urbanism that has rapidly transformed the metropolises throughout the world. Large-scale urban regeneration and renewal activities together with mega projects transformed cities not only spatially but also economically and socially. New accommodation, work, and entertainment spaces and forms were introduced (Todd, 1995). The consequences of this transformation include but are not limited to undermining spatial justice, increasing social inequalities, causing ecological destruction, and displacing many people. These deep wounds inflicted by neoliberal urbanism through dispossession and enclosure are becoming increasingly ordinary in metropolitan areas (Harvey, 2012; Merrifield, 2013). © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. 2024.Book Part Citation - Scopus: 2Policy Tools and the Attributes of Effectiveness: Spaces, Mixes and Instruments(Taylor and Francis, 2022) Coban, M.K.; Bali, A.S.[No abstract available]Book Part Dynamics Behind the 'moral Corruption' of the Financial System(Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg, 2014) Azer, Özlem ArzuThe first phase of transformation of the world economic system was realized at the beginning of the 1980s. These were years in which neo-liberalist politics had been widening all over the world due to the Washington Consensus. Decreasing role of government as one of the most important principle of Consensus played a very important role to establish the New World Order. The New World Order as a system of global governance that institutionalizes cooperation (Slaughter in A new world order Princeton University Press Princeton p. 15 2004). The decreasing role of government means decreasing the effect of 'wealth government.' Privatizations increased at high rate particularly in the Post Cold War era. The New World Order required the transformation of society. This transformation of society was realized from year to year since the 1980s. In the Post Cold War era there had been change in paradigms in terms of political as well as change in the structure of production. This era can be assumed to be the second phase of transformation. In the 1990s some big financial firms which were assumed to be free from the problem of liquidation (banktrupcy) went bankcrupt. The moral erosion of the financial system became evident. The mechanism behind the moral erosion was versatile. The components of the balance sheet and delibrate disinformation to increase the value of firms and consequently shareholder value were part of the problem. In the second part auditing firms which approved the finaancial statements were vigorously scrutinized. And the most important part was the mechanism which allows and/or directs CEOs and executives to act in such a corrupt and irresponsible way. © 2014 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. All rights are reserved.Book Part Cycles of (Im)mobility: Floating Populations in the Case of Turkey(Cambridge University Press, 2025) Karadaǧ, SibelAs the largest refugee-hosting country in the world, the case of Turkey represents a categorical example that manifests a varied set of legal and governing techniques to monitor millions of displaced people within a broad design of temporality and spatiality. At the intersection of Turkey’s contested gatekeeping role for Europe, an economic downturn, authoritarian rule, and the erosion of the rule of law, the multitude of displaced bodies becomes an instrument of population engineering characterized by remarkable flux. This chapter endeavors to dissect Turkey’s migration regime, revealing a complex legal precarity and temporal lacuna that are distinctly layered. This intricate legal and spatial/temporal architecture is routinely transcended, functioning as a self-failing mechanism aligning with the exigencies of the informal labor market and the prevailing political conjuncture. Consequently, it perpetually begets irregularity and arbitrariness. A set of governing technologies, at times paradoxical, transforms irregularized bodies into floating populations in cycles of (forced) movement. © 2025 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.Book Part Citation - Scopus: 1Transforming Universities for a More Competent Society: Digitalization and Higher Education(IGI Global, 2022) Tosun, P.Digitalization has transformed the higher education sector. It is a significant factor that shapes the future of higher education. Universities are the primary institutions that must ensure the relevancy and actuality of their curricula and provide high-quality education programs by utilizing new methods and technologies in the rapidly changing environment. Business administration, a popular program for undergraduate and graduate students, must evolve with the dynamic education environment shaped by digital learning alternatives. The management programs must respond to the rapidly changing needs of the labor market, students, and society to provide students with the relevant skills. The chapter presents a literature synthesis, summarizes the new trends and priorities in designing and managing higher education, and points out practical implications and future research directions for higher education managers and researchers © 2022, IGI Global. All rights reserved.Book Part Citation - WoS: 1Citation - Scopus: 2The Dead Are Alive: The Exotic Non-Place of the Bondian Runaway Production(Taylor and Francis, 2021) Behlil, M.; Prado, I.M.S.; Verheul, J.This chapter dissects the opening sequences of Skyfall (2012) in Istanbul and Spectre (2015) in Mexico City in order to argue that Eon’s predilection for runaway productions has begun began to influence the textual composition of the James Bond film series. Eon Productions often modifies the narratives and settings of its Bond features in order to exploit the increasingly global availability of funding schemes, tax incentives, and cheap labor, and to secure, on a global scale, profitable distribution deals, enhanced visibility, and greater revenues from merchandizing. In the process, the Bondian runaway production fashions a colonial imaginary of exotic non-places, which has since long been a staple of the brand of Bond. © The authors/Taylor & Francis Group 2020.Book Part Paul Bowles as I Knew Him(Brill Academic Publishers, 2014) Sawyer-Lauçanno, Christopher[Abstract Not Available]Book Part Citation - WoS: 5Citation - Scopus: 6Determinants of Corporate Cash Holdings: Firm Level Evidence From Emerging Markets(Springer, 2017) Akben Selçuk, Elif; Altiok-Yilmaz, AyseThe objective of this chapter is to investigate the factors affecting corporate cash holdings in five emerging markets namely Brazil Indonesia Mexico Russia and Turkey. The sample consists of 1991 firms listed on the major stock exchange of their countries and covers the period between 2009 and 2015. The model is estimated by Arellano–Bond dynamic generalized method of moments. Results show that firms which use higher leverage in their capital structure hold more cash. More profitable firms are shown to have higher levels of cash holdings. Another variable which has a positive effect on the level of cash holdings in any given period is the level of cash holdings in the previous period as shown by the positive and significant coefficient of the lagged dependent variable in the model. Liquidity and firm size have a negative and statistically significant impact on the level of corporate cash holdings. Firms with higher level of capital expenditures are also shown to hold less cash. Finally growth opportunities do not have a significant impact on the level of cash holdings for the firms in the emerging markets analyzed. © Springer International Publishing AG 2017.Book Part Citation - Scopus: 2Men, Masculinities and Military Organizations(Taylor and Francis, 2023) Aktaş,F.O.; Collinson,D.L.; Hearn,J.; Sünbüloğlu,N.Y.Militaries and militarism are among the most obviously gendered of all organizational activities. The military is also one of the clearest arenas of social power, violence and killing in their many guises. Military matters are urgent, powerful and lethal. The ways armies and those in them are organized and act are literally questions of life and death for all concerned. This chapter brings together studies on men and masculinities with those in the military and military organizations. Men, militarism and the military are historically, profoundly and blatantly interconnected. These interconnections have often either been simply accepted or it has gone unnoticed that these military persons are largely men. Indeed, many, though not all, armies and other fighting forces of the world have been and still are armies composed mainly of men, young men and boys. Those engaged in active combat and direct fighting in wars are often young men and boys. In the chapter, we address the place of men and masculinities in some key organizational issues in military organization and militarism, most notably recruitment, hierarchies and segregations, disability and veterans, and the impacts of these organizations on civilians, before concluding remarks on wider processes and impacts, on research, scientific and technological organizations, on international relations and geopolitics, and on the environment. © 2024 selection and editorial matter, Jeff Hearn, Kadri Aavik, David L. Collinson and Anika Thym. All rights reserved.Book Part Luxury Tourism(Springer Nature, 2025) Correia, A.; Kozak, M.Book Part Citation - Scopus: 39Cloud-based non-destructive characterization(Elsevier, 2023) Heidari,A.; Navimipour,N.J.; Otsuki,A.Cloud services have grown in popularity; businesses, organizations, industries, and academic institutions use cloud services such as Cloud Non-destructive Characterization Testing (CNDCT), also known as Cloud Testing (CT). Vendors compete to deliver highly reliable services, diverse requirements, and product qualities. The CT platforms can test cloud-based systems or use the cloud for testing purposes: both approaches have sparked interest in the research. Cloud testing draws many companies and sectors worldwide by offering potential solutions for managing software applications and providing convenient testing environments. Because of cloud computing, Testing as a Service (TaaS) was born. Given the capabilities of TaaS, it has created several issues and obstacles, particularly in cloud-based, non-destructive testing environments. So, this chapter reviews and addresses the obstacles and benefits of CNDCT, including a theoretical comparison between the cloud-based testing environment and traditional standard system testing. © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Book Part Neurogenesis in the Zebrafish Olfactory Epithelium in Response to Neurotoxicity and Injury(CRC Press, 2025) Kocagoz, Y.; Fuss, S.H.Book Part Financial Deregulation and the 2007–08 Us Financial Crisis(Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd., 2015) Orhangazi, O.[No abstract available]Book Part Citation - WoS: 6Citation - Scopus: 7Alternative Credit Scoring and Classification Employing Machine Learning Techniques on a Big Data Platform(Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2019) Hindistan, Yavuz Selim; Kiyakoğlu, Burhan Yasin; Rezaeinazhad, Arash Mohammadian; Korkmaz, Halil Ergun; Dağ, HasanWith the bloom of financial technology and innovations aiming to deliver a high standard of financial services, banks and credit service companies, along with other financial institutions, use the most recent technologies available in a variety of ways from addressing the information asymmetry, matching the needs of borrowers and lenders, to facilitating transactions using payment services. In the long list of FinTechs, one of the most attractive platforms is the Peer-to-Peer (P2P) lending which aims to bring the investors and borrowers hand in hand, leaving out the traditional intermediaries like banks. The main purpose of a financial institution as an intermediary is of controlling risk and P2P lending platforms innovate and use new ways of risk assessment. In the era of Big Data, using a diverse source of information from spending behaviors of customers, social media behavior, and geographic information along with traditional methods for credit scoring prove to have new insights for the proper and more accurate credit scoring. In this study, we investigate the machine learning techniques on big data platforms, analyzing the credit scoring methods. It has been concluded that on a HDFS (Hadoop Distributed File System) environment, Logistic Regression performs better than Decision Tree and Random Forest for credit scoring and classification considering performance metrics such as accuracy, precision and recall, and the overall run time of algorithms. Logistic Regression also performs better in time in a single node HDFS configuration compared to a non-HDFS configuration.Book Part Conclusion(Goodfellow Publishers Ltd, 2025) Kozak, M.; Correia, A.

