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I will pay for the following essay Business Issues and the Contexts of HR. The essay is to be 5 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page.

The human resource manager also plays a great role in reconciling the owners or managers of the company and the workforce, when a crisis arises in the company the human resource manager, as he is closer to the people than the owners are works to bring the two parties jointly to come up with a resolution.

The economic world has been faced with similar problems when it comes to human resource management. This is because human resource is dynamic and ranges from skilled to semi skilled to skilled labour. The growing competitive world has worked to put resource managers on their heels to seek professionalism and to make the competitive in the economic world. As competition increases the natural resources decreases, this brings us to the term survival for the fittest and only the fittest company will survive, many companies are investing heavily on skilled labour that has also gained its competition in the market (Human Value Management, Jac Fitz-Enz, 1990).

Technological innovations have taken a centre stage in the dynamic economic world creating need to arm the workforce with the skills. In many companies workforce competent in the IT sector have an advantage over the others. Information communication technology has enabled companies to save on costs of production and has made it easier to market their goods and keep a good flow of information within and outside the company. With the growing inflations and the world, economic crisis it has become essential for companies to cut on their spending and the human resource department has not been saved the headache. Networking has become another key factor in the evolving world. Social sites such as Face book, twitter, what sup and Skype among others have played a major task in the marketing of the products. This means that some human resource personnel have to be able to cope with this to remain competitive.

It has changed people’s ways of living and doing

 

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write my assignment 11957

Consider a European call option on a non-dividend-paying stock where thestock price is $52, the strike price $50, the risk-free rate is 5%, the volatilityis 30%, and the time to maturity is one year. Answer the following questionsassuming no recovery in the event of default, that the probability of defaultis independent of the option valuation, no collateral is posted, and no othertransactions between the parties are outstanding.(a) What is the value of the option assuming no possibility of a default?(b) What is the value of the option to the buyer if there is a 2% chance thatthe option seller will default at maturity?(c) Suppose that, instead of paying the option price up front, the option buyeragrees to pay the forward value of the option price at the end of option’slife. By how much does this reduce the cost of defaults to the option buyerin the case where there is a 2% chance of the option seller defaulting?(d) If in case (c) the option buyer has a 1% chance of defaulting at the end ofthe life of the option, what is the default risk to the option seller? Discussthe two-sided nature of default risk in the case and the value of the optionto each side.

 

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Due By: Saturday, Feb. 10

Read the poems “Telephone Conversation (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.” by Wole Soyinka and “On the Subway (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.” by Sharon Olds.

Write a 500 to 750 word essay comparing and contrasting the themes of these two poems. Remember that you should use the close reading method of Module 5 or the explication method of this module to gather evidence and quotes from the poems to support your thesis.

Module 5: Module Notes Transcript

Introduction

French critics of poetry developed a precise strategy for reading poetry they called explication du texte or explicating a poem. Explication is another word for analyze. This reading method follows a number of steps that progressive unearth the special language and meaning poems often contain. This method works best with difficult poems, but can be applied to any poetry. Much like the literary criticism you learned about in Module Two, explicating a poem represents a professional reading of poetry by scholars. It should never replace the active and more personal reading of poems you practiced in the last module. For an excellent example of how to analyze a poem along with a structure for writing about a poem using this critical method, see the University of North Carolina’s handout: Poetry Explications (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site..

For this module, we will be following the method of explication presented at Hunter College’s Writing about Literature section (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. of their Writing Center.

We will apply this method to an analysis of Robert Frost’s famous poem “Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.”. This is not meant to be an exhaustive analysis, but rather, a guideline to use when trying to understand and write about difficult poetry. The steps can be followed in any order.

Step 1: What is the literal sense of the poem?

Literal refers to the surface of the poem. What exactly happens in the poem independent of any meaning? If you had to write to a friend in another state or overseas how would you summarize or describe Robert Frost’s poem. Basically, a man riding in a horse and buggy crosses the country property of a village land owner on his way home. It is late at night on the shortest night of the year. He crosses a wooded landscape on the way home. It is snowing and the protagonist stops momentarily to think about life. His horse seems confused by the pause and, then, the protagonist (the main actor or character in the poem) continues on his way.

That’s the literal sense of the poem.

Step 2: What is the diction of the poem?

Diction is a fancy way to talk about language use or how we use our words. Formal diction occurs most often at work or in the classroom where you speak standard English. Formal diction changes depending on one’s audience. British royalty use very educated, elevated diction. Informal diction is more conversational and relaxed. We often use informal language at home or at recreational events. Street diction has emerged as a new informal style of spoken word poetry.

Although Frost writes poetry, the poem’s diction is informal and easy to understand. He writes as a common everyday person for another common everyday person whose education is not so important. In other words, Frost uses plain speaking diction.

Step 3: What is the tone of the poem?

Tone usually suggests attitude. “Don’t use that tone of voice with me” means don’t speak in an aggressive or angry fashion. A poem’s tone varies as much as a speaker’s attitude. Examples of tone include: happy, sad, angry, ecstatic, quiet, agitated, nervous and so on. Often irony is classified under tone. Irony (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. is when something other than what the reader expects to happen happens. This literary element was also discussed in Module 1.

Frost’s tone is very soft like the snowy night the poet describes. An excellent word for this tone would be contemplative. The poem describes a man all alone stopping for a moment to think about life before returning home.

Step 4: What is the rhetorical situation implied by the poem?

Rhetoric (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. is a fancy Greek word that refers to the speaking or writing situation you find yourself in? In other words who is the speaker of the poem? Who is the speaker addressing, i.e. the audience, and what is the context or occasion of the speech?

In Frost’s poem the speaker is the poems personae or protagonist, the “I”’ that travels across the wooded landscape. The poem’s original audience is hard to discern, but the poem implies a rather general, perhaps rural audience of everyday people. The situation is simply the poet’s moment of contemplation inspired by a particular scene at a particular moment of time.

Step 5: Does the poem use figurative language?

Figurative language is language that goes beyond the literal or surface level of a word. Most poetry makes strong use of figurative language especially simile and metaphor. Simile uses the words “like” or “as” to compare two items.

“My love is like a red, red rose.”

Love is compared to a red rose because a rose is considered an object of beauty and red is a symbol of life and passion.

Metaphor compares two unlike items through substitution, In “Digging,” Seamus Heaney substitutes the pen for a spade. That is an example of metaphor.

Frost’s poem seems primarily descriptive, but metaphor creeps in at the end. “Sleep” is often a metaphor for “death.” Thus the poem ultimately addresses the question of death that everyone must face. Metaphor lends the poem gravity and strength.

Step 6: What kind of imagery does the poem use?

Images, as addressed in Module 1, help create a visual picture in the reader’s mind through the use of the five senses: touch, taste, sight, smell and hearing.

Frost uses images of darkness and winter, i.e. the snow and the “frozen lake,” and “darkest evening of the year.”

Step 7: How does sound contribute to the effect of the poem?

Sound certainly helps differentiate poetry from prose and links poetry to its ancient roots in music. You have learned about some sound effects like alliteration and omnomatopia in the last module. For many poets, meter (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. distinguishes the poem’s rhythm or general sound pattern. In simple terms meter is the pattern of stressed an unstressed syllables in a line of poetry. Lines are measured by the number of poetic feet or units. There are numerous types of meter all derived from ancient Greece. If you decide to major in English Literature learning about meter will be important but for now you need only a general idea that meter creates the poem’s rhythm. You will learn more about the most popular form of English meter in Module 7 when you study Shakespeare’s Hamlet.

Unlike many modern poets Frost often writes in regular meter. Irregular meter is called free verse). Just read line 1 aloud and you can detect a meter even if you can’t define it.

U / u / u / u /

“Whose/ woods/ these/ are /I /think/ I /know.”

Every word is a single syllable. There are 8 syllables and every other syllable is stressed. The “u” marks an unstressed syllable and the accent or “/” indicates a stressed syllable. You can only determine a poem’s meter by reading the poem aloud and listening closely to the pattern of words.

Step 8 How is the poem structured?

Structure refers to both the poem’s rhyme scheme and the physical shape of the poem, i.e. length of the line, types of stanzas. Stanzas are groups of lines set off by spaces. Frost’s poem is very symmetrical. There are four stanzas each with four lines called quatrains. A poem’s rhyme scheme is determined by looking at the last word of each line and giving that line a letter from the alphabet. Every time that word is repeated you repeat the letter of the alphabet and every time the sound of the word changes you introduce the next letter of the alphabet. Again, Frost uses very careful rhymes. Let’s look at the first two stanzas.

“Whose woods these are I think I know. aHis house is in the village, though; aHe will not see me stopping here bTo watch his woods fill up with snow. a

My little horse must think it queer bTo stop without a farmhouse near bBetween the woods and frozen lake cThe darkest evening of the year.” b

Notice that lines 1, 2 and 4 all rhyme. Also notice that the third line of stanza 1 or “here” becomes the first line of stanza 2 or ‘queer” and that each of the first three stanzas follows an identical pattern. Frost links all the stanzas together displaying such an intricate rhyme scheme. Only the final stanza changes the pattern by using 4 consecutive rhymes: “deep”, “keep”, “sleep” and “sleep”. These four rhymes convey a sense of musical closure or stop point. The poem has come to rest.

 

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Compose a 2500 words essay on The Lisbon Treaty in Article 263 TFEU still has not adequately resolved the issue of access to judicial review of private parties before the CJEU. Critically discuss with reference to the relevant Treaty amendment and caselaw. Needs to be plagiarism free!

A third qualification was added to the original criteria to include an addressee. The Inuit case has been used as a basis for criticisms against the Treaty of Lisbon provisions. Others are of the opinion that reference to non-legislative acts is entirely absent from the provisions of Article 263(4) but preset in Article 290(1).The other case to highlight the inadequacy of the new provision in the Lisbon Treaty is the case Microban International v Eursope Commission. The applicant was involved in the

The changes made by the Treaty of Lisbon are a step in the correct direction but are still insufficient. There still exist gaps since no changes were made regarding private standing on cases where a legislative body was being challenged. Judgment on the case Telephonic v Commission by the CJEU continues to highlight the shortcomings of Article 263 (4) TFEU with the focus being on the third provision of the article which was introduced in the Treaty of Lisbon.

According to Craig, initially, the institution of Article 263 of the Lisbon Treaty, individuals, and countries that were members of the EU had to establish that they had been directly and sufficiently affected by the state’s decision and that the court’s intervention was warranted. This is known as a standing. If the court was able to establish the above criteria, the matter become subject to judicial review. However, fulfillment of the criteria was deemed too restrictive and contradictory in many quarters. One of the main concerns was that the two-test approach was not compatible with some of the basic human rights like accessibility to court. The EU came under fierce criticism particularly because of its claim of being founded on the principles of the rule of law and easy accessibility to a court2.

Article 263 of the Lisbon Treaty TFEU was therefore revised to reflect the changes needed. A third qualification was added to the original

 

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