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This meta-analytic study aims to assess the relationship between innovation and organizational performance. Examining studies published from 2012 to 2021 using a specific protocol resulted in selecting 180 effect sizes from 143 studies. Comprehensive Meta-Analysis Software (CMA2) (2.2.064) software facilitated data analysis. Findings reveal a positive and significant relationship between innovation and organizational performance. Moderating analysis identifies country, continent, year of publication, and innovation type as moderating variables. Additionally, recent years exhibit a noteworthy convergence in the relationship trend between innovation and organizational performance. Enhancing organizational performance remains a critical concern. The study’s outcomes offer valuable insights for managers, especially in international organizations to improve the planning and management of innovation and performance in their various branches and projects in different continents and countries.
The Dutch book trade provided the major channel through which English books were distributed on the Continent in the early eighteenth century. In the second half of the century, the Dutch trade retained its leading position, but it appears to have gradually lost its key function as distributor of English books to the Continent. In the total corpus of continental translations, literary works constituted the central element. The literature of travel and geographical exploration was of great interest on the Continent not only were the reports of James Cook and other individual works translated, but large new collections of travel accounts were also compiled. In some fields such as classical and oriental studies, the intellectual exchanges between England and scholarly centres on the Continent were particularly intense. Many details of this traffic in ideas across the Channel are also of interest to the book historian.
This chapter provides the understanding of England and the Continent in the eighth and ninth centuries. It concentrations of the evidence, the context for and activities of the Anglo-Saxon missionaries on the Continent, the establishment of new religious foundations in Hesse, Thuringia and Franconia, the Anglo-Saxons' contributions to the Frankish church, their interaction with Frankish rulers and bishops, and their legacy for subsequent connections across the Channel in the ninth century and afterwards. The eighth century in England and Francia was a period of rapid political change. It saw the emergence in England of Mercia, and in Francia of the Carolingian family whose wealth and interests were focused in the Rhine, Moselle and Meuse region, that is, the region where the English missionaries were initially most active. Information about the early life of the first of these missionaries, Willibrord, is meagre. The eighth- and ninth-century relations between England and the Continent were personal connections and local influences that were predominant.
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