OPTIONAL COURSES IN ACADEMIC YEAR 2009/10 - ue.wroc.pl · LINEAR ALGEBRA Dr Jan Florek 4 30 Winter...
Transcript of OPTIONAL COURSES IN ACADEMIC YEAR 2009/10 - ue.wroc.pl · LINEAR ALGEBRA Dr Jan Florek 4 30 Winter...
OPTIONAL COURSES IN ACADEMIC YEAR 2009/10
ZAPISY
Aby uczęszczać na zajęcia w języku obcym należy ponadto albo:
1. przedstawić dziekanowi i uzyskać zatwierdzenie indywidualnego planu studiów, bądź
2. wybrać kopię przedmiotu z własnego standardowego planu studiów i w tym
przypadku należy zgłosić nauczycielowi zaliczanie wykładu w języku obcym;
3. przedmioty te można wybierać również jako przedmioty wolnego wyboru,
Szczegółowe i wiążące informacje można otrzymać tylko w dziekanacie.
ECONOMICS, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND SOCIAL SCIENCES N
o Code Title Person ECTS Hours Term Kopia
1. IECL
09/10
AN INTRODUCTION TO
THE EUROPEAN
COMMUNITY LAW
Dr Anna Jenik 4 30 Winter
or spring nie
2. BPE
09/10 BUSINESS ETHICS
mgr Karol
Fjałkowski 2 15
Winter
or spring tak
3. CSUC
09/10
CIVIL SOCIETY – UTOPIA
OR CHANCE
Dr Stanisław
Kamiński 2 15 Winter nie
4. DRDLS
09/10
DETERMINANTS OF
REGIONAL
DEVELOPMENT ON THE
EXAMPLE OF LOWER
SILESIA
Dr Katarzyna
Miszczak 2 15 Spring nie
5. ESM
09/10
ECONOMIA ESPANOLA Y
MUNDIAL
mgr Jarosław
Chuchla 4 30 Spring nie
6. ECGL
09/10
ECONOMIC
GLOBALISATION:
CONCEPT, INDICATORS
AND GOVERNANCE
PROBLEMS
Dr Bożena
Baborska 2 15
Winter
or spring nie
7. ECSO
09/10 ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY
Dr hab. Wiesław
Wątroba 2 15 Winter nie
8. EOR
09/10 ECONOMICS OF RELIGION
mgr Karol
Fjałkowski 2 15
Winter
or spring nie
9. EPS
09/10
ECONOMICS OF THE
PUBLIC SECTOR
Dr Mikołaj
Klimczak 4 30 Spring nie
10. EUIN
09/10 EUROPEAN INTEGRATION Dr Anna Jenik 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
11. FTD
09/10
FAIR TRADE VS.
DEVELOPMENT
Mgr Sebastian
Bobowski 2 15
Winter
or spring nie
12. FDI
09/10
FOREIGN DIRECT
INVESTMENT IN THEORY
AND PRACTICE
Dr Zbigniew
Mogiła 2 15
Winter
or spring nie
13. FRA
09/10 FRANCHISING
Mgr Barbara
Mróz 2 15 Spring nie
14. GCC
09/10
GLOBALIZATION AND
CONSUMER CULTURE
Dr hab. Wiesław
Wątroba 2 15 Spring nie
15. HIG
09/10
HOW TO IMPROVE
MECHANISM OF
GLOBALIZATION?
Mgr Sebastian
Bobowski 2 15
Winter
or spring nie
16. INOR
09/10
INDUSTRIAL
ORGANISATION
Dr Mikołaj
Klimczak 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
17. ISED
09/10
INFRASTRUCTURE IN
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
Dr Małgorzata
Rogowska 4 30 Spring nie
18. IRDE
09/10
INNOVATIONS IN
REGIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
Mgr Niki
Derlukiewicz, dr
Katarzyna
Miszczak
4 30 Winter nie
19. INSEC1
09/10
INSTITUTIONAL
ECONOMICS (EXTENDED
COURSE)
Dr Bożena
Baborska, Mgr
Karol
Fjałkowski
4 30 Winter
or spring nie
20. INSEC2
09/10
INSTITUTIONAL
ECONOMICS (SHORT
COURSE)
Dr Bożena
Baborska 2 15
Winter
or spring nie
21. INBU
09/10
INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS
Mgr Artur
Klimek 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
22. IDSE
09/10
INTERNATIONAL
DETERMINANTS OF
SPATIAL ECONOMY
Dr Małgorzata
Pięta–Kanurska 4 30 Spring nie
23. INTEC
09/10
INTERNATIONAL
ECONOMICS
Dr Zbigniew
Mogiła, mgr
Sebastian
Bobowski
7 60 Winter
or spring tak
24. INEC
09/10
INTERNATIONALIZATION
OF NET ECONOMY
Dr Katarzyna
Miszczak 2 15 Spring tak
25. MACR
09/10 MACROECONOMICS
Dr Wiktor
Szydło 7 60
Winter
or spring tak
26. MICR
09/10 MICROECONOMICS
Dr Bożena
Baborska, Dr
Mikolaj
Klimczak
9 60 Full year tak
27. OPEU
09/10
OVERVIEW OF POLISH, EU
AND WORLD ECONOMY
Dr Wiktor
Szydło 2 10
Winter
or spring nie
28. RKBE
09/10
REGION IN THE
KNOWLEDGE – BASED
ECONOMY
Mgr Anna
Mempel-Śnieżyk,
dr Katarzyna
Miszczak
4 30 Spring nie
29. RERP
09/10
REGIONAL ECONOMICS
AND REGIONAL POLICY Dr Anna Jenik 2 15
Winter
or spring nie
30. SPO
09/10 SOCIAL POLICY
Dr Stanisław
Kamiński 2 15 Spring tak
31. SPPL
09/10 SPATIAL PLANNING
Mgr Piotr
Hajduga, dr
Katarzyna
Miszczak
4 30 Spring nie
32. SESIC
09/10
SVILUPPO ECONOMICO E
STRATEGIE DELLE
IMPRESE.
CONCORRENZIALITA’ E
INNOVAZIONE NEL
MERCATO GLOBALE
prof. Giuseppe
Calzoni 3 20 Winter nie
33. DIOE
09/10
THE DILEMMAS OF THE
OPEN ECONOMIES
dr Szymon
Mazurek 4 30
Winter
or spring nie
34. EAC
09/10
THE ECONOMICS OF THE
ARTS
Mgr Alicja
Doniec 2 15 Spring nie
35. TCPME
09/10
TRANSITION FROM
CENTRALLY PLANNED-
TO MARKET ECONOMY
Dr Bożena
Baborska 2 15 Winter nie
FINANCE, ACCOUNTING AND BANKING N
o Code Title Person ECTS Hours Term Kopia
36. AUFSF
09/10
ANALYSIS, USING AND
UNDERSTANDING
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
OF THE FIRM
Dr Grzegorz
Michalski 3 18 Winter nie
37. BRMB
09/10
BANK RISK
MANAGEMENT UNDER
BASEL II
Dr Ewa Kania 4 30 Winter
or spring nie
38. BUBU
09/10 BUSINESS BUDGETING
dr Joanna
Dyczkowska 4 30
Winter
or spring nie
39. CNTR
09/10 CONTROLLING
dr Tomasz
Dyczkowski 4 30
Winter
or spring nie
40. CBAI
09/10
COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS
OF INVESTMENT
PROJECTS
dr Magdalena
Ligus 3 20
Winter
or spring nie
41. CAM
09/10
CURRENT ASSETS
MANAGEMENT: VALUE
BASED WORKING
CAPITAL DECISIONS
Dr Grzegorz
Michalski 3 18 Winter nie
42. RKMU
09/10
DIE RECHNUNGSWESEN
KLEINES UND MITTELES
UNTERNEHMEN
dr Angelika
Kaczmarczyk 4 30
Winter
or spring nie
43. FAFI
09/10 FAMILY FINANCE
Dr Grzegorz
Michalski 3 18 Spring nie
44. FIACC1
09/10 FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING
Dr Wojciech
Hasik 4 30 Winter nie
45. FIACC2
09/10 FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING dr Adrian Ryba 2 15 Winter tak
46. FCNGO
09/10
FINANCIAL CHALLENGES
FOR NON-PROFIT
ORGANISATIONS
dr Tomasz
Dyczkowski 4 30
Winter
or spring nie
47. FLM
09/10
FINANCIAL LIQUIDITY
MANAGEMENT
Dr Grzegorz
Michalski 3 18 Spring nie
48. FIMA
09/10
FINANCIAL
MANAGEMENT
dr Tomasz
Słoński, mgr
Karolina
Daszyńska-
Żygadło
7 60 Winter tak
49. FMNO
09/10
FINANCIAL
MANAGEMENT FOR
NONPROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS
Dr Grzegorz
Michalski 3 18 Spring nie
50. FIPL
09/10 FINANCIAL PLANNING
dr Tomasz
Słoński, mgr
Karolina
Daszyńska-
Żygadło
4 30 Spring nie
51. FRIAS
09/10
FINANCIAL REPORTING IN
CONTEXT IAS/IFRS
Dr Maria
Niewiadoma 3 20 Spring nie
52. FFD
09/10
FIRMS’ FINANCING
DECISIONS
dr Tomasz
Słoński, mgr
Karolina
Daszyńska-
Żygadło
4 30 Spring nie
53. IAS
09/10 IAS/IFRS IN FIRMS
Dr Maria
Niewiadoma 5 40 Spring nie
54. IACBD
09/10
INVESTMENT APPRAISAL
– CAPITAL BUDGETING
dr Tomasz
Słoński, mgr 4 30 Winter nie
DECISIONS Karolina
Daszyńska-
Żygadło
55. MAFI
09/10
MANAGEMENT
ACCOUNTING IN
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Dr Magdalena
Chmielowiec -
Lewczuk 4 30 Winter nie
56. MACO
09/10
MARKETING
CONTROLLING Dr Marta Nowak 4 30 Winter nie
57. PEA
09/10
PROFESSIONAL ETHICS IN
ACCOUNTING
Dr Wojciech
Hasik 4 30 Winter nie
58. PUFI
09/10 PUBLIC FINANCE
Dr Wiktor
Szydło 4 30
Winter
or Spring nie
59. RFSFA
09/10
READING FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS –
FINANCIAL ANALYSIS
AND CREATIVE
ACCOUNTING
Dr Wojciech
Hasik 4 30 Spring nie
60. SMA
09/10
STRATEGIC
MANAGEMENT
ACCOUNTING
dr Bartłomiej
Nita 4 30 Winter nie
61. VAL
09/10 VALUATION
dr Tomasz
Słoński, mgr
Karolina
Daszyńska-
Żygadło
4 30 Spring nie
62. BUJB
09/10
БУХГАЛТЕРСКИЙ УЧЁТ -
ЯЗЫК БИЗНЕСА (ЛЕКЦИИ
НА РУССКОМ ЯЗЫКЕ)
др Иоанна
Кочар 4 30
Winter
or spring nie
INFORMATICS (COMPUTER SCIENCE) AND ECONOMETRICS
(QUANTITATIVE METHODS) N
o Code Title Person ECTS Hours Term Kopia
63. AIFE
09/10
ARTIFICIAL
INTELLIGENCE IN
FINANCE AND
ECONOMICS
Prof. dr hab.
Jerzy KORCZAK 4 30 Winter tak
64. BUFO
09/10 BUSINESS FORECASTING
Dr Aleksandra
Szpulak,
dr Ewa Szabela–
Pasierbińska
4 30 Winter tak
65. DATBA
09/10 DATABASES
Mieczysław
Owoc Ph.D.
hab. 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
66. ECMR
09/10 ECONOMETRICS
Prof. Józef
Dziechciarz,
Mgr Anna Król 7 60 Spring tak
67. ECMAP
09/10
ECONOMETRICS
APPLICATIONS
Prof. Józef
Dziechciarz,
Mgr Anna Król 7 60 Winter nie
68. EASI
09/10
ENTERPRISE
APPLICATION AND
SYSTEMS INTEGRATION
Dr. Andrzej
Niesler 2 15 Spring nie
69. INTE
09/10
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGIES
Prof. dr hab.
Jerzy KORCZAK 4 30 Winter tak
70. INSYS
09/10 INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS
Mieczysław
Owoc Ph.D.
Prof 4 30
Winter
or spring nie
71. GAWS
09/10
INTRODUCTION TO
GOOGLE ADWORDS
Katarzyna
Lechki 2 15 Winter nie
72. LIAL
09/10 LINEAR ALGEBRA Dr Jan Florek 4 30 Winter tak
73. MNIS
09/10
MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Dr hab. inż.
Jacek Unold,
prof. UE 4 30 Winter nie
74. MRIS
09/10
MARKETING
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Dr hab. inż.
Jacek Unold,
prof. UE 4 30 Spring nie
75. MAAN
09/10
MATHEMATICAL
ANALYSIS
Dr hab.
Wojciech
Rybicki, prof
.nadzw
4 30 Full year tak
76. MATH
09/10 MATHEMATICS
Dr inż. Zbigniew
Michna 7 60
Winter
or spring tak
77. MFD
09/10
MINING OF FINANCIAL
DATABASES
Prof. dr hab.
Jerzy KORCZAK 4 30 Spring tak
78. OOPS
09/10
OBJECT-ORIENTED
PROGRAMMING/SYSTEMS
Mieczysław
Owoc Ph.D.
Prof 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
79. PROB
09/10 PROBABILITY
Dr.Eng. Albert
Gardoń 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
80. SMWB
09/10 SEMANTIC WEB
Dr. Andrzej
Niesler 2 15 Winter nie
81. STAC
09/10 STATISTICS
Dr.Eng. Albert
Gardoń 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
82. STAK
09/10 STATISTIK
Dr.Eng. Albert
Gardoń 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
83. WAHR
09/10 WAHRSCHEINLICHKEIT
Dr.Eng. Albert
Gardoń 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
MANAGEMENT SCIENCES N
o Code Title Person ECTS Hours Term Kopia
84. BAMA
09/10 BASICS OF MANAGEMENT
Dr hab. Ewa
Stańczyk–Hugiet 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
85. BRMA
09/10 BRAND MANAGEMENT
Dr hab. Ryszard
Kłeczek 4 30 Spring tak
86. BUCO
09/10 BUSINESS CONSULTING
Dr Anna Witek-
Crabb 2 15 Spring tak
87. BCM
09/10
BUSINESS CREATIVITY
MODULE
dr Tomasz
Dyczkowski 7 50
Winter
or spring nie
88. BUNE
09/10 BUSINESS NEGOTIATIONS
Dr Arkadiusz
Wierzbic Dr
Adela Barabasz 4 30 Winter tak
89. CSA
09/10
CREATIVE STRATEGY IN
ADVERTISING
Dr hab. Ryszard
Kłeczek 4 30 Spring tak
90. CCIM
09/10
CULTURAL CONTEXT OF
THE INTERNATIONAL
MANAGEMENT
Dr Sylwia
Przytuła 2 15
Winter
or spring nie
91. DAM
09/10
DECISION ANALYSIS FOR
MANAGEMENT
Prof. Dr habil.
Ing.Ewa
Konarzewska-
Gubała
4 30 Winter
or spring tak
92. EMCSR
09/10
EFFICIENT MANAGEMENT
OF CORPORATE SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY
Dr Magdalena
Rojek-
Nowosielska 2 15 Spring nie
93. GEMA
09/10 GENERAL MANAGEMENT
Dr Janusz
Marek
Lichtarski 2 15 Spring nie
94. HRM HUMAN RESOURCES Dr Marzena Stor 6 45 Winter tak
09/10 MANAGEMENT or spring
95. IHRM
09/10
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN
RESOURCES
MANAGEMENT
Dr Sylwia
Przytuła 4 30 Winter nie
96. IBC
09/10
INTERPERSONAL
BUSINESS
COMMUNICATION
Dr Marzena Stor 5 45 Winter
or spring tak
97. KDINE
09/10
KNOWLEDGE DIFFUSION
IN THE INTERNATIONAL
NETWORK OF
ENTERPRISES
Prof. zw. dr hab.
Kazimierz
Perechuda 4 30
Winter
or spring nie
98. KMIE
09/10
KNOWLEDGE
MANAGEMENT IN THE
INTERNATIONAL
ENTERPRISE
Prof. zw. dr hab.
Kazimierz
Perechuda 4 30
Winter
or spring nie
99. LSCM
09/10
LOGISTICS AND SUPPLY
CHAIN MANAGEMENT
Prof. dr hab.
Jarosław
Witkowski, Dr
Bartłomiej
Rodawski
2 15 Winter
or spring nie
100. LSG
09/10
LOGISTICS SIMULATION
GAME “LOGISTIX”
dr Natalia
Szozda, mgr
Marek Wąsowicz 2 15 Spring nie
101. MGCS
09/10
MANAGERIAL GAMES
AND CASE STUDIES
Dr Janusz
Marek
Lichtarski 2 15 Winter nie
102. MIT
09/10
MANAGING
INTERNATIONAL TEAMS Dr Marzena Stor 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
103. MAMA
09/10
MARKETING
MANAGEMENT
Dr hab. Ryszard
Kłeczek 4 30 Winter tak
104. MBSG
09/10
MARKETPLACE -
BUSINESS SIMULATION
GAME
Dr Anna Witek-
Crabb, Dr inż.
Letycja
Soloducho-Pelc,
Dr Jarosław
Ignacy, Dr
Przemyslaw
Wolczek
4 24 Winter
or spring nie
105. MIM
09/10
MODERN INFORMATION
MANAGEMENT
Dr hab. inż.
Jacek Unold,
prof. UE 2 15 Winter nie
106. ORBE
09/10
ORGANIZATIONAL
BEHAVIOUR
Czesław Zając
Ph.D. Assoc.
Prof. 2 15 Spring nie
107. PROMA
09/10 PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Prof. Dr habil.
Ing.Ewa
Konarzewska-
Gubała
4 30 Spring nie
108. SAMA
09/10 SALES MANAGEMENT
Dr hab. Ryszard
Kłeczek 4 30 Winter tak
109. STS
09/10
SEMINAR THESIS’ FOR
STUDENTS
Dr Sylwia
Przytuła 10 15
Winter
or spring nie
110. SQM
09/10
SERVICE QUALITY
MANAGEMENT
dr Cyprian
Kozyra 2 15
Winter
or spring tak
111. STMA1
09/10
STRATEGIC
MANAGEMENT
Dr Maciej
Czarnecki 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
112. STMA2
09/10
STRATEGIC
MANAGEMENT
Dr hab. Ewa
Stańczyk–Hugiet 4 30
Winter
or spring tak
113. TIC TOOLS OF THE Ph.D. 2 15 Winter nie
09/10 INFLUENCE ON THE
CUSTOMERS
Aleksander
Binsztok
or spring
114. TQM
09/10
TOTAL QUALITY
MANAGEMENT
Prof. Dr habil.
Ing.Ewa
Konarzewska-
Gubała
4 30 Winter nie
115. VBM
09/10
VALUE BASED
MANAGEMENT (VBM) AS A
COMPREHENSIVE TOOL
IN STRATEGIC
MANAGEMENT
Dr Maciej
Czarnecki 4 15-30
Winter
or spring nie
LANGUAGES
116. POL
09/10 POLISH LANGUAGE
mgr Halina
Karaszewska 3 60
Winter
or spring nie
ECONOMICS, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND SOCIAL SCIENCES
Title:
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE EUROPEAN
COMMUNITY LAW
Code: IECL 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 (15 hours of lectures and 15 hours of classes)
Study period: Winter or spring
Level: Advanced students
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Exam written in English
Language: English
Prerequisites: Microeconomics, Macroeconomics and European Integration courses
Course content: Part one:
Sources of the law in the EU , general principles of Community law,
primary and secondary law, supremacy and direct applicability in
Community law, institutional law, common market law (Community trade
law, free movement of workers, ,freedom of establishment, free movement
of services, free movement of capital, ) competition law, European
citizenship within an Area of Freedom ,Security ,and Justice.
Part two:
Analysis of cases concerning institutional and material law
Contact person: Dr. Anna Jenik [email protected]
Literature: S.Weatherill, Cases and Materials on EU Law, Oxford University Press,
2006
C.Barnard, The Substantive Law of the EU. The Four Freedoms
Oxford University Press,2007
Karen Davies, Understanding European Union Law, Routledge
Cavendish, 2007
Faculty: All students according to their preferences
Title:
BUSINESS ETHICS
Code: BPE 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 hours of workshop
Study period: Winter or Spring
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Attendance and Essay
Language: English
Prerequisites: --
Course content: I Introduction to Business Ethics
Morality and ethics; Business Ethics: its scope and purpose; Ethical
theory: utilitarianism, Kantian ethics, personalism, responsibility, justice
II The Nature of the Firm and Purposes of Managers
Purposes and forms of business activity and the role of profit,
‗Managerial capitalism‘ vs. Social responsibility of corporations
III Ethical Treatment of Employees
Employee rights and employee duties; Hiring and firing; The fair wage;
Occupational risk; Diversity and discrimination; Workplace privacy;
Mobbing and sexual harassment; Trade unions; Whistle-blowing
IV Relations with Suppliers and Customers. Fair Competition
Information in business relations; Marketing; Advertising; Consumer
risk; Principles of positive competition; Fair and unfair competition
V Ethical Issues in Finance, Banking and Accounting
Fiduciary duties; Creative accountancy; Banking issues: credit and
confidentiality; Information and manipulation in capital markets;
Responsibility of investors, Ethical standards of finance professionals
VI Ethical Issues Regarding the Natural Environment
Business and environmental obligations; ‗Environmental friendliness‘
VII Ethical Issues in International Business
Moral relativism vs. moral universalism; Multinational corporations;
Sweatshops and bribery; International business ethics initiatives
VIII Making Ethics Work in Managing a Firm
Tools of ethical management; Corporate culture; Codes of ethics;
Structures and procedures; Problems of Corporate Social Responsibility
Contact person: mgr Karol Fjałkowski – [email protected]
Literature: Ethical Theory and Business, Edited by T.L. Beauchamp, N.E. Bowie and
D.G. Arnold, Upper Saddle River, Seventh Edition (2004) or Eight
Edition (2009)
An Introduction to Business Ethics, Edited by G.D. Chryssides and J.K.
Kaler, London 1993
Faculty: All
Title:
CIVIL SOCIETY – UTOPIA OR CHANCE
Code: CSUC 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 (lecture)
Study period: Winter
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: End-of-term paper
Language: English
Prerequisites: none
Course content: 1. Idea of civil society
2. Philosophical background
3. To trust or not to trust - social capital
4. Bowling alone - modern observations
5. Above the borders - world of NGOs
6. Informal social ties
Contact person: dr Stanisław Kamiński, Department of Sociology and Social Policy,
Literature: Putnam R.D., Bowling Alone, Simon&Schuster, New York 2000
Putnam R.D. (ed.), Democracies in Flux, Oxford University Press, New
York 2002
Salamon L.M. and others, Global Civil Society: Dimensions of the
Nonprofit Sector, Kumarian Press, Bloomfield 2004
Faculty: all
Title:
DETERMINANTS OF REGIONAL
DEVELOPMENT ON THE EXAMPLE OF
LOWER SILESIA
Code: DRDLS 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: Spring
Level: Master studies
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Credit – on mark (presentation and/or test)
Language: English
Prerequisites: Microeconomy, Macroeconomy
Course content: Basic definitions in field of regional and local development. Determinants
of competitiveness and attractiveness of particular regions Policy of
regional and local development. Analysis of endogenous and exogenous
determinants of regional development in Lower Silesia. Examples of
localization selected investments in Lower Silesia.
Contact person: Dr Katarzyna Miszczak, tel. 36 80 621, [email protected]
Literature: 1. Recent Advances in Urban and Regional Studies, ed. R. Domański,
KPZK PAN, vol. XII.
2. Spatial Aspects of Entrepreneurship, KPZK PAN, vol. XIII.
3. M.E. Porter, The Competitive Advantage of Nations, MacMillan,
London 1990.
4. Regions, Globalisation, and the Knowledge-Based Economy, ed. by
J.H. Dunning, Oxford University Press, New York 2000.
5. Incentives and Foreign Direct Investment, UNCTAD/DTCI/28, New
York and Geneva 1996.
6. S. Barios, H. Goerg, E. Strobl, Multinationals‘ Location Choice,
Agglomeration Economies and Public Incentives, Research Paper
Series, Internalization of Economic Policy, the University of Nottingham
33/2002.
7. J.H. Dunning, The Globalization of Business. The Challenge of the
1990s, Routledge, London and New York1993.
8. World Investment Report 2003. FDI Policies for Development:
National and International Perspectives, UN - UNCTAD, New York,
Geneva 2003.
Faculty: International relations
Title:
ECONOMIA ESPANOLA Y MUNDIAL
Code: ESM 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 hours of workshop
Study period: Spring - verano
Level: Basic - Fundamentos
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Student‘s Work & Projects Evaluation – La evaluación de trabajo y
proyectos de los estudiantes
Language: Spanish - español
Prerequisites: Spanish – conocimiento de la lengua
Course content:
Tema 1.- Introducción a la Economia Espanola
Tema 2.- La economía española desde la perspectiva histórica
Tema 3.- El mercado de trabajo espańol y sistema financiero
Tema 4.- El sector del turismo
Tema 5.- Mapa general de la economía mundial
Tema 6.- La Unión Europea
Tema 7.- Los paises del este europeo y las economias emergentes
Tema 8.- El cambio tecnológico. Las TIC
Tema 9.- La globalización
Tema 10.- Medio ambiente y desarrollo sostenible
Contact person: Jarosław Chuchla, [email protected], 706Z
Literature:
1. ALONSO J.A. (Dir). Lecciones sobre economía mundial. Introducción al desarrolo y a las
relaciones económicas internacionales. Madrid. Thomson Civitas. 2003.
2. AURIOLES, J. y E. MANZANERA (coor). Cuestiones clave de la economía
española.Perspectivas actuales, 2001. Madrid. Pirámide.Centra. 2002.
3. TUGORES, J. Economía Internacional, globalización e integración regional. Madrid. Ed Mac
Graw Hill. 2002.
4. REQUEIJO, J. Y Otros.Economía española. Madrid.Delta.2007.
Faculty: All students – todos los estudiantes
Course title:
ECONOMIC GLOBALISATION: CONCEPT,
INDICATORS AND GOVERNANCE PROBLEMS
Code: ECGL 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 hrs lectures
Study period: Winter or spring semester
Level: Intermediate / Advanced
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Written test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Completed basic economics
Course content: The aim of this short course is to show some problems economists faced
in attempting to give scientific explanation of the nature of economic
globalisation, its expected benefits and threats for developed and
developing economies, with special emphasis on the current slowdown in
the world economy in result of the 2008 Year global financial system
crisis. From a wide range of problems course will be focused on the
global governance problems and globalisation measurement problems.
Proposed by the OECD set of indicators related to foreign direct
investment, activity of multinational firms, trade globalisation and
knowledge dissemination will be presented.
Contact person: Dr Bozena Baborska
Literature: 1. H. Bünz, A. Kukliński (Eds): Globalisation. Experiences and Prospects.
Friedrich Ebert Stifung, 2001,(chosen chapters).
2. Hirst, P. Thompson, G: Globalization in Question: The International
Economy and the Possibilities for Governance. Blackwell, 1996
3. M. Lewis,. R. Fitzgerald and Ch. Harvey: The Growth of Nations.
Culture, Competitiveness, and the Problem of Globalisation. Bristol
University Press, 1996
6. OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation Indicators. OECD, 2005.
7. J.E Stiglitz: Making Globalization Work. Allen Lane, 2006
8. The IMF and the World Bank chosen information and commentaries
on the 2008 year‟ global financial crisis and its consequences for world
economy (selected from internet).S
Faculty: For all
Title:
ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY
Code: ECSO 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: Winter
Level: Intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Examination papers or oral exminations
Language: English
Prerequisites: One year of education in economics
Course content: The course consists of series of lectures presenting social aspects of
economic activity, focused on the main trends of contemporary
capitalism. Post-industrial society, consumer culture and consumerism,
organizational culture, corporate management and information society,
are among the basic topics of the course.
Contact person: Dr hab. Wiesław Wątroba
Literature: Contact the lecturer for information
Faculty: All students
Title:
ECONOMICS OF RELIGION
Code: EOR 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 hours of workshop
Study period: Winter or Spring
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Attendance and Essay
Language: English
Prerequisites: Microeconomics
Course content: This course explains principles of the social-scientific study of religion,
with special emphasis on the economic and New Institutional Economics
approaches. Whereas psychologists and sociologists usually interpret
religious belief and behaviour in terms of ignorance, irrationality and
indoctrination, economists claim that rational self-interest shapes the
choices of religious ―consumers‖ and ―producers‖. The course presents
economic theories of the interrelation of religion and economic behaviour
as well as of the role of religion in contemporary society.
Main topics: Social-scientific and economic approaches to the study of
religion, Economic theories of individual religious belief and non-belief,
Economics of religious institutions, The influence of religion on markets
and economic behaviour, The influence of religion on economic and
social outcomes.
Contact person: mgr Karol Fjałkowski – [email protected]
Literature: L. Iannaccone, Introduction to the Economics of Religion, ―Journal of
Economic Literature‖, 1998, 36 (3), pp. 1465-1495
R. Hardin, The Economics of Religious Belief, ―Journal of Theoretical
and Institutional Economics‖, 1997, 153 (March), pp. 259-278
B.B. Hull and F. Bold, Towards an Economic Theory of the Church,
―International Journal of Social Economics‖, 1989, 16 (7), pp. 5-15
C. Azzi and R. Ehrenberg, Household Allocation of Time and Church
Attendance, ―Journal of Political Economy‖, 1975, 83 (1), pp. 27-56
L. Guiso, P. Sapienza and L. Zingales, People's Opium? Religion and
Economic Attitudes, ―Journal of Monetary Economics‖, 2003, 50 (1), pp.
225-82
U. Blum and L. Dudley, Religion and Economic Growth: Was Weber
Right?, ―Journal of Evolutionary Economics‖, 2001, 11 (2), pp. 207-30
Faculty: All
Title:
ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR
Code: EPS 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: Lecture: 30 hours
Study period: Spring semester
Level: Intermediate
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Case study, essay and attendance
Language: English
Prerequisites: Microeconomics and Macroeconomics
Course content: This course‘s main goal is to provide the basis for economic analysis of
public policy issues and focus on the economic role of the public sector (i.e.
government) in the economy.
The course will start with the general discussion about market efficiency
connected with market and government failure analysis. This will lead to the
brief description of public and publicly provided goods and finally a public
choice theory and the analysis of bureaucracy. The next major topic will be
externalities and its impact on public policy.
Within the scope of these theories we will discuss specific policies of public
sector: healthcare, education, social insurance, welfare programs etc. We
will finish this part of the course with the analysis of taxation theories.
Last part of the course will be dedicated towards voting and political
decisions as basic to all public choices.
Contact person: Dr Mikolaj Klimczak
Department of Microeconomics and Institutional Economics
Phone: +48 71 3680 196
Email: [email protected]
Literature: Joseph E. Stiglitz, Economics of the Public Sector, Third Edition, W. W.
Norton & Company, 2000
Supplementary books and articles may be used.
Faculty: All
Title:
EUROPEAN INTEGRATION
Code: EUIN 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 hours(15 hours lectures and 15 hours workshop)
Study period: Winter or spring
Level: beginners
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Test written in English
Language: English
Prerequisites: Microeconomics and Macroeconomics
Course content: Part one:
Fundamental concepts, origins and development of the European
Communities ,European Union(three pillars structure ,the basis for the
EU law) European Union‘s stages of integration ,common policies,
principle of subsidiarity ,institutional structure and decision making
processes in the EU ,budget of the EC ,revenues and expenditures
,evolution of the budget ,financial perspective 2007-2013,structural
operations, common market (benefits and cost)trade liberalization ,free
movement of people ,freedom of establishment, competition rules,
monetary union(cost and benefits) history of EMU, three stages of the
EMU ,convergence criteria., institutions responsible for EMU, practice of
the monetary integration. EU reform treaty and the future of the EU
Part two:
Students will discuss the current problems connected with the main policy
areas of the European Community like: regional policy agriculture policy
social policy etc. and with functioning of the common market and the
monetary union.
Contact person: Dr. Anna Jenik [email protected]
Literature: Ali M. El-Agra The European Union (eight edition) Cambridge University
Press, 2007
T.Hitiris The European Union Economics, The Pearson Education Ltd,
2003
Zoltan Horvath, Handbook of the European Union , HVG-ORAC
Publishing House Ltd, 2007
A.Baneth, G.Cserey, The Ultimate EU test Book, John Harper Publishing,
2007
Faculty: All
Title:
FAIR TRADE VS. DEVELOPMENT
Code: FTD 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 (tutorials)
Study period: winter or spring
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: attendance, short presentation
Language: english
Prerequisites: principles of macroeconomics and microeconomics
Course content: 1. Vision of fair development by World Bank.
2. Fair trade. The role of WTO.
3. Priorities of Development Round.
4. Achievements of Doha.
5. The basis of a fair agreement.
6. Special treatment for developing countries.
7. Fair Trade Agenda.
8. Trade system.
9. Institutional reforms.
10. Trade liberalization and its costs
Contact person: mgr Sebastian Bobowski; [email protected]
Literature: 1. Joseph E. Stiglitz, Making globalization work, Oxford University
Press, 2006
2. Joseph E. Stiglitz, Globalization and Its Discontents, Oxford
University Press, 2004
3. Andrew Charlton, Joseph E. Stiglitz, Fair trade for all. How trade
can promote development, Oxford University Press, 2005
4. Joseph E. Stiglitz, Wizja sprawiedliwej globalizacji. Propozycje
usprawnień, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa 2007
5. Joseph E. Stiglitz, Globalizacja, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN,
Warszawa 2004
6. Andrew Charlton, Joseph E. Stiglitz, Fair trade. Szansa dla
wszystkich, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa 2007
7. Jan Rymarczyk, Internacjonalizacja i globalizacja
przedsiębiorstwa, PWE, Warszawa 2005
8. Jan Rymarczyk (red.), Międzynarodowe stosunki gospodarcze,
PWE, Warszawa 2006
9. Adam Budnikowski, Międzynarodowe stosunki gospodarcze,,
Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa 2006
Faculty: all students
Title:
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT IN THEORY
AND PRACTICE
Code: FDI 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15h ( lectures)
Study period: Winter and Spring semester
Level: Basic
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Essay
Language: English
Prerequisites: Principles of International Economics
Course content: The course will examine the following subjects:
1) theoretical aspects of foreign direct investment (FDI):
- definitions;
- measurement;
- micro- and macro-level theories;
- costs and benefits of FDI;
2) FDI flows and stock- global trends:
- historical aspects;
- geographical and sectoral structure;
- mergers and acquisitions versus greenfield investment;
3) transnational corporations:
- types;
- strategies;
- the OECD guidelines for multinational enterprises;
4) consequences of FDI for source and host countries:
- implications for the balance of payments and macroeconomic
policy;
- FDI and labour market;
- FDI as a source of new technologies;
- negative aspects of FDI;
5) relocation and FDI:
- offshoring and outsourcing;
- determinants and consequences;
- global trends;
6) means of attracting FDI:
- FDI policies,
- international agreements on FDI;
- examples of the FDI incentives- with special reference to Poland;
7) the impact of economic integration on FDI – the example of the
European Union:
- the interdependence between FDI and foreign trade;
- static and dynamic effects of economic integration;
- investment creation and diversion effects;
8) FDI and Central and Eastern Europe - with special reference to
Poland;
Contact person: dr Zbigniew Mogiła - [email protected]
Literature: 1) Bezpośrednie inwestycje zagraniczne w Polsce, red. Z. Olesiński,
PWE, Warszawa 1998;
2) Dunning J.H., A rose by any other name...? FDI theory in
retrospect an prospect, University of Reading and Rutgers
University 2000;
3) Dynamic Interdependence between Foreign Direct Investment and
Foreign Trade in the Context of the European Integration Process
with Special Reference to Central and East European Countries,
red. J. Witkowska, Z. Wysokińska, Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu
Łódzkiego, Łódź 1998;
4) Egger P., Pfaffermayer M., Foreign Direct Investment and
European Integration in the 90‘s., University of Innsbruck,
Innsbruck 2002;
5) European Union Foreign Direct Investment Yearbook, Eurostat,
Luksemburg- different series;
6) Hansen M.W., Economic Theories of Transnational Corporations,
Environment and Development, Copenhagen Business School,
Kopenhaga 1998;
7) Hein P., Vork A., Foreign Direct Investments and European
Integration: Implications for CEEC, University of Tartu, Tartu
2000;
8) Inwestycje zagraniczne w Polsce. Raport roczny, red. J. Chojna,
IKiCHZ, Warszawa 2006;
9) Rymarczyk J., Internacjonalizacja i globalizacja przedsiębiorstwa,
PWE, Warszawa 2004;
10) Witkowska J., Rynek czynników produkcji w procesie integracji
europejskiej, Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego, Łódź 2001
11) World Investment Report,UNCTAD, Geneva – different series
(1991-2008);
Faculty: All students
Title:
FRANCHISING
Code: FRA 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 hours of workshop
Study period: Spring
Level: Advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Project
Language: English
Prerequisites: Principles of International economics
Course content: 1.The history of Franchising in the USA
2.Development of Franchising in Europe
3.The definition and different kinds of Franchising
4.Stregthness and weakness of Franchising
5.Franchising in the European law
6.The contents of the Agreement
7. Legal character of the Agreement
8.Franchising and similar legal solutions
9.Expiry and dissolution of the Agreement
10.Examples of Franchising Networks in the USA and Europe
11.Examples of Franchising Networks in Poland
Contact person: Barbara Mróz ([email protected]), Katedra MSG
Literature: 1. Blair Roger O.,”The Economic of Franchising”, Cambridge
University Press, 2005
2. Pokorska B.”Leksykon Franczyzy ”, Difin, Warszawa, 2002
3. Banachowicz E.,” Franchising- skorzystaj z tej szansy”
Poltext,Warszawa ,1994
4. Bagan-Kurluta K.,” Umowa Franchisingu” C.H.Beck ,Warszawa
2001
5. Mendelsohn M., „How to Buy a Franchise”
6. Mendelsohn M., “How to Franchise Your Business”
Faculty: All students
Title:
GLOBALIZATION AND CONSUMER CULTURE
Code: GCC 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: Spring
Level: Advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Examination papers or oral exminations
Language: English
Prerequisites: Two years of education in economics
Course content: The course examines the social aspects of globalization and consumer
culture. Influence of social postmodernism on post-industrial society,
globalization, post-modern consumption, influence of media on global
society, weakening role of nation states and social policy, consumer
ethnocentrism, social restratification, these are the main topics of the
course.
Contact person: Dr hab. Wiesław Wątroba
Literature: Contact the lecturer for information
Faculty: All students
Title:
HOW TO IMPROVE MECHANISM OF
GLOBALIZATION?
Code: HIG 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 (tutorials)
Study period: winter or spring
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: attendance, short presentation
Language: english
Prerequisites: principles of macroeconomics and microeconomics
Course content: 1. Globalization as a process. Introduction.
2. Vision of fair development by World Bank.
3. Making trade fair. Trade agreement, the role of WTO.
4. Intelectual property and its limits.
5. Lifting the resource curse.
6. Global warming.
7. Corporate governance.
8. Burden of debt.
9. Reforming global reserve system.
10. Democratizing globalization.
Contact person: mgr Sebastian Bobowski; [email protected]
Literature: 1. Joseph E. Stiglitz, Making globalization work, Oxford University
Press, 2006
2. Joseph E. Stiglitz, Globalization and Its Discontents, Oxford
University Press, 2004
3. Andrew Charlton, Joseph E. Stiglitz, Fair trade for all. How trade
can promote development, Oxford University Press, 2005
4. Joseph E. Stiglitz, Wizja sprawiedliwej globalizacji. Propozycje
usprawnień, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa 2007
5. Joseph E. Stiglitz, Globalizacja, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN,
Warszawa 2004
6. Andrew Charlton, Joseph E. Stiglitz, Fair trade. Szansa dla
wszystkich, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa 2007
7. Jan Rymarczyk, Internacjonalizacja i globalizacja
przedsiębiorstwa, PWE, Warszawa 2005
8. Jan Rymarczyk (red.), Międzynarodowe stosunki gospodarcze,
PWE, Warszawa 2006
9. Adam Budnikowski, Międzynarodowe stosunki gospodarcze,,
Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa 2006
Faculty: all students
Title:
INDUSTRIAL ORGANISATION
Code: INOR 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: Lecture and case study: 30 hours
Study period: Winter or spring semester
Level: Intermediate
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Case study, essay and attendance
Language: English
Prerequisites: Microeconomics and Macroeconomics
Course content: In economics, studies in the field of the industrial organisation consist of
the analysis of imperfect competitive markets, i.e., markets where a
company is able to apply market power and establish a price above
marginal cost. Industrial organisation uses microeconomics' models (both
static and dynamic) as well as the game theory to describe various aspects
of firms, industries and markets. The ultimate goal of the course is to
discuss the influence of government on markets, exerted to create more
competitive structures. Throughout the course we will discuss case studies
mainly from our European markets rather then American ones.
The course will start with the overview of the theory of firms and costs
and the description of different market structures. This will be applied to
the analysis of monopolies and monopoly practices. The course will also
discuss concentration in individual markets, entry and exit issues and
mergers.
The next part of the course will begin from the short overview of game
theory and its application to the analysis of oligopolistic behaviour –
together with basic microeconomics tools we will study cartels and the
entry in both pricing and non-pricing strategies.
The last part of the course will give an overview of business practices –
product differentiation and advertising strategies, research and
development, price discrimination and vertical relationships and
integration. The course will end with the discussion about regulation and
deregulation.
Contact person: Mikolaj Klimczak
Department of Microeconomics and Institutional Economics
Phone: +48 71 3680 196
Email: [email protected]
Literature: 1. D.E.Waldman, E.J.Jensen: Industrial Organisation. Theory and
Practice. 3rd Edition. Pearsons Education 2006.
2. D.W.Carlton, J.F.Perloff. Modern Industrial Organization. (last
edition) Harper-Collins.
3. S.Douma, H.Schreuder, Economic Approaches to Organizations.
(last edition) Prentice Hall Inc.
4. L.Pepall, D.Richards, G.Norman, Industrial Organization:
Contemporary Theory and Practice, Thomson Learning, 3rd
Edition, 2005.
5. H.R.Varian. Intermediate Microeconomics. A Modern Approach.
3rd edition. W.W.Norton and Company 1993 (or newer 4th or 5th
edition).
Supplementary books and articles may be used.
Faculty: All
Title:
INFRASTRUCTURE IN SOCIAL AND
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Code: ISED 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 hours
Study period: Spring
Level: Master studies
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Written work and its presentation during the lecture
Language: English
Prerequisites: Microeconomics, macroeconomics
Course content: The aim of this lecture is to show the significance of technical and social
infrastructure mainly by presenting its place in local and regional
development, and in the latest theories concerning economic growth. The
infrastructure should be fitted to other developmental factors (also non-
material) so that it amplifies the development. Only an active approach to
infrastructure gives an opportunity to use the whole development
potential, therefore it is one of the most important tasks of the local and
regional authorities. The specific character of infrastructure requires
special tools to carry out and to finance infrastructural investments. All of
these aspects will be discussed during the classes.
The student will acquire the knowledge which will contribute to the better
understanding of the problems concerning the meaning of infrastructure
in spatial development process.
Contact person: Dr Małgorzata Rogowska Department of Spatial Economy and Self-
governed Administration Phone: +48 71 36 80 862
Literature: 1. M. Ratajczak, Infrastruktura w gospodarce rynkowej, Wyd. AE w
Poznaniu, Poznań 1999.
2. Infrastructure in Europe and Central Asia Region approaches to
sustainable services, World Bank, 2006.
3. Municipal and environmental infrastructure, European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development, 1999.
4. Public-Private Partnership in the New UE Member States, World
Bank, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, 2007.
Faculty: All students
Title:
INNOVATIONS IN REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Code: IRDE 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30
Study period: Winter
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: On mark
Language: English
Prerequisites: Microeconomy, makroeconomy
Course content: 1. Basic information of regional development
2. Regional policy in European Union
3. Towards a Knowledge Economy
4. A Regional Perspective on Innovation: From Theory to Strategy
5. Developing Regional Innovation Strategies
6. Regional Innovation Strategies in European Union countries
(examples)
7. Innovation policy in regions
8. Regional Innovation Systems
Contact person: mgr Niki Derlukiewicz Department of Spatial Economy and Self-governed
Administration Phone: +48 71 36 80 862
or dr Katarzyna Miszczak
Department of Spatial Economy and Self-governed Administration
Phone: +48 071 36 80 621
E-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1. Kevin Morgan, Claire Nauwelaers: Regional Innovation
Strategies. The Challenge for Less-Favoured Regions, Routledge
2002.
2. Hans-Joachim Braczyk, Philip Cooke, Martin Heidenreich:
Regional Innovation Systems. The Role of Governances in a
Globalized World, Routledge 2004.
3. Philip Cooke, Andrea Piccaluga: Regional Development in the
Knowledge Economy, Routledge 2006.
4. R. Domański: Recent Advances in Urban and Regional Studies,
KPZK PAN, vol. XII.
Faculty: all
Title:
INSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICS (EXTENDED
COURSE)
Code: INSEC1 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15 hrs lectures and 15 hrs classes
Study period: Spring
Level: Intermediate / Advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Final test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Completed basic economics course
Course content: The purpose of the course is to introduce students into a relatively new
field in the economic theory – the institutional economics (IE), mainly its
part called the New Institutional Economics (NIE).
Lectures contents: Some basic terms. IE versus orthodox economics.
―Old‖ and ―new‖ institutional economics – superficial comparison.
Basic concepts of NIE. Transaction costs economics. Firms and markets
as institutions. Property-rights analysis. Two types of economic theories
of contracts: the agency theory and relational and incomplete contract
theory. Some sample applications of NIE concepts to the economic
analysis of such problems of system transformation as privatisation of
former state-owned firms, development of markets and their institutional
environment.
Classes will be focused on the following problems: ―Old‖ versus ―New‖
IE. Informal institutions. Economic theory of social capital. The NIE of
the state. Constitutional economics. Performance of institutional systems.
D.C. North‘s concept of institutional change. Controversies and
perspectives of the NIE.
Contact person: Dr Bożena Baborska (lectures) - [email protected]
Mgr Karol Fjałkowski (classes) - [email protected]
Literature: E.G. Furubotn and R. Richter, Institutions and Economic Theory. The
Contribution of the New Institutional Economics. The University of
Michigan Press 1997
C. Menard (ed): Institutions, Contracts and Organizations. Perspectives
from New Institutional Economics. Edward Elgar Publ. 2000
D.C. North: Economic Performance Through Time. American Economic
Review, 1994, vol. 84, no. 3, pp. 356-368
O.E. Williamson: The New Institutional Economics: Taking Stock,
Looking Ahead. Journal of Economic Literature, 2000, vol. 38 pp. 595-
613
Faculty: All
Title:
INSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICS (SHORT
COURSE)
Code: INSEC2 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 hrs lectures
Study period: Winter or spring semester
Level: Intermediate / Advanced
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Final test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Completed basic economics
Course content: The purpose of the course is to introduce students in relatively new field
in the economic theory - the institutional economics (IE), mainly its
stream called the New Institutional Economics (NIE).Lectures contents:
Some basic terms. IE versus orthodox economics. “Old” and “new”
institutional economics – superficial comparison. Basic concepts of NIE.
Transaction costs economics. Firms and markets as institutions. Property-
rights analysis. Two types of economic theories of contracts: the agency
theory and relational and incomplete contract theory. Some samples of
NIE concepts‟ applications to the economic analysis of such systemic
transformation problems as former state-owned firms privatisation,
development of markets and their institutional environment.
Contact person: Dr Bożena Baborska
Literature: 1. E.G. Furubotn and R. Richter: Institutions and Economic Theory. The
Contribution of the New Institutional Economics. The University of
Michigan Press 1997,
2. E.G. Furubotn and R. Richter (editors): The New Institutional
Economics. Mohr, 1991
3. C. Menard(ed): Institutions, Contracts and Organizations. Perspectives
from New Institutional Economics. Edward Elger Publ., 2000,
4. C. Menard and M.M. Shirley (editors): Handbook of New Institutional
Economics. Springer 2005.
5. O.E. Williamson: The Economic Institution of Capitalism. The Free
Press, 1985
Faculty: All
Title:
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS Code: INBU 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15h (seminars) + 15h (tutorials)
Study period: Winter and spring semester
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Projects prepared by students + final multiple test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Principles of economics
Course content: The module will allow students to develop their understanding of
international business. Thanks to the course students will identify the
crucial factors of international environment like financial systems,
entry barriers and risk assessment which affect firms in their markets,
acquisition of materials or labour supply in various parts of the
world. Each topic consists of lectures and tutorials, when case
studies will be analyzed.
Topic 1: International Business Nature
Topic 2: World Financial System
Topic 3: Multinational Corporations
Topic 4: International Market Entry Modes
Topic 5: Country Evaluation and Selection
Topic 5: Managing International Operations
Topic 6: Ethics of International Business
Contact person: mgr Artur Klimek (mailto:[email protected])
Literature: International business : global competition from a European
perspective / Andrew Harrison, Ertugrul Dalkiran, Ena Elsey. -
Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2000
International business : environment and operations / John D.
Daniels, Lee H. Radebaugh. - 4th ed. - Reading, MA : Addison-
Wesley Publishing Company, latest edition
International business / Michael R. Czinkota, Ilkka A. Ronkainen,
Michael K. Moffett. - 3rd ed. - Fort Worth, TX : Dryden Press, 1994.
Students should also monitor current issues in international business
by reading The Financial Times and The Economist
Faculty: All students
Title:
INTERNATIONAL DETERMINANTS OF
SPATIAL ECONOMY
Code: IDSE 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30
Study period: Spring
Level: Master‘s studies
Location: Wrocław
Examination: The conditon of gaining final grade is the written work.
Language: English
Prerequisites: Macroeconomic, microeconomic
Course content: The aim of this lecture is to acquaint students with contemporary
problems of spatial economy. The subject of the lecture is connected with
experiences of shaping the spatial economy so far and the directions of its
development in the future in choosen national economies, especially in
European space. This considerations are conducted both on the theory
ground, as well as usuing practical examples.
Contact person: Dr Małgorzata Pięta–Kanurska
e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1. Bűnz H., Kukliński A., Globalization. Experiences and Prospects, The
Friedrich Ebert Foundation, Warsaw 2001.
2. Gorzelak G., Ehrlich E., Faltan L., Illner M., Central Europe in
Transition – Towards EU Membership, Regional Studies Association,
Polish Section, Warsaw 2001.
3. Castells M., The Rise of the Network Society, Blackwell Publ.,
Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1997.
4. Myrdal G., Economic Theory and Under – Developed Regions.
Duckworth, London 1957.
3. Sassen S., The global city. New York, London, Tokio. Wyd. Princeton
University Press, Princeton – New Yersey 1991.
Faculty: All
Title:
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS
Code: INTEC 09/10
ECTS credits: 7
Lecture hours: 30h ( lectures) + 30h ( tutorials)
Study period: Winter and Spring semester
Level: Basic
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Written examination
Language: English
Prerequisites: Principles of macroeconomics and microeconomics
Course content: The course will examine the following subjects:
1) the reasons for international trade:
- early trade theories;
- classical theories based on the principle of comparative
advantage;
- neoclassical trade theories;
- new trade theories;
2) international factor movements:
- labour movements;
- capital and technology movements;
- foreign direct investment and multinationals;
3) international trade policy:
- the instruments of trade policy;
- free trade versus protectionism;
4) international financial markets:
- international financial instruments;
- foreign exchange market;
- various exchange rate regimes;
- exchange rates and open-economy macroeconomics;
- the international monetary system;
- capital flows and financial crises;
5) the balance of payments accounts;
6) international economic integration:
- theoretical aspects of economic integration;
- examples of trade blocs in America and Asia;
- the European Union;
7) international economic institutions such as the World Bank, the
International Monetary Fund, the World Trade Organization;
8) economic globalization:
- causes, consequences and challenges of the globalization process;
- international competitiveness of countries and companies in the global
economy;
- the impact of globalization on developed and developing
countries;
- the European Union in the global economy - with special
reference to Poland;
Contact person: dr Zbigniew Mogiła - [email protected]; mgr Sebastian Bobowski
Literature: 1) Appleyard D., Field A.,Cobb S., International Economics,
McGraw-Hill, 2005;
2) Carbaugh R., International Economics,International Thomson
Publishing, 2006.
3) Krugman P., Obstfeld M., International Economics. Theory and
Policy (7th
Edition), Addison Wesley Publishing Company, 2006;
4) Międzynarodowe stosunki gospodarcze, red. J. Rymarczyk, Polskie
Wydawnictwo Ekonomiczne, Warszawa 2006;
5) Współczesna gospodarka światowa, red. A. B. Kisiel-Łowczyc,
Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego, Gdańsk 2000.
Faculty: All students
Title:
INTERNATIONALIZATION OF NET ECONOMY
Code: INEC 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: Spring
Level: Master studies
Location: Wrocław
Examination: on mark
Language: English
Prerequisites: Microeconomy, Macroeconomy
Course content: The purpose of the lecture is presentation problems of net economy`s functioning
on all three-dimensional (spatial) levels, it means from enterprise and city for
multinational corporations and global economy. There are identified sources of
new relations` creation in spatial economic development on background of
modern trends and processes occuring in world economy (for example
globalization). Then it is performed characteristic of directions, scale and
structure of transformations caused by horizontal net connections.
Contact person: Dr Katarzyna Miszczak, tel. 3680-621,
mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1. Toffler A.H.: Budowa Nowej Cywilizacji - Polityka Trzeciej Fali, Poznań,
Wyd. Zysk i Ska, 1996
2. Kelly K.: Nowe reguły nowej gospodarki, Warszawa, Wyd. WIG-Press, 2001
3. Andersson Å.E., Batten D.F., Johansson B., Nijkamp P.: .Advances in Spatial
Theory and Dynamics. Studies in Regional Science and Urban Economics nr 20,
Wyd. Elsevier Science Publishers B.V. North-Holland-Amsterdam 1989
4. Domański R., Marciniak A.: Sieciowe koncepcje gospodarki miast i regionów,
Warszawa, Wyd. Komitet Przestrzennego Zagospodarowania Kraju PAN, Studia
Tom CXIII, 2003
5. Brown L.M.: Diffusion dynamics. A review and revision of the quantitative
theory of the spatial diffusion of innovation. Lund Studies in Geography, Ser. B.
Human Geography, vol. 29, C. W. K. Gleerup, Lund 1968
6. Kukliński A.: Gospodarka oparta na wiedzy. Wyzwanie dla Polski XXI wieku,
Warszawa, Wyd. Komitet Badań Naukowych, 2001
7. Domański R., Gospodarka przestrzenna, Warszawa, Wyd. PWN, 2002
8. Matusiak K. B., Stawasz E.: Przedsiębiorczość i transfer technologii — polska
perspektywa, śyrardów, Wyd. Łódzkie, 1998
9. Castells M.: The Information Age. Economy, Society and Culture – The rise of
network society. T. 2. Blackwell Publishers, Oxford 1998
10. Hingel A.J.: A New Model of European Development. Innovation.
Technological Development and Network-led Integration. W: Science -
Technology - Economy. Red. A. Kukliński Science and Government Series, Vol.
3, State Committee for Scientific Research, Warsaw 1994
11. Schumpeter J.A.: Business Cycles. New York 1939
12. Breault R.: Global Networking of Regional Optics Clusters. The
International Society for Optical Engineering Denver, Kolorado 1996
13. Zuskovitch E., Justman M.: Networks, sustainable differentiation and
economic development. W: Network in action. Communication, economics and
human knowledge. Red. D. Batten, J. Casti, R. Thord. Wyd. Springer-Verlag,
Berlin 1995
Faculty: All
Title:
MACROECONOMICS
Code: MACR 09/10
ECTS credits: 7
Lecture hours: Total 60 h (30 h - lectures, 30 h – classes)
Study period: Winter or spring
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Multiple choice test plus some exercises
Language: English
Prerequisites: Preferably the completion of microeconomics course
Course content: 1. Introduction – research area, review of main theories and
definitions, simple economy model
2. National income accounting
3. Economic growth and development
4. Consumption functions and consumption demand theories
5. Investment – model of accelerator, investment project evaluation
6. Fiscal policy – function, brief overview of the tax system in Poland,
Laffer curve, government spending, crowding out, deficit, Public Debt
EU‘s budget, fiscal policy in OECD countries
7. Monetary policy – instruments, effectiveness, central banks (National
Bank of Poland, Fed, European Central Bank)
8. Money – functions, demand and supply
9. IS-LM model
10. AS-AD model
11. Inflation
12. Unemployment; the tradeoffs between unemployment and inflation
13. Macroeconomics in the Open Economy – analysis of balance o
payment, protectionism, exchange rates regimes, globalization
Contact person: Dr Wiktor Szydło (e-mail: [email protected])
Literature: - R. Dornbusch, S. Fischer, R. Startz, Macroeconomics, McGraw-Hill (9th
international edition, 2004)
- N.Gregory Mankiw, Macroeconomics - 4th ed. - New York, NY : Worth
Publishers, 2000
Recent texts and articles on the subject given to students
Faculty: Course for all faculties
Title:
MICROECONOMICS
Code: MICR 09/10
ECTS credits: 9
Lecture hours: Full year course:
30 hrs lectures( dr Bożena Baborska)
30 hrs classes (dr Bożena Baborska, dr Mikołaj Klimczak)
Study period: Full academic year
Level: Basic
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: For Polish students compulsory participation in classes and semesters‟
evaluation with grades.
Final written examination
Language: English
Prerequisites: None; the course is addressed to beginners
Course content: The course (lectures and classes) is an alternative for the course
“Mikroekonomia”, which is compulsory for all first year students of Wroclaw
University of Economics.
It starts with an introduction to economics as a science, brief characteristic of its
main fields: micro- and macroeconomics as well as with a fair review of the
major findings of contemporary microeconomics. Contents in brief: theory of
price. Elasticity of demand and supply. Market equilibrium. Government
intervention in markets: reasons and effects. Consumer choice theories.
Economic theory of production costs. Perfectly competitive firm and
monopolistic firm equilibrium. Elements of imperfect competition theories.
Elements of factors markets theories. Overview of modern microeconomic
theories of a firm and market structures. Market failures and market
imperfections.
Contact person: Dr Bozena Baborska
Dr Mikolaj Klimczak
Literature: Begg D., Fischer s, Dornbusch R.: Economics. McGrow-Hill 2003 or later
edition
Begg D., Ward D.: Economics. Student Workbook. . McGrow-Hill 2003 or later
edition
Faculty: All
Title:
OVERVIEW OF POLISH, EU AND WORLD
ECONOMY
Code: OPEU 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 10 h
Study period: Winter or Spring term
Level: Basic to intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Short essay in English
Language: English
Prerequisites: Preferably the completion of macroeconomics course
Course content: Discussion of recent state and development of Polish economy in
comparison with other emerging economies - both from Europe (new EU
Member States) and outside Europe (Latin America, South East Asia, etc.)
Brief overview of world economy with special attention to credit crunch
speculative bubbles, inflation/deflation, unemployment, fiscal situation,
exchange rates trends and exchange rate regimes, etc.
Contact person: Dr Wiktor Szydło (e-mail: [email protected])
Telephone - 713680757
Literature: Recent texts, articles and reports on the subject given to students
Faculty: Course for all faculties
Title:
REGION IN THE KNOWLEDGE – BASED
ECONOMY
Code: RKBE 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30
Study period: Spring term
Level: Specialization
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Credit – on mark (presentation and/or test)
Language: English
Prerequisites: microeconomics, macroeconomics, spatial economy
Course content: Local and regional development is an increasingly global issue. The one
of the aim of the lecture is attempt to presentation meaning of the local
development. Basic definitions in field of regional and local development.
Determinants of competitiveness and attractiveness of particular regions
Policy of regional and local development. The lecture concern also the
processes such as globalization and the increasing role of innovation as
the foundation for a knowledge-based economy. The main resource of the
new economy – knowledge, its feature and attribute. We are now an
information society in a knowledge economy where knowledge
management is essentials.
Contact person: Mgr Anna Mempel-Śnieżyk Department of Spatial Economy and Self-
governed Administration Phone: +48 71 36 80 862
or dr Katarzyna Miszczak
Department of Spatial Economy and Self-governed Administration
Phone: +48 071 36 80 621
E-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1. Regions, Globalisation, and the Knowledge-Based Economy, ed. by
J.H. Dunning, Oxford University Press, New York 2000.
2. Kukliński A.: Gospodarka oparta na wiedzy. Wyzwanie dla Polski
XXI wieku, Warszawa, Wyd. Komitet Badań Naukowych, 2001
3. Hingel A.J.: A New Model of European Development. Innovation.
Technological Development and Network-led Integration. W: Science -
Technology - Economy. Red. A. Kukliński Science and Government
Series, Vol. 3, State Committee for Scientific Research, Warsaw 1994
4. Kelly K.: Nowe reguły nowej gospodarki, Warszawa, Wyd. WIG-
Press, 2001
5. Korenik S.: Gospodarka oparta na wiedzy skali regionu, [w:]
Przybyła Z. (red.) 2007 Gospodarka przestrzenna X. Wydawnictwo
Akademii Ekonomicznej we Wrocławiu, Wrocław2007.
6. Bourdieu P., 1985, The Forms of Capital.
7. Kosiedowski W.(red.), Zarządzanie rozwojem regionalnym i
lokalnym. Problemy teorii i praktyki. Wyd. Tonik, Stowarzyszenie
Wyższej Uczelni Dom Organizatora w Toruniu 2001.
8. Parysek J.J., Podstawy gospodarki lokalnej. Wyd. Naukowe UAM,
Poznań 2001.
9. Pike, Andy, Rodriguez-Pose, AndresTomaney, John: Local and
Regional Development. Wyd. Routledge, Anno 2006
10. Rooney, D., Hearn, G., & Ninan, A. 2005: Handbook on the
Knowledge Economy. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham
Faculty: International relations
Title:
REGIONAL ECONOMICS AND REGIONAL
POLICY
Code: RERP 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 hours of lectures
Study period: Winter or spring
Level: Advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Open test written in English (10-20 questions)
Language: English
Prerequisites: Microeconomics and Macroeconomics
Course content: The course of 15 hours, one hour a week divided into three parts:
1. Theory of regional development
2. Regional policy in Europe: case study of different countries
3. Regional policy on supranational level (European union regional
policy)
Contact person: Dr. Anna Jenik [email protected]
Literature: H. Armstrong and Jim Taylor: „Regional Economics and Policy‖;
Blackwell Publishers Oxford 2000
Faculty: All students according to their interest
Title:
SOCIAL POLICY
Code: SPO 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 (lecture)
Study period: Spring
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Multiple choice test
Language: English
Prerequisites: none
Course content: 1. Introduction to social policy
2. Welfare regimes
3. Social policy institutions
4. Social policy issues: social security, employment, education, etc.
5. Social policy in Poland
6. Globalisation and social policy
Contact person: dr Stanisław Kamiński, Department of Sociology and Social Policy,
Literature: Hill M., Social Policy in the Modern World, Blackwell, Oxford 2006
Spicker P., Social Policy. Themes and Approaches, The Policy Press,
Bristol 2008
Faculty: all
Title:
SPATIAL PLANNING
Code: SPPL 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 hours
Study period: Spring semester
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test and short essay
Language: English
Prerequisites: Listeners must have knowledge of subjects: basis of microeconomics and
macroeconomics and basis of spatial economy.
Course content: 1. Principles of farming and management space and stocks.
2. Spatial planning - general notions and basic informations of spatial
planning, purpose, range.
3. Act on Spatial Planning and Management - basic definitions, range.
4. Spatial planning on national grade - general characteristic.
5. Spatial planning in voivodship - general characteristic.
6. Spatial planning and development in commune.
7. Study of local conditions affecting local planning and perspectives for
spatial development - notion and character, content and procedure of
creation.
8. Local land-use plan - notion and character, content and procedure of
creation.
9. Legal effects of adoption of a land-use plan.
10. Questions of environmental protection with reference to land-use
plans.
11. Decision of condition of building and developing of field.
12. Localization of investment of public purpose.
Contact person: Mgr Piotr Hajduga
Department of Spatial Economy and Self-governed Administration
Phone: +48 71 36 80 862
E-mail: [email protected]
or dr Katarzyna Miszczak
Department of Spatial Economy and Self-governed Administration
Phone: +48 071 36 80 621
E-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1. Abler R., Adams J.S., Gould P., Spatial organization. The
geographer‘s view of the world. Prentice-Hall, INC, Englewood Cliff,
New Jersey 1971.
2. Hall P., Urban and regional planning - 2nd ed. – Harmondsworth,
Penguin Books, 1982.
3. Buckingham-Hatfield S., Evan B., Environmental planning and
sustainability – Chichester, J. Wiley, 1996.
4. Barnes W.R., Ledebur L.C., The new regional economics. SAGE
Publication, London 1998.
5. Fujita M., Krugman P., Venables A.J., The spatial economy:
Cities, Regions, and international trade. The MIT Press, Cambridge
Mass 1999.
6. Domański R., Gospodarka przestrzenna. Podstawy teoretyczne.
PWN, Warszawa 2007.
7. Podstawy gospodarki przestrzennej - wybrane aspekty, red. S.
Korenik, J. Słodczyk, Wydawnictwo Akademii Ekonomicznej im.
Oskara Langego we Wrocławiu, Wrocław 2005.
8. Niewiadomski Z., Planowanie przestrzenne. Zarys systemu.
Wydawnictwo Prawnicze LexisNexis, Warszawa 2004.
9. Szwajdler W., Bąkowski T., Proces inwestycyjno-budowlany.
Zagadnienia administracyjno-prawne. Toruń 2004.
Faculty: All students
Title:
SVILUPPO ECONOMICO E STRATEGIE
DELLE IMPRESE. CONCORRENZIALITA’ E
INNOVAZIONE NEL MERCATO GLOBALE
Code: SESIC 09/10
ECTS credits: 3
Lecture hours: 20
Study period: Invernale
Level: Avanzato
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Discussione su argomenti del corso e valutazione dei candidati da 0 a 5
Language: Italian
Prerequisites: Conoscenza di base delle seguenti materie: microeconomia,
macroeconomia, politica economica, gestione dell‘impresa
Course content: Nuova istituzione Lo sviluppo economico nel pensiero degli economisti e
nella realtà attuale. L‘impresa e lo sviluppo economico: primi elementi di
strategia dell‘impresa. Le strategie d‘impresa nell‘evoluzione del
pensiero economico. Il concetto di strategia e il processo di gestione
strategica. Obiettivi e vincoli della gestione strategica. Le strategie
d‘ingresso in un mercato nuovo. Le strategie delle imprese nei mercati
globali: vantaggi competitivi e concorrenza. Strategie dei gruppi di
imprese. Globalizzazione, mercato del lavoro e strategie produttive: il
caso dell‘Italia. Internazionalizzazione e strategia delle imprese minori
nei settori tradizionali: il caso delle Marche. La strategia della
delocalizzazione all‘estero nel settore della moda: il caso di Vicenza.
Strategie d‘impresa e mercato: le performance delle piccole e medie
imprese italiane nel mercato globale. Le strategie d‘impresa nel pensiero
degli economisti. Qualità dell‘imprenditore, innovazione e credito per
l‘affermazione dell‘impresa del mercato globale.
Contact person: prof. Giuseppe Calzoni,
Facoltà: Economia. Dipartimento di Politica Economica e Studi
Regionali Europei.
e.mail [email protected]
Literature: fornito dall‘insegnante.
Faculty: tutti gli studenti
Title:
THE DILEMMAS OF THE OPEN ECONOMIES
Code: DIOE 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: Lecture: 30 hours
Study period: Spring or Winter
Level: Intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Cases (work group), small essay or test (to be announced)
Language: english
Prerequisites: Microeconomics and Macroeconomics
Course content: This course main goal is to show difficulties in deciding what is the best
economic policy for an economy in today‘s world. We will discuss specific
policies and different approaches to manage economic openness of a
country.
Content:
1. Defining open economy. Measuring openness
2. Does regionalization obstruct globalization?
3. Free trade vs. protectionism
4. Agricultural subsidies, food prices and the third world
5. Do FDI in developing countries hurt workers in high-wage
countries?
6. Exchange rate regimes: fixed or float?
7. ERM2, Euro and the theory of optimum currency areas
8. International capital movements: opportunity or curse?
9. International transmission of crises (contagion)
10. Moral hazard in global economy
11. Energy security
12. Small or big, close or open? Economic policy case studies
Contact person: dr Szymon Mazurek
e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: P. Krugman, M. Obstfeld, International Economics
N. G. Mankiw, Macroeconomics
or polish translations
Faculty: all
Title:
THE ECONOMICS OF THE ARTS
Code: EAC 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 hours of workshop
Study period: Spring semester
Level: Intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test
Language: English, German
Prerequisites: Microeconomics
Course contenet: The scope of cultural economics course is:
1. Introduction to the arts and media industries. (Economic history of the
arts) 2. Basic economic characteristics of cultural goods and services. 3.
Artists' labour markets. 4.Production in the performing arts and the
productivity lag – Baumol's cost disease. 5. Superstar phenomenon –
what makes a star? 6. Copyright and contracts in the arts. 7. Public
subsidy for the arts – why and how much? 8. The role of the arts in the
local economy.
Contact person: mgr Alicja Doniec, [email protected]
Literature: 1. A Handbook of Cultural Economics, edit. By R.Towse, Edward Elgar
Cheltenham, UK, 2003.
2. The Economics of Art and Culture, J.Heilbrun, CH.M.Gray, Cambridge
University Press 2001,
3. The Economics of the Performing Arts, C.D. Throsby, G.A. Whiters,
Edward Arnold Publishers LTD, London,1979.
Title:
TRANSITION FROM CENTRALLY PLANNED-
TO MARKET ECONOMY
Code: TCPME 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: Winter semester
Level: Intermediate /Advanced
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Short essay
Language: English
Prerequisites: Completed microeconomics or macroeconomics course
Course content: Historical background: characteristic features of centrally planned
economy(CPE); chosen examples: Polish- and Soviet Union economy.
First period of transition: liberalisation, deregulation and privatisation .
Emerging markets. Process of markets‟ development. External costs of
economy transformation: market imperfection, government imperfection,
grey economy , corruption. Path dependency and expectation dependency
Contact person: Dr Bożena Baborska.
Literature: 1. K.J. Arrow: Economic Transition: Speed and Scope. “Journal of
Institutional and Theoretical Economics” no.156/1, 2000
2. European Commission – DG for Economic and Financial Affairs:
Growth and Competitiveness in the Polish Economy: the Road to
Real Convergence. “European Economy” no.27, November 2006
3. IMF: An IMF Perspective on Progress and Prospects of
Transition Economies. 2000,
4. D.K. Rossati (ed.): New Europe. Report on Transformation.
[Publisher:] Institute for Eastern Studies 2006
5. World Bank: From Plan to Market. World Bank Development
Report 1996
Faculty: All
FINANCE, ACCOUNTING AND BANKING
Title:
ANALYSIS, USING AND UNDERSTANDING
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF THE FIRM
Code: AUFSF 09/10
ECTS credits: 3
Lecture hours: 18
Study period: Winter
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test
Language: English
Prerequisites: none
Course content: In the lecture will be shown and explained the role of true understanding
and profitable use of financial statements. Will be discussed their role in
the prediction close and far future health of the firm.
Contact person: Grzegorz Michalski, [email protected]; tel.48.503.452.860
Literature: Michalski G., Prediction cooperator future condition using financial statements (In Polish: Ocena
kontrahenta na podstawie sprawozdań finansowych), ODDK, Gdańsk, 2008.
White G. I., A. C. Sondhi, D. Fried, The Analysis and Use of Financial Statements, Wiley, New
York 2003.
Michalski G., Liquidity management in small enterprises (in Polish: Płynność finansowa w małych
i średnich przedsiębiorstwach), WN PWN, Warszawa, 2005.
Peterson P. P., F. J. Fabozzi, Analysis of Financial Statements, Wiley, New York 2006.
Michalski G., Financial strategies of the firm (In Polish: Strategie finansowe przedsiębiorstw),
ODDK, Gdańsk, 2009.
Wilson M., Reading the Financial Pages For Dummies, Wiley, New York 2009.
Faculty: All
Title:
BANK RISK MANAGEMENT UNDER BASEL II
Code: BRMB 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30
Study period: Winter or spring
Level: Advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Banking management, financial markets and instruments
Course content: 1. What is risk? Expected and unexpected risk in banking industry. Sources of risk.
2. Interest rate risk.
3. Duration, convexity.
4. Hedging interest rate risk.
5. Risk Metrics model, BIS regulations and bank internal models.
6. Credit risk and its measurement.
7. Newer models of credit risk measurement and pricing. Basel II framework for credit
risk drivers.
8. Credit Metrics. Credit Risk+. Loan portfolio diversification and modern portfolio
theory: KMV model, regulatory models.
9. Hedging credit risk with futures and forwards, credit swaps and options.
10. Sources of operational risk.
11. Foreign exchange risk exposure. Hedging FX risk with forwards, futures and
currency swaps and options.
12. Liquidity risk of banks.
13. The causes of banks‘ insolvencies. Capital and insolvency risk, capital adequacy in
the commercial banking industry, risk-based capital ratios.
14. The bank loan sales market. Innovations in securitization.
15. Current review of the Basel new capital accord, implementation of Basel II into
European law, EU directives on capital adequacy, CRD.
Contact person: Dr Ewa Kania, Department of Banking 411Z phone (071)3680353
e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1. Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, International Convergence of Capital
Measurement and Capital Standards, Basel: BIS 2006;
http://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs128
2. Saunders A., Credit risk measurement: new approaches to value at risk and other
paradigms, New York, NY: J. Wiley, 1999
3. Saunders A., Financial institutions management: a modern perspective, Boston,
MA: Irwin/McGraw-Hill, 2000
4. Uyemura D.G., D.R. Van Deventer, Financial risk in banking management: the
theory and application of asset and liabilities management, Burr Ridge, IL: Irwin,
1993
Faculty: Finance and Banking majors
Title:
BUSINESS BUDGETING
Code: BUBU 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 10 hours of lectures
20 hours of IT-workshops
Study period: both winter and spring terms
Level: advanced (Master Studies)
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written report
Language: English
Prerequisites: Fundamentals of Accounting
Course content: The course combines theoretical and analytical approaches to budgeting-
related issues.
Lectures presenting a general concept of business budgeting are
supplemented with IT-workshops in MS Excel environment, where
students become acquainted with analytical techniques necessary for
planning business activities. The whole course is supported with
numerous case studies presenting a budgeting process from a practical
perspective.
Contents: 1) Role of budgeting in an enterprise
2) Principles of budgeting
3) Phases of a budgeting process (formation and realisation of budgets,
budgetary control)
4) Different methods of budgeting (bottom-up, incremental, zero-based
budgeting)
5) Structure of a master budget and analysis of its elements
6) Envisaged financial statements
Contact person: dr Joanna Dyczkowska tel.: (071) 36-80-807, e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: Materials will be submitted by the instructor
Recommended books:
1) Robert Rachlin: Total Business Budgeting: A Step-by-Step Guide with
Forms, 2nd Edition, Willey 1999
2) William R. Lalli (Editor): Handbook of Budgeting, 5th Edition, Willey
2003
3) Nils H. Rasmussen, Christopher J. Eichorn: Budgeting: Technology,
Trends, Software Selection, and Implementation, Willey 2000
4) Janice M. Roehl-Anderson, Steven M. Bragg: The Controller's
Function: The Work of the Managerial Accountant, 3rd Edition,
Willey 2005
5) Steven M. Bragg: Controller's Guide to Planning and Controlling
Operations, Willey 2004
Faculty: Everyone is invited
Title:
CONTROLLING
Code: CNTR 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 10 hours of lectures
20 hours of IT-workshops
Study period: both winter and spring terms
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: written report
Language: English
Prerequisites: Fundamentals of Accounting, Fundamentals of Management
Course content: The course offers a practice-oriented approach to planning, control, co-
ordination and reporting problems in an enterprise. It provides participants
with necessary knowledge and skills to cope with tasks which controllers
or managerial accountants have to face.
Lectures, presenting a general background to controlling, are supported
with IT-workshops in MS Excel environment, where students become
acquainted with application of accounting and financial tools in various
areas of business activity.
Contents:
1) Budgeting
integrating financial and non-financial plans; working with budgets
2) Planning for Project Management
action planning; co-ordination of time schedules and budgets;
feasibility analysis
3) Sales Analysis
customers‟ profiles (financial and non-financial measures); volume-
and time-structures of sales
4) Purchasing Analysis
suppliers‟ profiles (ratio analysis); suppliers selection (evaluation
forms)
5) Production Modelling
implementation of JIT standard
6) Financial Monitoring
data mining; cash flow modelling; scenario analysis
7) Controllers‟ Reports
data formats; designing financial reports; visualisation techniques
Contact person: dr Tomasz Dyczkowski phone: 071 36-80-807, e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: Materials will be submitted by the instructor
Recommended supplementary readings:
1) S. M Bragg: Controller's Guide: Roles and Responsibilities for the
First Years, Willey: 2005.
2) Handbook of Budgeting, W. R. Lalli (ed.), Willey: 2003.
3) N. H. Rasmussen (et al.): Budgeting: Technology, Trends, Software
Selection, and Implementation, Willey: 2000.
4) J. M. Roehl -Anderson (et al.): The Controller's Function: The Work
of the Managerial Accountant, Willey: 2005.
Faculty: Everyone is invited
Title:
COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS OF INVESTMENT
PROJECTS
Code: CBAI 09/10
ECTS credits: 3
Lecture hours: 10h lecture +10h workshop
Study period: Winter or Spring
Level: Advanced
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Written test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Basic accounting, basic investment decisions
Course content: Cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is one of the economic analyses methods, which purpose is to help evaluate a project or proposal. In this sense it could be perceived as an investment decision tool. It shows if the project will increase the common wealth and it helps to identify value for money solutions that meet the objectives of government policies. In broad socio-economic sense the analysis will tackle not only financial aspects of an investment but also other aspects that are not explicit in market prices.
CBA of investment projects is explicitly required by the new EU regulations for different funds for major projects. CBA is also useful in many different situations connected with collecting funds to run investment projects.
The lecture combines theory and practical applications. An understanding
of financial methods for project appraisal is essential if one is to develop
and implement the methods of project economic (social) effectiveness
appraisal. Therefore, lectures begin with basic concepts, including
background on the economic and financial environment, financial and
economic analysis, risk analysis, and the valuation process. With this
background one can understand how specific techniques and decision
rules can be used for appraisal of projects from investor and social point
of view. Lectures will cover following subjects:
1 What is Cost-Benefit Analysis – differences between financial and
economic analysis (theory of distortions).
2 An agenda for the project examiner
Provides operational tools for both the preparation and the appraisal of
the project.
3 Financial analysis
This section explains how to conduct the study, from the definition of the
main items to include in the analysis to the calculation of the financial
IRR and NPV (both of the investment and of the equity).
4 Economic analysis
Starting from the financial analysis and the table of financial flows, the
aim is to assess a standard methodology for the four steps for the
definition of the table for the economic analysis: correction for fiscal
aspects; correction for externalities; the determination of the conversion
factors; the determination of social discount rate.
The section focuses on how to calculate the social costs and benefits of a
project and how they can influence the final result. It provides guidance
on how to calculate economic IRR and economic (social) NPV and to
understand its economic meaning for project appraisal.
5 Multicriteria analysis
This section will cover situations in which the IRR and NPV criteria are
insufficient as impact indicators and complementary analysis is needed.
6. Sensitivity and risk analysis
The section gives an outline on the treatment of uncertainty in investment
projects.
Contact person: dr Magdalena Ligus e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: Boardman A.E., Greenberg D.H.: Cost-benefit analysis. Concepts and
practice. Third edition. Prentice Hall, New Jersey 2006.
Guide to cost-benefit analysis of investment projects. (Structural Fund –
ERDF, Cohesion Fund and ISPA). Prepared for: Evaluation Unit DG
Regional Policy European Commission, 2003.
Guidelines for preparing economic analysis. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 2000.
Mitchell R.C., Carson R.T.: Using surveys to value public goods: the
contingent valuation method. Resources for the Future, Washington D.C.
1989.
Hanley N., Spash C.L.: Cost-benefit analysis and the environment.
Edward Elgar, 1993.
Faculty: all
Title:
CURRENT ASSETS MANAGEMENT: VALUE
BASED WORKING CAPITAL DECISIONS
Code: CAM 09/10
ECTS credits: 3
Lecture hours: 18
Study period: Winter
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test
Language: English
Prerequisites: none
Course content: Current assets management should use a combination of policies and
techniques leading to firm value creation. Cash management identify the cash
balances (transaction, precautionary and speculative) which allows for the
business to meet day to day expenses, but reduces cash holding and
managing costs. Inventory management identify the level of inventories and
allow uninterrupted production but optimize the investment in materials and
optimizes reordering costs. Accounts receivable management identify the
best trade credit policy, i.e. credit terms which will be offered to customers.
Corporate Net Working Capital management strategies Cash conversion
cycle and operating cycle Inventory management (ABC, EOQ, POQ,
VBEOQ, VBPOQ) Accounts receivable management Cash budget & cash
management models.
Contact person: Grzegorz Michalski, [email protected]; tel.48.503.452.860
Literature: Maness T. S., J. T. Zietlow, Short-Term Financial Management, The Dryden Press, 1998.
Michalski G., Liquidity management in small enterprises (in Polish: Płynność finansowa w małych
i średnich przedsiębiorstwach), WN PWN, Warszawa, 2005.
Pluta W., G. Michalski, Short-run financial management. (in Polish: Krótkoterminowe zarządzanie
kapitałem), CH Beck, Warszawa 2005.
Zietlow J.T., A. Seidner, Cash and Investment Management for Nonprofit Organizations, John
Wiley & Sons, New York 2007.
Faculty: All
Title:
DIE RECHNUNGSWESEN KLEINES UND
MITTELES UNTERNEHMEN
Code: RKMU 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30
Study period: Winter or Spring
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: written test
Language: German
Prerequisites: Die Kentniesse der Grunde Rechnungswesen
Course content: Die Unternehmen unterscheiden sich vor allem hinsichtlich ihrer
Rechtsform und ihrer Grosse. Um die Unternehmen hinsichtlich die
Grosse zu teilen, kónnen wir z.B. Anzahlkriterium annehmen. In Literatur
konnen wir viel Anzahlkriterium finden, jede Land hat eigene
Definitionen kleine, mittele und grosse Unternehmen.
Kleine Unternehmen beschaftigen bis 50 Mitarbeiter (Angestellte), und
mittele bis 250 Angestellte. Dass Anzahlkriterium sind nicht genugend.
Man soll noch andere Kriterium finden.
Und jezt die zweite Teilung: hinsichtlich Rechtsform. In Deutschland
unterscheidet man Rechtsformen des offentlichen Rechts und privaten
Rechts.
Die Vorlesung zeigt, wie sieht die Rechnungswesen in kleines und
mitteles Unternehmen aus.
Contact person: dr Angelika Kaczmarczyk, [email protected], tel.
713680406, room 521Z
Literature:
Faculty: All
Title:
FAMILY FINANCE
Code: FAFI 09/10
ECTS credits: 3
Lecture hours: 18
Study period: Spring
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test
Language: English
Prerequisites: None
Course content: During this lectures we will learn how to identify family best values and
how to choose family financial goals. We will use long-run and short-run
financial decision approach knowing that our decisions are fixed in
conditions of risk and uncertainty.
Contact person: Grzegorz Michalski, [email protected]; tel.48.503.452.860
Literature: Bajtelsmit V. L., Personal Finance: Planning and Implementing Your Financial Goals, Wiley 2005.
Douglas A., E. Lewin, Family Finance, Dearborn Trade 2001.
Woerheide W., Core Concepts of Personal Finance, Wiley 2004.
Fletcher D. E., Understanding the Small Family Business, Routledge 2002.
Millar R., A Complete Guide to Family Finance, Kogan Page Publishers 2004.
Israelsen C. L. , R. O. Weagley, Personal & Family Finance Workbook, Kendall Hunt Pub 2006.
Callaghan G., I. Fribbance, M. Higginson, Personal Finance, Wiley 2006.
Faculty: All
Title:
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING
Code: FIACC1 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 hours
Study period: Winter semester
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written work at home and in class assignments
Language: English
Prerequisites: Listeners must have knowledge of subjects: basis of accounting,
microeconomics and basis of law.
Course content: The lecture is addressed to all students who plan their careers in
multinational companies or public listed companies, particularly
candidates to positions in financial departments of all kinds of
companies. It is essential for all students of finance and accounting.
Scope and objectives:
The main purpose of this course is to introduce students to Anglo-Saxon
professional accounting (and business in general) terminology by:
explaining the basic rules and concepts of financial accounting
and financial statements preparation,
introducing the meaning of all major accounting terminology,
introducing key features of Anglo-Saxon accounting philosophy
as a opposed to continental accounting,
emphasizing on the ambiguity of English economic terms,
explaining differences between British and American English,
and English used in International Financial Reporting Standards.
Key words:
financial statement, users of financial statements, qualitative
characteristics of financial statements, accounting standardization and
harmonization, International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
Contact person: dr Wojciech Hasik, e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1. Alexander D., Nobes C., Financial Accounting – an International
Introduction, 2nd edn., Financial Times, Prentice Hall, 2004.
2. Black G., Applied Financial Accounting and Reporting, Oxford,
2004.
3. Choi F. D. S., Frost C. A., Meek G. K., International Accounting,
Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River 1999.
4. Sutton T., Corporate Financial Accounting and Reporting, 2nd edn.,
Prentice Hall, 2004.
5. Robinson T. R., Munter P., Grant J., Financial Statement Analysis –
a Global Perspective, Pearson Education, Prentice Hall, 2004.
6. Weygandt J. J., Kieso D. E., Kimmel P. D., Financial Accounting,
fifth edn. Wiley, 2005.
Faculty: All students
Title:
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING
Code: FIACC2 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 hours
Study period: Winter
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written
Language: English
Prerequisites: Basis of Accounting
Course content: 1. Recording and Valuation of Plant and Intangible Assets.
2. Depreciation of Plant and Intangible Assets.
3. Recording and Valuation of Liabilities and Receivables.
4. Accounting for Salaries
5. Recording and Valuation of Investments.
6. Recognition and Measurement of Income
7. Presentation of Financial Statements Prepared According to IAS
–IRFS (including Accounting Policy).
Contact person: dr Adrian Ryba 517 Z tel. 071 3680423
Literature: 1. Elliott B, Elliott J., Financial Accounting and Reporting, 12th
ed., Person, 2007/2008.
2. Kimmel P.D., Jerry J., Financial Accounting : Tools for Business
Decision Making, 3rd ed., intern.ed. - New York, NY : J.Wiley,
2004.
3. Needles B, E. Jr, Powers M., Financial Accounting, 8th
ed.,Boston, Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004.
Faculty: All students
Title:
FINANCIAL CHALLENGES FOR NON-PROFIT
ORGANISATIONS
Code: FCNGO 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 10 hours of lectures
20 hours of workshops
Study period: both winter and spring terms
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: written exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: Fundamentals of Management
Course content: The course offers a practical approach to finance-related problems in non-
profit organisations (NPOs) and provides participants with necessary
knowledge and skills to cope with tasks which managers of modern NPOs
have to face.
Lectures presenting general background to non-profit-oriented activities
and requirements for financial management and reporting in NPOs are
supported with workshops, where students become acquainted with
application of managerial tools adjusted to non-profit environment.
Contents:
1) Non-profit organisations in contemporary economy
a) Non-profit sector as an economic power.
b) Legal and organisational framework.
c) Challenges for NPOs
financial stability; relationships with stakeholders; effectiveness
and efficiency of non-profit oriented activities.
2) Financial management in non-profit organisations
a) Information needs of NPOs
objectives and requirements for information systems; internal and
external sources of information; financial and non-financial data
b) Managerial accounting for NPOs
cost-estimates; fundraising objectives; budgeting; costs-benefits
analysis; financial and non-financial ratios
c) Financial monitoring for NPOs
analytical techniques; evaluation criteria; budgetary control;
contents of managerial reports
Contact person: dr Tomasz Dyczkowski
phone: 071 36-80-807, e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: Materials will be submitted by the instructor
Recommended supplementary readings:
1) Charity Commission [online]: various publications and reports
2) S. A. Finkler: Financial Management For Public Health and Not-for-
Profit Organizations. Prentice Hall: 2004.
3) J. Kendall: The Voluntary Sector. Routledge: 2003.
4) W. A. Schneider (et al.): The Practical Guide to Managing Nonprofit
Assets. Wiley: 2005.
5) K. Sprinkel Grace: Beyond Fundraising New Strategies for Nonprofit
Innovation and Investment. Wiley: 2005.
6) E. Young: Management Control in Non-profit Organizations;
McGraw-Hill: 2002.
Faculty: Everyone is invited
Title:
FINANCIAL LIQUIDITY MANAGEMENT
Code: FLM 09/10
ECTS credits: 3
Lecture hours: 18
Study period: Spring
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test
Language: English
Prerequisites: none
Course content: Financial Liquidity Management (FLM) involves managing the relationship
between a firm's short-term assets and its short-term liabilities. The best FLM
mix uses a combination of policies and techniques which lead to firm value
maximization. These policies aim at managing the current assets (i.e. cash
and its equivalents, accounts receivables and inventories) and the short term
financing. Cash management identify the cash balances (transaction,
precautionary and speculative) which allows for the business to meet day to
day expenses, but reduces cash holding and managing costs. Inventory
management identify the level of inventories and allow uninterrupted
production but optimize the investment in materials and optimizes reordering
costs. Accounts receivable management identify the best trade credit policy,
i.e. credit terms which will be offered to customers. Short term financing
identify the best source of financing and analyzes the best net working capital
policy firm should chose to maximize its value. Financial liquidity and its
measurement Corporate Net Working Capital management strategies Cash
conversion cycle and operating cycle Inventory management (ABC, EOQ,
POQ, VBEOQ, VBPOQ) Accounts receivable management Cash budget &
cash management models.
Contact person: Grzegorz Michalski, [email protected]; tel.48.503.452.860
Literature: Maness T. S., J. T. Zietlow, Short-Term Financial Management, The Dryden Press, 1998.
Michalski G., Liquidity management in small enterprises (in Polish: Płynność finansowa w małych
i średnich przedsiębiorstwach), WN PWN, Warszawa, 2005.
Pluta W., G. Michalski, Short-run financial management. (in Polish: Krótkoterminowe zarządzanie
kapitałem), CH Beck, Warszawa 2005.
Zietlow J.T., A. Seidner, Cash and Investment Management for Nonprofit Organizations, John
Wiley & Sons, New York 2007.
Faculty: All
Title:
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
Code: FIMA 09/10
ECTS credits: 7
Lecture hours: 30h lecture + 30h workshop
Study period: winter
Level: intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: basic accounting, financial mathematics
Course content: Understanding of principles of finance theory is indispensable to develop
and implement effective financial strategies. Lectures take students
through the basic concepts, including background on the economic and
financial environment, financial statement analysis, risk analysis, and the
valuation process. With this portion of knowledge one can understand
how specific techniques and decision rules can be used in the process of
value maximization of the company. Lectures will cover following
subjects:
1 Basic Concepts in Finance
Objective and Scope of Finance. Agency Problems. Capital Market and
Portfolio Theories. Analysis of Financial Statements.
2 Capital Budgeting Decisions
The Capital Budgeting Process. Cash Flows Analysis. Capital
Budgeting without Capital Constraints: NPV, IRR, Payback, and
Accounting Rate of Return. Capital Budgeting Under Capital Rationing:
Profitability Index, Mathematical Programming.
Risk-Adjusted NPV Model: Risk-Adjusted Discount Rate and Certainty
Equivalent Approaches. Risk Analysis Techniques: Sensitivity Analysis,
Simulation, and Decision Trees. Impact of Inflation. Dependence of
Cash Flows over Time. Correlation among Investment Projects. Agency
Problem.
3 Cost of Capital
Weighted Average Cost of Capital. Marginal Cost of Capital. Application
of the CAPM.
4 Capital Structure Decisions
Short to Medium-Term Debt Financing. Long-Term Debt Financing.
Equity Capital. Quasi-Equity Capital. Agency Problem of External
Financing.
Financial Leverage and Financial Risk. Capital Structure Theories:
Traditional Approaches and The Modigliani-Miller Theory. Impact of
Market Imperfections: Taxes and Agency Problem. Optimal Capital
Structure.
5 Dividend Policies
Dividend Decisions and Shareholder Wealth. Modigliani-Miller
Irrelevance Argument. Taxes, Clientele Effects, and Announcement
Effects. Factors Affecting Dividend Policies. Types Of Dividend Policies.
6 Working Capital Management
Liquidity. Managing Cash, Marketable Securities Portfolio, Accounts
Receivables, and Inventory.
7 Basics of Value Based Management
Contact person: dr Tomasz Słoński, tel. (71)36-80-662, e-mail:
[email protected], mgr Karolina Daszyńska-Żygadło, tel.
(71)36-80-887, [email protected]
Literature: Ross, S.A., Westerfield, R.W. and Jordan, B.D., Fundamentals of
Corporate Finance, Irving Mc-Graw-Hill.
Supplementary reading
E.Brigham, L.Gapenski: „Financial Management:. The Dryden Press,
Chicago 1999.
R. Brealey, S. Myers “Principles of Financial Management” (5th Edition),
McGraw-Hill,1996
S. Lumby: “Investment appraisal and financing decisions”, Chapman &
Hall, 1993.
A. Damodaran: “Corporate Finance. Theory and practice” John Wiley and
Sons, Inc. 2002.
Cases
J. Sulock, J. Dunkelberg: “Cases in Financial Management” John Wiley
and Sons, Inc, 2002
Faculty: All
Title:
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FOR NONPROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS
Code: FMNO 09/10
ECTS credits: 3
Lecture hours: 18
Study period: Spring
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test
Language: English
Prerequisites: None
Course content: This lecture will cover the theory and practice of nonprofit financial
policies and strategies. Our purpose will be to show how to choose and
use financial management strategies for nonprofit organization. We will
present how nonprofit organizations should use cash flow sources,
borrowing, risk management, short-run and long-run financial planning.
Contact person: Grzegorz Michalski, [email protected]; tel.48.503.452.860
Literature: Zietlow J., J.A. Hankin, A.G. Seidner, Financial Management for Nonprofit Organizations:
Policies and Practices, Wiley 2007.
Herman M.L., G.L. Head, P.M. Jackson, T.E. Fogarty, Managing Risk in Nonprofit Organizations:
A Comprehensive Guide, Wiley 2003.
Bryce H.J., Financial and Strategic Management for Nonprofit Organizations: A Comprehensive
Reference to Legal, Financial, Management, and Operations Rules and Guidelines for Nonprofits,
Wiley 2000.
Hankin J.A., A.G. Seidner, J. Zietlow, Financial Management for Nonprofit Organizations, Wiley
1998.
Maddox D.C., Budgeting for Not-for-Profit Organizations, Wiley 1999.
Zietlow J.T., A. Seidner, Cash and Investment Management for Nonprofit Organizations, John
Wiley & Sons, New York 2007.
Faculty: All
Title:
FINANCIAL PLANNING
Code: FIPL 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15h lecture + 15h workshop
Study period: spring
Level: intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: basic accounting, financial mathematics
Course content: The lecture combines theory and practical applications. An understanding
of finance theory is absolutely essential if one is to develop and
implement effective financial strategies. Therefore, lectures begin with
basic concepts, including background on the economic and financial
environment, financial statement analysis, risk analysis, and the valuation
process. With this background one can understand how specific
techniques and decision rules can be used to help maximize the value of
the enterprise. Lectures will cover following subjects:
1 What is Financial Planning – its role and functions
2 Financial Planning Models
Components of Financial Planning Model, Sustainable Growth Model,
Percentage of Sales Model,
3 Risk measuring methods Break-even Point Analysis, Sensitivity Analysis, Scenario Analysis
4 Working Capital Management and Short-Term Planning
Working Capital – Components and Management Strategies, Cash
Conversion Cycle, Current Assets Planning, Cash Budgeting, Short-Term
Financing Plan, Sources of Short-Term Financing
Contact person: dr Tomasz Słoński, tel. 36-80-662, e-mail: [email protected]
mgr Karolina Daszyńska-Żygadło, tel. 36-80-887,
Literature: A. Damodaran: “Corporate Finance. Theory and practice” John Wiley and
Sons, Inc. 2002.
E.Brigham, L.Gapenski: „Financial Management”. The Dryden Press,
Chicago 1999.
R. Brealey, S. Myers, A. Marcus “Fundamentals of Corporate Finance”
(4th Edition),
McGraw-Hill, 2004
Cases
J. Sulock, J. Dunkelberg: “Cases in Financial Management” John Wiley
and Sons, Inc, 2002.
Faculty: All
Title:
FINANCIAL REPORTING IN CONTEXT IAS/IFRS
Code: FRIAS 09/10
ECTS credits: 3 Lecture hours: 20
Study period: Spring
Level: Basic
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Written work at home
Language: English
Prerequisites: None
Course content: External and internal destinators of financial statements. Financial reports for decision
making. Recording transactions. Adjusting the accounts and preparing financial
statements – based on IAS and IFRS. Introduction to financial reporting (based on IAS
and IFRS) in international companies. Analysis and interpretation of financial statements.
Profit and loss account/statement – in variant with classification of costs by type; in
variant with classification of costs by function – except banks and insurers and especially
in banks. Cash flow statement – except banks and insurers and especially in banks.
Horizontal analysis of balance sheet in firms and in banks. Vertical analysis of balance
sheet in firms and in banks. Horizontal, vertical and joined horizontal and vertical analysis
of financial statements. Additional information for financial statements. Different ratios for
analysis the positions from financial statements. IFRS for Investment Funds: More Than
Just Accounting and Reporting. Reviewing and Revising Corporate Interim Reporting.
Especially cases in possibility to reduce falsification the financial statements and reduce
fraud risk in firms.
Contact person: [email protected]
– room 517 building „Z‖ phone (71) 3680-423
Literature: 1) Atrill P., McLaney E.: Accounting and Finance for Non-Specialists, Prentice Hall,
London-Amsterdam-Sydney 2004
2) Czinkota M.R., Ronkainen I.A., Moffett H.M.: International Business, Thomson
Learning, United Kingdom 2002
3) Robertson J.: Power and Politics Afre Financial Crisis Rethinking, Pallgrave
MacMillan 2007 UK.
4) Niewiadoma M.: English-Polish Dictionary for Managers, FRRwP Warsaw 1997
5) Niewiadoma M.: Polish-English Dictionary for Managers, ―Ekspert‖ Wroclaw 1996
6) Niewiadoma M.: Słownik skrótów ekonomicznych. Angielsko-polskie kompendium
skrótów dla biznesu w Unii Europejskiej (Business English), PWN Warsaw 2006
(e-mail version -http://www.aneksy.pwn.pl )
7) Niewiadoma M.: Vademecum for Economists, ―Ekspert‖ Wroclaw 1996
8) Brian P. West: Professionalism and Accounting Rules, Routledge London 2003
Faculty: All students
Title:
FIRMS’ FINANCING DECISIONS
Code: FFD 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15h lecture + 15h workshop
Study period: spring
Level: intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: basic accounting, financial mathematics
Course content: The emphasis is on setting forth clearly and succinctly the most important
concepts in the field of Corporate Financing. The particular attention is
given to testable propositions and to the literature that has developed
empirical tests of important elements of financing decisions. In addition,
the nature and uses of firm‟s financing decisions can be better understood
because of an application examples.
1 Overview of Corporate Financing
2 Sources of Financing and Cost of Capital
Short to Medium-Term Debt Financing. Long-Term Debt Financing.
Equity Capital. Quasi-Equity Capital. Agency Problem of External
Financing. Weighted Average Cost of Capital. Marginal Cost of Capital.
Application
of the CAPM.
3 Capital Structure Decisions
Financial Leverage and Financial Risk. Capital Structure Theories:
Traditional Approaches and The Modigliani-Miller Theorem. Impact of
Market Imperfections: Taxes and Agency Problem. Optimal Capital
Structure.
4 Dividend Policies
Dividend Decisions and Shareholder Wealth. Modigliani-Miller
Irrelevance Argument. Taxes, Clientele Effects, and Announcement
Effects. Factors Affecting Dividend Policies. Types Of Dividend
Policies.
Contact person: dr Tomasz Słoński, tel. (71)36-80-662, e-mail:
mgr Karolina Daszyńska-Żygadło, tel. (71)36-80-887,
Literature: E.Brigham, L.Gapenski: „Financial Management:. The Dryden Press,
Chicago 1999.
J. Sulock, J. Dunkelberg: “Cases in Financial Management” John Wiley
and Sons, Inc, 2002.
R. Brealey, S. Myers “Principles of Financial Management” (9th Edition),
McGraw-Hill,2004
S. Lumby: “Investment appraisal and financing decisions”, Chapman &
Hall, 1993.
Faculty: All
Title:
IAS/IFRS IN FIRMS
Code: IAS 09/10
ECTS credits: 5 ECTS credits: 5
Lecture hours: 20 + 20
Study period: Winter + Spring
Level: Basic
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Written work at home
Language: English
Prerequisites: None Course content: Basic concepts, conventions and principles of accounting. Adjustments for financial
statements in context IAS and IFRS problems (except banks and insurers). Implications of
adoption IAS/IFRSs for the companies. The parts of the lecture will be connected with the:
objective, interpretation, effective date of first realization and special cases in practice the
most important IAS/IFRS as: Presentation of Financial Statements (IAS 1) – prescribe the
procedures when an entity adopts IFRSs for the first time as the basis for preparing its
general-purpose financial statements; The most important parts of inventories (IAS 2; Cash
Flow Statements (IAS 7); Possibility to Changes Accounting Policies and so on (IAS 8);
Events After the Balance Sheet Date (IAS 10); Elements of Income Taxes (IAS 12); Property,
Plant and Equipment (IAS 16); Revenue (IAS 18); Accounting for Government Grants and
Disclosure of Government Assistance (IAS 20); Consolidated and Separate Financial
Statements (IAS 27); Disclosures in the Financial Statements of Banks and Similar Financial
Institutions (IAS 30); Earnings per Share (IAS 33); Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and
Contingent Assets (IAS 37); Intangible Assets (IAS 38). Financial Instruments: Recognition
and Measurement (IAS 39); Investment Property (IAS 40); First-time Adoption of
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS 1); Share-based Payment (IFRS 2);
Business Combinations (IFRS 3); IFRS No 7 (Financial Instruments – Disclosures) and
more new information about IFRS 8 Operating Segments.
Contact person: [email protected]
– room 517 building „Z‖ phone(71) 3680-423
Literature: 1) International Financial Reporting Standards, IASB London 2006
2) Mc Laney E., Atrill P.: Accounting. An Introduction, Edinburgh Gate Ltd 2002
3) Niewiadoma M.: Accountancy. General theory and cases (Rachunkowość. Teoria
ogólna i zadania z rozwiązaniami), DIFIN Warsaw 2008
Financial Statement (Rachunkowość. Od operacji gospodarczej do sprawozdania
finansowego), Wroclaw University of Economics 2003
4) Niewiadoma M.: English-Polish Dictionary for Managers, FRRwP Warsaw 1997
5) Niewiadoma M.: Vademecum for Economists, ―Ekspert‖ Wroclaw 1996
6) Niewiadoma M.: Polish-English Dictionary for Managers, ―Ekspert‖ Wroclaw 1996
7) Niewiadoma M.: Słownik skrótów ekonomicznych. Angielsko-polskie kompendium
dla biznesu w Unii Europejskiej (Business English), PWN Warsaw 2006 ( e-mail version -
http://aneksy.pwn.pl))
8) West Brian P.: Professionalism and Accounting Rules, Routledge London 2003
Faculty: All students
Title:
INVESTMENT APPRAISAL – CAPITAL
BUDGETING DECISIONS
Code: IACBD 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15h lecture + 15h workshop
Study period: winter
Level: intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: basic accounting, financial mathematics
Course content: The emphasis is on setting forth clearly and succinctly the most important
concepts in capital budgeting theory. The particular attention is given to
testable propositions and to the literature that has developed empirical
tests of important elements of finance theory.. In addition, the nature and
uses of capital budgeting theory can be better understood because of an
application examples.
1. The Importance of Investment Decisions in Value Based
Management Process.
2 Capital Budgeting Decisions under Certainty
The Capital Budgeting Process. Cash Flows Analysis. Capital
Budgeting without Capital Constraints: NPV, IRR, Payback, and
Accounting Rate of Return. Capital Budgeting Under Capital Rationing:
Profitability Index, Mathematical Programming.
3 Capital Budgeting Decisions under Uncertainty
Risk-Adjusted NPV Model: Risk-Adjusted Discount Rate and Certainty
Equivalent Approaches. Risk Analysis Techniques: Sensitivity Analysis,
Simulation, and Decision Trees. Impact of Inflation. Dependence of
Cash Flows over Time. Correlation among Investment Projects. Agency
Problem.
4 Cost of Capital
Weighted Average Cost of Capital. Marginal Cost of Capital. Application
of the CAPM.
Contact person: dr Tomasz Słoński, tel. (71)36-80-662, e-mail:
mgr Karolina Daszyńska-Żygadło, tel. (71)36-80-887,
Literature: E.Brigham, L.Gapenski: „Financial Management:. The Dryden Press,
Chicago 1999.
J. Sulock, J. Dunkelberg: “Cases in Financial Management” John Wiley
and Sons, Inc, 2002.
R. Brealey, S. Myers “Principles of Financial Management” (7th Edition),
McGraw-Hill,2004
S. Lumby: “Investment appraisal and financing decisions”, Chapman &
Hall, 1993
Faculty: All
Title:
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING IN FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONS
Code: MAFI 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30h
Study period: winter
Level: elementary
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: presentation
Language: english
Prerequisites: Cost accounting, Management accounting, Banking, Insurance
Course content: Tools of management accounting in insurance company, bank, investment
fund, pension fund (activity based costing, product life cycle costing,
budgeting, short-term account, financial product cost calculation,
accounts for making decisions)
Contact person: Dr Magdalena Chmielowiec - Lewczuk
Literature: -
Faculty: All students
Title:
MARKETING CONTROLLING
Code: MACO 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 – lecture (with workshop elements)
Study period: Winter
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: active participation in the lecture or oral exam
Students who participate in the lecture actively
do not have to take the exam!
Language: English
Prerequisites: Accounting, management
Course content: marketing strategies and tools of a company, marketing controlling
concept, marketing costs, accounting and financial statements as a
database for marketing controlling, the role of a marketing controller in a
company, marketing responsibility centers of a company, cost budgeting
in marketing controlling, capital budgeting in marketing controlling,
balanced scorecard in marketing controlling, relational equity scorecard
in marketing controlling, marketing audit, ABC analysis in marketing
controlling, XYZ analysis in marketing controlling, stakeholder analysis
in a marketing controlling, SWOT analysis in marketing controlling,
portfolio analysis in a marketing controlling, lifetime cycle analysis in
marketing controlling, sector analysis in marketing controlling
Contact person: dr Marta Nowak ([email protected] )
Literature: 1) Nowak M., 2007, Controlling działalności marketingowej, PWE,
Warszawa.
2) Rachlin R., 1991, Total Business Budgeting, John Wiley&Sons,
New York.
3) Welsh, G.A., Hilton, R.W., Gordon P.N., 1988, Budgeting. Profit
planning and control, Prentice-Hall Europe, London.
Faculty: All faculties
Title:
PROFESSIONAL ETHICS IN ACCOUNTING
Code: PEA 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 hours
Study period: Winter semester
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written work at home and in class assignments
Language: English
Prerequisites: Listeners must have knowledge of subjects: basis of accounting, financial
accounting, microeconomics and basis of law. .
Course content: This lecture is based on empirical research conducted in countries with
well developed capital markets (U.S.A., Great Britain, New Zeeland, etc.).
It introduces the most typical conflicts and dilemmas that accountants must
face in praxis of public listed companies. The scope of the lecture is
enhanced by behavioral accounting research results explaining the
behavior (decision making process) of individual investor in capital market.
The lecture comprises valuable study for future: financial managers,
financial analytics, chief accountants, bank analysts. Knowledge of ethical
dilemmas in finance and accounting is priceless for current or future stock
exchange investors.
Is it worthy to study ethics in accounting professions?
The issues of professional ethics in accounting are strongly emphasized in
CPA and ACCA courses (internationally recognized title of Certified Public
Accountant and qualifications of Association of Chartered Certified
Accountants). They are crucial for individuals planning their career in
accounting and finance. Implementation of International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRS) into legal systems of all EU countries causes
the serious growth of accountants‘ professional responsibility and results in
identification of numerous ethical dilemmas which were unknown before in
continental Europe.
Key words: professional ethics, ethics in accounting, ethical dilemmas of accountants,
behavioral accounting
Contact person: dr Wojciech Hasik, e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 7. Gowthorpe C., Blake J. [ed.], Ethical issues in accounting, Routledge,
1998.
8. Schroeder R. G., Clark M. W., Cathey J. M., Financial Accounting
Theory and Analysis, eight edn. Wiley, 2005.
9. Sutton T., Corporate Financial Accounting and Reporting, 2nd edn.,
Prentice Hall, 2004.
Faculty: All students
Title:
PUBLIC FINANCE
Code: PUFI 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: Lectures – 30 h
Study period: Winter or spring
Level: Basic to intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Multiple choice test (2 h)
Language: English
Prerequisites: After microeconomics
Course content: 1. Government at a glance
2. Tools of Public finance
- Tools of positive analysis
- Tools of normative analysis
3. Market failure and public goods
4. Externalities
5. Public choice
6. Evaluating programs using benefit –cost analysis
7. Government transfer programs
8. The basic theory of taxation
- Overview of taxes in Poland and other countries
- Taxes on personal incomes
- Income taxes and household behaviour
- The corporation tax
- Taxes on consumption and wealth
- Budget surpluses and deficits
9. State and local public finance
10. EU budget versus Polish budget
Contact person: dr Wiktor Szydło (e-mail: [email protected]);
Telephone - 713680757
Literature: Neil Bruce, Public finance and the American Economy, Addison-Wesley
Longman, second edition, 2001
Harvey S. Rosen, Public finance, 4th edition, Irvin, 1995
Owsiak S. Finanse publiczne. Teoria I praktyka. PWN, Warszawa 2005
Wiesława Ziółkowska, Finanse publiczne. Teoria i zastosowanie, Wydawnictwo
WSB w Poznaniu, Wydanie III, 2005
Recent texts and articles on public finance given to students
Faculty: All students
Title:
READING FINANCIAL STATEMENTS –
FINANCIAL ANALYSIS AND CREATIVE
ACCOUNTING
Code: RFSFA 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 hours
Study period: Spring semester
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written work at home and in class assignments
Language: English
Prerequisites: Listeners must have knowledge of subjects: basis of accounting, financial
accounting, microeconomics and basis of law.
Course content: The lecture covers two strictly connected issues regarding reading and
understanding financial statements: financial analysis and creative
accounting. It is essential for all students of finance and accounting. The
basic source of information to assess companies, their financial
condition, efficiency and financial risks are financial statements. And the
method of decoding that information is financial analysis. On the other
hand, every company is trying to manipulate its financial statement. This
practice is so common that it earned many names: creative accounting,
aggressive accounting or window dressing. The lecture introduces the
listeners to the most common practices of creative accounting, though it
focuses only on the legal actions. The knowledge of possibilities, legal
and ethical conditions and economic results of creative accounting is
essential for all students who plan their careers on positions in financial
departments of all kind of companies, and particularly for future:
financial managers, financial analytics, chief accountants, bank
analytics. Students will achieve the knowledge and ability to analyze in
practice financial statements of real companies. The lecture comprises
methodological workshops on public companies assessment on the basis
on all publicly accessible information.
Key words:
financial statement, financial analysis, comparative analysis,
fundamental analysis, creative accounting, tools of creative accounting,
goals of creative accounting, positive accounting theory
Contact person: dr Wojciech Hasik, e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 10. Black G., Applied Financial Accounting and Reporting, Oxford,
2004.
11. Sutton T., Corporate Financial Accounting and Reporting, 2nd edn.,
Prentice Hall, 2004.
12. Schroeder R. G., Clark M. W., Cathey J. M., Financial Accounting
Theory and Analysis, eight edn. Wiley, 2005.
13. Robinson T. R., Munter P., Grant J., Financial Statement Analysis –
a Global Perspective, Pearson Education, Prentice Hall, 2004.
Faculty: All students
Title:
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
Code: SMA 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 hours
Study period: Winter semester
Level: Intermediate/Advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Attendance
Language: English
Prerequisites: Students should have basic knowledge in management, strategic
management, accounting and corporate finance
Course content: Goal of the course: The course has strong strategic emphasis. Students
should learn how to measure and report financial and non-financial
information that helps managers make decisions and fulfill the goals of a
corporate. Students should also recognize and understand theories and
concepts of strategic cost and management accounting which they can
then apply when analyzing, evaluating and taking business decisions.
Content of the course:
Management Accounting and Strategy – an Overview
Balanced Scorecard
Value Chain Analysis
Cost Planning for Product Life Cycle
Target Costing
Theory of Constraints and Long-Term Pricing
Strategic Profitability Analysis
Management Control and Strategic Performance Measurement
Management Compensation and Business Valuation
Accounting Information for Strategic Positioning
Strategic Cost Driver Analysis (Structural and Executional Cost
Drivers)
Contact person: dr Bartłomiej Nita, e-mail: bartł[email protected]
Literature: E. Blocher, K. Chen, G. Cokins, T. Lin, Cost Management. A Strategic
Emphasis, McGraw Hill, third edition, 2004
J.K. Shank, V. Govindarajan, Strategic Cost Management, The Free
Press, 12th
edition, 2005
C.T. Horngren, S.M. Datar, G. Foster, Cost Accounting: A Managerial
Emphasis. Prentice Hall, 12th
edition, 2005
Faculty: All students
Title:
VALUATION
Code: VAL 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15h lecture + 15h workshop
Study period: spring
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: basic accounting, financial mathematics, financial management
Course content: The lecture combines theory and practical applications. An understanding
of finance theory is absolutely essential if one is to develop and
implement effective financial strategies. Therefore, lectures begin with
basic concepts, including background on the economic and financial
environment, financial statement analysis, risk analysis, and the valuation
process. With this background one can understand how specific
techniques and decision rules can be used to help maximize the value of
the enterprise. Lectures will cover following subjects:
1 The Concept and Importance of Company’s Value
2 Discounted Cash Flow Methods of Company’s Valuation
Presentation of Methods, Analysis of Past Financial Results, Forecasting
Future Financial Results, Estimation of Weighted Cost of Capital,
Estimation of Residual Value, Calculating the Shareholders Value
3 Multiple methods of Company’s Valuation
4 Value Based Management
Contact person: dr Tomasz Słoński, tel. (71)36-80-662, e-mail:
mgr Karolina Daszyńska-Żygadło, tel. (71)36-80-887,
Literature: A. Damodaran: “Corporate Finance. Theory and practice” John Wiley and
Sons, Inc. 2002.
A. Damodaran: “Damodaran on Valuation” John Wiley and
Sons, Inc. 2006.
T. Copeland, T. Koller, J. Murrin “Valuation. Measuring and Managing
the Value of Companies” (3rd edition), McKinsey & Co, Inc., 2000
S. Benninga, O. Sarig “ Corporate Finance: A Valuation Approach”,
McGraw-Hill 1997.
Cases
J. Sulock, J. Dunkelberg: “Cases in Financial Management” John Wiley
and Sons, Inc, 2002.
Faculty: All
Title:
БУХГАЛТЕРСКИЙ УЧЁТ - ЯЗЫК БИЗНЕСА
(ЛЕКЦИИ НА РУССКОМ ЯЗЫКЕ) Rachunkowość – język biznesu
Accountancy – business language
Code: BUJB 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 часов
Study period: зимний или летний курс
Level: элементарный
Location: Вроцлав
Examination: самостоятельная писменная работа
Language: русский
Prerequisites: компендий знаний бухгалтерского учѐта
Course content: Международное сотрудничество в области торговли, производства и
услуг требует знания языка бизнеса. Таким языком является
располагающий определѐнным кругом понятий бухгалтерский учѐт.
Геополитическое положение Польши предназначает нас
поддерживать сотружество и быть посредником между Западом и
Востоком Европы. Дла этого необходимо знание языка бизнеса,
которым является бухгалтерский учѐт - лекции на русском языке.
Contact person: Dr Joanna Koczar
Literature: Hendriksen, Breda, Teoria rachunkowości (wydanie rosyjskojęzyczne)
Э.С.Хендриксен, М.Ф.Ван Бреда: Теория бухгалтерского учѐта
Faculty: все специальности
INFORMATICS (COMPUTER SCIENCE) AND ECONOMETRICS
(QUANTITATIVE METHODS)
Title:
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN FINANCE
AND ECONOMICS
Code: AIFE 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 20 hrs of lecture + 10 hrs labs
Study period: Winter
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: written exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: Foundations in finance, economics, computer science
Course content: The objective of the lecture to give a comprehensive overview of the field
of Artificial Intelligence and its application in finance and economics. The
lecture will be founded on computational machine learning theory,
knowledge representation models and data mining algorithms. Inductive
systems, neural network models and evolution-based algorithms will be
discussed and evaluated. Different evaluation criteria and performance
measures will be detailed such as accuracy, confusion matrix, ROC
graphs, efficiency. To illustrate AI approaches the examples using
financial databases will be given, in particular on time series analysis,
pattern discovery, credit scoring, decision making and stock trading.
Regarding the novelty and abundance of available techniques, a special
part of the lecture will be devoted to a description of data mining
modelling techniques. In the lecture, a number of software tools oriented
toward financial applications will be presented using real-world data.
Contact person: Prof. dr hab. Jerzy KORCZAK
Literature: Haykin S., Neural Networks: Comprehensive Foundation, Prentice Hall
2007
Korczak J., Roger P., Stock Timing using Genetic Algorithms, [in]
Journal of
Stochastic Models in Business and Industry, 18, pp.121-134, 2002.
Reichmann T., Learning in Economics: Analysis and Application of
Genetic
Algorithms, Physica Verlag, 2001
Voges K, Pope L., Business Application and Computational Intelligence,
Idea Group Pub., 2006
Witten, J., Eibe, F. : Data Mining: Practical Machine Learning Tools and
Techniques with Java Implementations, Morgan Kaufmann, 2005.
Faculty: All students
Title:
BUSINESS FORECASTING
Code: BUFO 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 24 lecture + 8 workshops
Study period: Winter
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Basic statistics and econometrics
Course content: 1. Basic concepts of forecasting (forecast functions, forecast and forecasting,
forecast basis, types of forecast, steps in the forecasting task)
2. Forecasting data statistical adjustment and analysis (transformation,
aggregation, completion of the missing data, identifying outlying observations,
turning points, and data pattern – ACF and PACF functions)
3. Time series decomposition (principles of decomposition, moving averages,
classical decomposition, Census Bureau methods)
4. Forecasting based on smoothing methods (averaging: mean-as-forecast,
moving average, double moving average; exponential smoothing methods: single
exponential smoothing, adaptive-response-rate single exponential smoothing,
Holt‘s linear model, Winter‘s model)
5. Trend – line forecasting (choosing a curve, building and evaluating a model,
setting a forecast, setting a predicting interval)
6. Trend – seasonality forecasting (types of seasonal pattern, building and
evaluating a model with seasonal rates)
7. Forecasting using ARIMA models (model identification – ACF and PACF
function, estimating and evaluating a model, setting a forecast)
8. Forecasting using simple and multiple regression (forecasting assumptions,
building and evaluating a model, setting a forecast, measuring forecast accuracy
setting a predicting interval)
9. Qualitative variables in regression analysis (probit transformation, regression
of seasonality)
10. Forecasting the long term (analogies, leading indicators)
11. Judgmental forecasting (choosing the experts, testing the level of agreement
among experts, the Delphi Method, the Brain Storm Method, personal
probability, formal models II type)
12. Scenario building (types of scenarios, construction steps, examples)
13. Corporate forecasting system (system‘s function and construction,
combining statistical and judgmental forecast, forecast monitoring and revision)
Contact person: dr Aleksandra Szpulak, Department of Economic Analysis and
Forecasting
dr Ewa Szabela – Pasierbińska, Department of Economic Analysis and
Forecasting
Literature: 1. M.P. Clements, D.F. Hendry: ―A companion to economic forecasting‖
Blackwell Publishers 2002
2. J.C. Compton, S.B. Compton: ―Successful business forecasting‖
Liberty Hall Press 1990
3. C.W.J. Granger: ―Forecasting in business and economics‖ Academic
Press, San Diego 1989
4. S. Makridakis, S.C. Weelwright, R.J. Hyndman ― Forecasting. Methods
and Applications‖ John Wiley & Sons. Inc., New York 1998
Faculty: Finance, marketing, management
Title:
DATABASES
Code: DATBA 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15 lectures + 15 labs
Study period: whole year
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written form: Report prepared by students confirming performed
database applications and/or multiple choice question – single answer
test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Fundamentals of computer science and optionally: Information Systems
Design, Computer Networks
Course content: Basic concepts of databases. Database infrastructure. Query languages
overview. SQL – an universal access language to modern databases.
Query and transaction processing. Advances topics of databases:
distributed databases, post-relational databases. Universal DBMS server
and future trends in databases.
Contact person: Mieczysław Owoc Ph.D. prof., phone: 36-80-503, building Z, room. 602
Literature: 1. Elamsri R., Shamkant B.N.: Fundamentals of Database Systems.
2006
2. Date C.J., Darwen H.: A Guide to the SQL Standard. Addison-
Wesley, 2002
3. Kroenke D.M.: Database Processing. Fundamentals Design and
Implementation. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, 2006
4. Maciaszek L.A.: Database Design and Implementation.
Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs 2004
5. Loney K.: Oracle Database 10g: The Complete Reference. Oracle
Press Series, 2004
Faculty: All students
Title:
ECONOMETRICS
Code: ECMR 09/10
ECTS credits: 7
Lecture hours: Lectures: 20 hours
Classes: 20 hours
Laboratories: 20 hours
Study period: Spring Term
Level: Basic
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Examination Test, Case Studies
Language: English
Prerequisites: Mathematics, Statistics
Course content: Lectures and Classes:
Correlation. Simple Regression Model. Ordinary Least Squares (OLS)
Estimation. Assumptions Underlying Classical Linear Regression Model.
Multiple Regression Model. Properties of the OLS Estimators. Goodness
of Fit. Hypothesis Testing: t-test, F-test. Normality of the Disturbance
Term. Heteroscedasticity. Autocorrelation. Specification Analysis and
Model Selection. Multicollinearity. Transformation of Variables.
Nonlinear Regression Models. Dummy Variables. Binary Choice Models.
Maximum Likelihood (ML) Estimation. Simultaneous-Equations Models.
Introduction to Time-Series Models.
Laboratories:
Application of Econometric Methods in Economics, Finance and Business
with the Use of Computer Tools: MS Excel and Econometric Computer
Package GRETL.
Contact person: Prof. Józef Dziechciarz, Mgr Anna Król
Literature: [1] Maddala G.S.: Introduction to Econometrics, John Wiley & Sons
2001.
[2] Dougherty Ch.: Introduction to Econometrics, Oxford University
Press 2002.
[3] Greene W.H.: Econometric Analysis, Prentice Hall 1999.
[4] Johnston J., Dinardo J.: Econometrics Methods, McGraw-
Hill/Irwin 1996.
[5] Davidson R., MacKinnon J.G.: Econometric Theory and Methods,
Oxford University Press 2004.
[6] Brooks Ch.: Introductory Econometrics for Finance, Cambridge
University Press 2002.
Faculty: All Faculties
Title:
ECONOMETRICS APPLICATIONS
Code: ECMAP 09/10
ECTS credits: 7
Lecture hours: Lectures: 20 hours
Classes: 20 hours
Laboratories: 20 hours
Study period: Winter Term
Level: Advanced
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Examination Test, Case Studies
Language: English
Prerequisites: Mathematics, Statistics, Econometrics
Course content: Lectures and Classes:
Simple Regression Model. Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) Estimation.
Assumptions Underlying Classical Linear Regression Model.
Multiple Regression Model. Properties of the OLS Estimators. Diagnostic
Tests. Specification Analysis and Model Selection. Transformation of
Variables. Nonlinear Regression Models. Discrete and Limited
Dependent Variable Models. Maximum Likelihood (ML) Estimation.
Simultaneous-Equations Models. Time-Series and Dynamic Models.
Applications in Marketing, Microeconomics, Macroeconomics and
Finance.
Laboratories:
Application of Econometric Methods in Marketing, Microeconomics,
Macroeconomics and Finance with the Use of Econometric Computer
Package GRETL.
Contact person: Prof. Józef Dziechciarz, Mgr Anna Król
Literature: [1] Maddala G.S.: Introduction to Econometrics, John Wiley & Sons
2001.
[2] Heij Ch., de Boer P., Franses P.H., Kloek T., van Dijk H.K.:
Econometric Methods with Application in Business and Economics,
Oxford University Press 2004.
[3] Greene W.H.: Econometric Analysis, Prentice Hall 1999.
[4] Johnston J., Dinardo J.: Econometrics Methods, McGraw-
Hill/Irwin 1996.
[5] Brooks Ch.: Introductory Econometrics for Finance, Cambridge
University Press 2002.
[6] Davidson R., MacKinnon J.G.: Econometric Theory and Methods,
Oxford University Press 2004.
Faculty: All Faculties
Title:
ENTERPRISE APPLICATION AND SYSTEMS
INTEGRATION
Code: EASI 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: spring term
Level: advanced
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: multiple-choice test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Management Information Systems
Course content: Introduction and Overview
Enterprise Integration Design Objectives
Defining the Enterprise Integration Architecture
Integration Technology Landscape
Data-Level Integration and Database Middleware
Distributed Transaction and Messaging Middleware
Object-Oriented Middleware
EDI and XML Integration
B2B Application Integration
Web Services and Service-Oriented Architectures
Performance and Scalability
Security and Systems Management
Contact person: Dr. Andrzej Niesler
Literature: Linthicum D. S. ―Next Generation Application Integration‖,
Cummins F. A. ―Enterprise Integration‖,
Britton Ch. ―IT Architectures and Middleware‖
Faculty: CS & Econometrics
Title:
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES
Code: INTE 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15 lectures + 15 instructions
Study period: Winter
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: written exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: Notions in Computer Science
Course content: Information technology refers to the collection of tools that make it easier
to use, create, manage and exchange information. In particular, IT deals
with the use of computers and computer software to convert, store,
protect, process, transmit, and retrieve information. The Internet is the
latest of a long series of information technologies, which includes
printing, mail, radio, television and the telephone.
The course comprises three parts. The first provides an overview of the
current state of information technology, and more importantly, its use for
and by business. The second examines the domains in which these
technologies are being applied, and the potential directions in which they
may be developed. In particular, the lectures will be focused on data
management, computer networking, databases, software design, MIS. The
third considers the strategic illications of IT for future business practice.
The selected IT applications in finance and trading will be presented
covering financial portals, e-commerce, electronic payment, financial
models and modeling financial data, risk management and controlling,
planning and business processes, security, algorithms and complexity.
Contact person: Prof. dr hab. Jerzy KORCZAK
Literature: J. Hopcroft, R. Motwani, J. Ullman, Introduction to Automata Theory,
Languages and Computation, Addison Wesley, 2006.
J.A. Senn, Information Technology: Principles, Practices, and
Opportunities , Prentice Hall, 2003.
D.Seese, C. Weinhardt (eds.) Handbook on Information Technology in
Finance, IHIS, 2007.
Faculty: All students
Title:
INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS
Code: INSYS 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15 lectures + 15 labs
Study period: Whole year
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written form: Report prepared by students confirming performed
intelligent applications and/or multiple choice question – single
answer test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Databases, Basics of Problem-Solving
Course content: Introduction to artificial intelligence. Problems and solutions, universal
problem solver concepts. Taxonomy and properties of intelligent systems.
Approaches to intelligent systems development. Knowledge representation
and validation techniques. Architecture of expert systems. Machine
learning and inductive knowledge. Modern intelligent systems and its
applications: neural nets, evolution algorithms, agent systems.
Contact person: Mieczysław Owoc Ph.D. Prof., phone: 36-80-503, building Z, room. 602
Literature: 1. Darlington K., The Essence of Expert Systems. Prentice Hall, 2000.
2. Jackson P.: Introduction to Expert Systems. Addison Wesley 1999
3. Turban E., Aronson J.E, Liang T-P: Decision Support Systems and
Intelligent Systems (7th Edition). Pearsons, Prentice Hall, 2005
4. Russell S., Norvig P.: Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach.
Prentice-Hall, 2002
5. Negnevitsky M.: Artificial Intelligence: A Guide to Intelligent Systems.
Addison-Wesley, 2004
Faculty: All Students
Title:
INTRODUCTION TO GOOGLE ADWORDS
Code: GAWS 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture Hours: Interactive lectures: 10, self study: 5
Study Period: Winter semester
Level: Advanced
Location: University of Economics, Wrocław
Examination: Google AdWords Professional Exam, attendance, forum participation
Language: English
Prerequisites: 4th and 5th year students, proficient in English language, passion for the
Internet and online marketing
Course Content: Introduction to Google AdWords - Google AdWords Professional exam
Google AdWords is an online advertising program that allows companies
to manage cost effective, trackable and flexible online advertising
campaigns. The program is used widely by local and multi-national
companies as well as advertising agencies.
Using the Google Advertising Professionals Program, an internationally
recognized „stamp of approval‟ for individuals showing extensive
AdWords knowledge, students will go through a multimedia study of
Google AdWords. The e-learning course will contain:
• Lectures, lesson modules from the Google Learning Center
• Forum discussions with other students moderated by Google staff
• Q&A sessions
• Advertising practice in real AdWords accounts and optimization of the
real accounts
• Webinars (Google e-learning platform)
Content:
1. Introduction to AdWords.
2. Getting Started with AdWords
3. Targeting
4. Costs and Billing
5. Tracking Ad Performance
6. Optimizing Ad Performance
7. The AdWords Toolbox
8. Google Analytics
9. Managing Client Accounts
Contact Person: Katarzyna Lechki ([email protected]) or Karen Schultz
Google Wroclaw, Bema Plaza, V pietro, Ul. Gen. J. Bema 2, 50-265
Wroclaw
+48 (71) 734-1000
Literature: Google Learning Center Modules (Online Library), Google AdWords
Help Centers, Online Resources
Faculty: All
Title:
LINEAR ALGEBRA
Code: LIAL 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 hours per academic year
Study period: Winter semester
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: Mathematics at the secondary school level
Course content: Complex numbers. Polynomials, rational functions, partial fractions,
decomposition of rational functions into partial fractions. Systems of
linear equations, Gauss‘ method. Llinear space, base, linear subspace.
Matrices, algebra of matrices, determinant, rank of matrix, inverse
matrix. Linear operators, eigenvalues, eigenvectors. Quadratic forms.
Contact person: Jan Florek
Literature: 1) A. Kurosh, Higher Algebra, Moscow, Mir Publishers, 1972.
2) B. Noble, J.W. Daniel, Applied Linear Algebra, third edition,
1988, Prentice Hall, New York.
Faculty: All students
Title:
MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Code: MNIS 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 lectures
Study period: Winter 2009
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: examination
Language: English
Prerequisites: Basic Computer Science, Introduction to Management
Course content: Setting the scene of MIS, hardware fundamentals and trends, business
software, business information systems, communication and networks,
systems integration-information systems at work, introduction to systems
development, strategic IS management, managing the IS functions, e-
business, Web commerce development, personal productivity with IS.
Contact person: Dr hab. inż. Jacek Unold, prof. UE; [email protected]
Literature: 1. Benson S., Standing C. (2008): Information Systems: A Business
Approach. John Wiley & Sons Australia Ltd.
2. Unold J. (2005): Marketing information systems (in Polish). AE
Wrocław
Faculty: Inter-faculty (All students)
Title:
MARKETING INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Code: MRIS 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 lectures
Study period: Spring semestr 2010
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: examination
Language: English
Prerequisites: Basic Computer Science, Introduction to Management
Course content: This course provides an overview of the most significant concepts and
experiences in the area of modern Marketing Information Systems, and
offers its own theoretical and methodological proposals. It is aimed at
two groups of participants. The first group is university students who
study computer-aided management and marketing. The other group is
strategic level managers who wish to utilize the enormous potential of
electronic markets and want to implement the most recent orientation of
electronic marketing in their companies.
Contact person: Dr hab. inż. Jacek Unold, prof. UE; [email protected]
Literature: 1. Benson S., Standing C. (2008): Information Systems: A Business
Approach. John Wiley & Sons Australia Ltd.
2. Unold J. (2005): Marketing information systems (in Polish). AE
Wrocław
Faculty: Inter-faculty (All students)
Title:
MATHEMATICAL ANALYSIS
Code: MAAN 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30
Study period: Winter and spring ( 15 + 15 hours)
Level: Introductory (basic)
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: Extended course in mathematics of secondary school
Course content: The objective of the course is to provide some basic formal tools, which have became
necessary for understanding quantitative aspects of economics. It contains the elements
of modern mathematical analysis as well as the classical calculus: first of all those
appearing in marginal analysis supporting almost all reasoning of microeconomics.
The subject of lectures:
-the role mathematical analysis in economics (examples and historical remarks)
-the survey of functions useful for modeling of economic phenomena
-basic notions of logic and set theory
-Cartesian products and relations: preference ordering and equivalence relation
-functions as particular classes of relations
-real functions of one real variable, real sequences and financial mathematics
-continuity, differentiation and economic interpretation
-elements of metric spaces (open and closed sets, compactness)
-convexity and optimization – applications of differential calculus in economics
-differentiation of functions of several variables,
-inverse images and indifference surfaces,
- extremes and conditional extremes. elements of comparative static
-indefinite integrals and primitive functions, integration by parts , changing of variables
-definite integrals and valuations of bounds of commodities and streams of goods
-information on multiple integrals – some ideas and technicalities
-summation and integration , power series
-introduction to difference and differential equations – as a description of rules of
Nature
-Linear differential equations with constant coefficients (first and second order)
Contact person: dr hab. Wojciech Rybicki, prof .nadzw. A.E. [email protected]
Literature: Proposed series of lectures do not fit exactly with one specified text-book or monograph
because their character of self-contained lecture composed originally by author –
according to directives of Ministry. However the following
text-books are recommended: ―Mathematical Analysis and Convexity with Applications
to Economics‖ by J. Green and W.P. Heller (contained in ―Handbook of Mathematical
Economics‖ vol.1, eds .K.J. Arrow and M.D. Intriligator) New York 1981;
―Mathematics in Economics. Models and Methods‖ by Adam Ostaszewski. Based on
lecture notes by K.G. Binmore and A. Ostaszewski, Blackwell. Oxford 1993
Faculty: Management and Computer Science
Title:
MATHEMATICS
Code: MATH 09/10
ECTS credits: 7
Lecture hours: 60 hours per academic year
Study period: winter semester and spring semester
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: written and oral exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: mathematics at the secondary school level
Course content: Logic, set theory, relations, complex numbers, linear space, matrix, linear
operators, systems of linear equations, determinant, rank of matrix,
quadratic forms, eigenvalue vectors, polynomials, rational functions,
partial fractions, decomposition of rational functions into partial
fractions, metric space, sequences, limits, function limit, multiply variable
functions, continuous functions, derivative of one variable functions,
partial derivatives, derivatives of multiply variable functions, second and
higher order derivatives, Taylor expansion for one and multiply variable
functions, extremes of one and multiply variable functions, conditional
extremes, primitive function, indefinite integral
Contact person: dr inż. Zbigniew Michna [email protected]
Literature: 1) L. Hogben ,,Handbook of Linear Algebra'', Chapman and
Hall, 2007
2) L. Rade and B. Westergren ,,Mathematics Handbook for
Science and Engineering'', Springer, 2004.
3) W. Rudin ,,Principles of Mathematical Analysis'',
McGraw-Hill, 1976.
4) A. C. Chiang ,,Fundamental Methods of Mathematical
Economics'', second edition, McGraw-Hill, 1974.
Faculty: all students
Title:
MINING OF FINANCIAL DATABASES
Code: MFD 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30
Study period: Spring
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: written exam
Language: English
Prerequisites: Foundations in finance, economics, computer science, databases
Course content: This lecture introduces to a data mining process, its algorithms and
applications applied in finance. Definition of particular activities of
knowledge discovery will be given, with more detailed picture of most
important techniques, applications and technical terms. The
computational intelligence theory, models and algorithms will be detailed.
Topics will include the role of metadata, how to handle missing data, and
data preprocessing. The software tools such as Oracle Financial
Analyzer, Oracle Expert, Ibert will be presented and used on real-life
data. The lecture will be focussed on financial databases such as
Bloomberg, Datastreams, FINDATA, Osiris. A special attention will be
given to rule discovery from databases and frequent pattern recognition.
The examples will be given using client transaction databases, ecommerce
and Web data.
Contact person: Prof. dr hab. Jerzy KORCZAK
Literature: Hand D., J., Mannila H., Smyth P., Principles of Data Mining, The MIT
Press 2001.
Mitchel T., Machine Learning, McGraw Hill, 1997.
Pyle D., Data Preparation for Data Mining, Morgan Kaufmann, 1999.
Weiss, S., Indurkkhya, N.: Predictive Data Mining - A practical guide,
Morgan Kaufmann Pub. Inc, 1998.
Witten, J., Eibe, F.: Data Mining: Practical Machine Learning tools and
techniques wit Java implementations, Morgan Kaufmann, 2005.
Goldberg D.G., Algorytmy genetyczne i ich zastosowania, WNT 2003.
Korczak J., Roger P., Stock Timing using Genetic Algorithms, [in]
Journal of Stochastic Models in Business and Industry, 18, pp.121-134,
2002.
Faculty: All students
Title:
OBJECT-ORIENTED
PROGRAMMING/SYSTEMS
Code: OOPS 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15 lectures + 15 labs
Study period: Whole year
Level: Specialised
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written form: Report prepared by students confirming performed
applications and/or multiple choice question – single answer test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Fundamentals of Computer Science, Databases, Information Systems
Design and Computer Networks
Course content: Basic concepts of object-oriented (O-O) approach. UML as the platform
of object-oriented programming. Java language fundamentals. Class
properties and application programming in different environments.
Advanced topics of object-oriented programming (exception services and
concurrent programming, JavaBeans, database programming in Java).
Contact person: Mieczysław Owoc Ph.D. Prof., phone: 36-80-503, building Z, room. 602
Literature: 1. Lemay L., Cadenhead R.: Java 2 for Everybody. McGraw-Hill,
2002
2. Eckel B.: Thinking in Java. Prentice Hall, 2000
3. Maciaszek L., Liong B.L: Practical Software Engineering. A Case-
Study Approach, Addison-Wesley, 2005
4. Dale N.B, Joyce D.T., Weems Ch.: Object-oriented Structures
using Java. Prentice Hall, 2001
Faculty: Major: Computer Science and Econometrics
Title:
PROBABILITY
Code: PROB 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 (20+10)
Study period: Both spring and winter terms
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Test (in writing)
Language: English
Prerequisites: Algebra, Analysis
Course content: Probability space, random events as sets;
Definitions of probability measures;
Conditional probability and Bayes‘ rule;
Independence of random events;
Distributions and their parameters;
Correlation and independence of random variables;
Limit theorems.
Contact person: Dr.Eng. Albert Gardoń, Z-418, [email protected]
Literature: Pitman J. ―Probability‖. Springer, New York 1993.
Lupton R. ―Statistics in Theory and Practice‖. Princeton U. P. 1993.
McClave J.T., Dietrich F.H. ―Statistics‖. Dellen, San Francisco 1988.
Faculty: All
Title:
SEMANTIC WEB
Code: SMWB 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: winter term
Level: advanced
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: multiple-choice test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Algorithms and Data Structures, Introductory Programming (advisable,
but not mandatory)
Course content: Introduction and Overview
Structuring Web Documents (XML)
Namespaces and Identifiers
Describing Web Resources (RDF)
Query Languages (SPARQL)
Web Ontology Language (OWL)
Logic and Inference Rules
Ontology Engineering
Web Service Modeling Language
Semantic Web Services
Lowercase Semantic Web: Microformats
Technology, Tools and Infrastructure
Case Studies and Applications
Contact person: Dr. Andrzej Niesler
Literature: Antoniou G., van Harmelen F. ―A Semantic Web Primer‖
Faculty: CS & Econometrics
Title:
STATISTICS
Code: STAC 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 (20+10)
Study period: Both spring and winter terms
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Test (in writing)
Language: English
Prerequisites: Probability
Course content: Ordering statistical data, empirical density and distribution functions;
Estimation, basic statistical measures (mean, variance, skewness,
correlation);
Properties of estimators, Cramer-Rao inequality;
Statistical tests (parametric and non-parametric);
Linear regression model.
Contact person: Dr.Eng. Albert Gardoń, Z-418, [email protected]
Literature: Lupton R. ―Statistics in Theory and Practice‖. Princeton U. P. 1993.
McClave J.T., Benson P.G. ―Statistics for Business and Economics‖.
Dellen, San Francisco 1985.
Faculty: All
Title:
STATISTIK
Code: STAK 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 (20+10)
Study period: Sommer- und Wintersemester
Level: Grundlagen
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Schriftliche Klausur
Language: Deutsch
Prerequisites: Wahrscheinlichkeit
Course content: Einordnen der statistischen Daten, empirische Dichte und
Verteilungsfunktion;
Schaetzung, elementaere statistische Masse (Mittel, Varianz, Asymetrie,
Korrelation);
Eigenschaften der Schaetzer, Cramer-Rao Schranke;
Statistische Teste (parametrisch und nichtparametricsch);
Lineares Regressionsmodell.
Contact person: Dr.Eng. Albert Gardoń, Z-418, [email protected]
Literature: Lupton R. ―Statistics in Theory and Practice‖. Princeton U. P. 1993.
McClave J.T., Benson P.G. ―Statistics for Business and Economics‖.
Dellen, San Francisco 1985.
Faculty: Alle
Title:
WAHRSCHEINLICHKEIT
Code: WAHR 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 (20+10)
Study period: Winter- und Sommersemester
Level: Grundlagen
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Schriftliche Klausur
Language: Deutsch
Prerequisites: Algebra, Analysis
Course content: Wahrscheinlichkeitraum, zufaellige Ereignisse als Mengen;
Definitionen des Wahrscheinlichkeitsmasses;
Bedingte Wahrscheinlichkeit und Bayessche Formel;
Unabhaengigkeit der zufaelligen Vorkommen;
Verteilungen und ihre Parameters;
Korrelation und unabhaengigkeit der Zufallsvariablen;
Grenzsaetze.
Contact person: Dr.Eng. Albert Gardoń, Z-418, [email protected]
Literature: Pitman J. ―Probability‖. Springer, New York 1993.
Lupton R. ―Statistics in Theory and Practice‖. Princeton U. P. 1993.
McClave J.T., Dietrich F.H. ―Statistics‖. Dellen, San Francisco 1988.
Faculty: Alle
MANAGEMENT SCIENCES
Title:
BASICS OF MANAGEMENT
Code: BAMA 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: Lectures 30hours/ classes 30 hours – e-learning
Study period: Winter/Spring
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test/cases
Language: english
Prerequisites: none
Course content: Organizations operating in the 21st Century face many challenges,
including: Profitability, Adaptability, Competitiveness, Growth,
Globalization, Technology, Speed of Change. All of these are significant
challenges. The good organizations will have processes, procedures and
standards of performance to meet these challenges especially understand
the nature and meaning of management, work and work organization;
influence of changing technology on management processes and
practices; the motivation of people to achieve organizational objectives;
social relations in the work place; organizational culture and control;
conflict, its regulation and management; cross-cultural dimensions; global
trends.
List of topics:
Evolution of Management, Managers and managing, Organizational
Environment, Planning, Decision Making, Organizing, Human Resource
Management, Innovation and Change, Groups and Teams, Motivating,
Leading, Communicating, Controlling, Organizational Culture.
Contact person: Ewa Stańczyk – Hugiet, [email protected]
Literature: Jones G.R., Hill J.M. (2008), Contemporary Management, McGraw-Hill.
Faculty: Management, Computer Science and Finance
Title:
BRAND MANAGEMENT
Code: BRMA 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: Lecture: 15 hours; cases: 15 hours
Study period: Spring semester
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Cases, small essay, test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Basic marketing and marketing research courses
Course content: 1. Brand equity, 2. Measuring brand strength sources (awareness, image
- qualitative and quantitative research) 3. Brand position mapping ,image
audit and tracking; 3. Introducing new brand (analyses, position
selection, selection of brand elements: name, logo, slogan, packaging); 4.
Brand portfolio management. Image transfer. 5. Brand values and
financial aspects of brand management (marketing decisions and brand
value; 6. Corporate brand image management.
Contact person: dr hab. Ryszard Kłeczek, prof. UE
Literature: 1. K.L Keller: Strategic Brand Management. Building, Measuring and
Managing Brand Equity. Prentice Hall, 2003. 2. P. Doyle: Value Based
marketing. Marketing strategies for Corporate Growth and Shareholder
Value. Wiley 2000. 3. Articles from ABI and EBSCO databases.
Faculty: Management, marketing
Title:
BUSINESS CONSULTING
Code: BUCO 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 hrs of interactive lectures
Study period: Spring
Level: Advanced
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: No exam. Class presence and participation in discussions, case studies
and class work.
Language: English
Prerequisites: Recommended course in Basic Management and Strategic Management.
Good English skills.
Course content: The course will show the most important elements of consultant‟s work (an
employee of a business consulting company or of a freelance consultant).
Students will exercise skills useful in the job, learn work methodology of a
business consultant and practice organizational diagnosis and change
management.
The main topics will include:
1. Polish and international market of business consulting.
2. Skills and qualifications of a business consultant.
3. Myth and reality of consultants work.
4. Contracting a client
5. Organisational diagnosis.
6. Change management.
Contact person: dr Anna Witek-Crabb; email: [email protected]
Literature: 1. Block P.: “Flawless consulting”. Jossey-Bass/ Pfeiffer, 2000
2. Rasiel E., Friga P.: “The McKinsey Mind - Understanding and
Implementing the Problem-Solving Tools and Management
Techniques of the World's Top Strategic Consulting Firm”. McGraw-
Hill Professional, 2001
Faculty: All
Title:
BUSINESS CREATIVITY MODULE
Code: BCM 09/10
ECTS credits: 7
Lecture hours: 25 hours of lectures
25 hours of in-class and IT-workshops
Study period: both winter and spring terms
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: The assignment consists of four elements:
1. Development of “a competence map” (15%)
2. Presentation on European economy-related topic (15%)
3. Presentation of the value proposition (35%)
Written final report (35%)
Language: English
Prerequisites: Entrepreneurial spirit / Strong communication skills in English
Course content: The Business Creativity Module is a unique educational proposal in
entrepreneurial education in Europe, which creation has been supported by
the grant of the European Commission. It is jointly co-ordinated by seven
partner universities from: the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Poland,
Portugal and Scotland.
“The aim of the unit is to assist students in bridging process between their
specific areas of studies and the workplace through the creation of a viable
entrepreneurial idea (for a new company, product or service) or a viable new
solution to an existing problem having in mind from the start the great
European market.”
“A series of seminars and structured tutorial will be held locally for all
participating students to assist the creative process: The subjects cover:
creativity and innovation
virtual group dynamics
European culture
market research
marketing strategies
presentation techniques
commercialisation interface.”
The students will form multi-national creative venture teams with colleagues
attending exactly the same course at the same time in other Partner
Universities (or, alternatively, on a local basis). Through internet
communication and with support of team coaches, groups will identify needs
or problems in the European market and develop entrepreneurial solutions.
If you think that this module is Different, Challenging or even Risky, be
daring and sign in. You may also visit the web-site of the project
www.coeur-module.eu first.
Contact person: dr Tomasz Dyczkowski phone: 071 36-80-807, e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: The materials prepared exclusively for the Business Creativity Module by
the Partner Universities of the COEUR-consortium.
Faculty: Everyone is invited
Title:
BUSINESS NEGOTIATIONS
Code: BUNE 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 – workshops
Notice: workshops can be performed in groups of maximum 30 students
Study period: Winter semestr preferred
Level: Most appropriate for III, IV and V year students
Location: Wrocław
Examination: As required by University authorities
Language: English
Prerequisites: No prerequisites demanded
Course content: 1. Negotiation ‗Towards Agreement‘ – what does it mean?
2. Climate of a negotiation
3. The opening process – objectives, method, introducing the process,
who leads?
4. The fabric of a negotiation – the phases; broad front vs. deep
penetration, the form of confrontation, the structure of concentration
5. Conducting the negotiation – the exploratory phase, bidding and
bargaining towards agreement, process control, the human elements
6. Tactics ‗Towards Agreement‘ – recessing, setting deadlines, ‗what
if…‘, full disclosure, ‗All I‘ve got is 60%‘, lubrication, the Golf Club,
the study group
7. Communication – barriers to communication, improving
communication during negotiations, the negotiator‘s personal impact
Contact person: dr Arkadiusz Wierzbic - lecture
dr Adela Barabasz - workshop
Literature: 1. Karras C.L., 1974, Give and Take, World Publishing Co.
2. Scott B., 1984, The skills of negotiating, Garver Publishing, Aldershot
3. Faes W., 1994, ‗Negotiations – Communications‘, didactic materials
from course in negotiation strategies and tactics, Brussels
Faculty: All students
Title:
CREATIVE STRATEGY IN ADVERTISING
Code: CSA 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: Lecture: 15 hours; cases: 15 hours
Study period: spring semester
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Cases, small essay, test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Basic marketing and marketing research courses
Course content: 1. Creative brief: construction, research needed, brief based evaluation of
creative executions. 2. Creative idea, creative executions; 3. Rossiter-
Percy grid – creative tactics in communication of brand position; 4.
Creation of brand elements (name, logo, slogan, packaging); 5. Headlines
and illustrations; 6. Copy, 7. Advertising testing and research
Contact person: dr hab. Ryszard Kłeczek
Literature: 1. J.Rossiter, L.Percy: Advertising Communications and promotion
management. McGraw Hill 1998.
Faculty: Management, marketing
Title:
CULTURAL CONTEXT OF THE
INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT
Code: CCIM 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: liczba godzin w rozbiciu na poszczególne formy zajęć
Study period: 15 hrs interactive lecture
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: attendance+test
Language: English
Prerequisites: none
Course content: 1. The influence of social-cultural factors on the international management ● understanding international management, culture, international company
● phases of internationalization
2. Cultural approaches in international business ● ethnocentric, polycentric, regiocentric, geocentric
3. Models of the organizational cultures in international management
● High-context and low-context cultures (E.T.Hall) ● Trust model of culture (F.Fukuyama)
● “Cultural software”- cultural dimensions (G.Hofstede) ● F.Trompenaars‟ model of business culture
4. Cross-cultural implications for global management-problems and dysfunctions
● clashing civilizations ● convergence vs divergence of culture
● cultural compromises and multiculturalism
5. Managing people in international companies planning
staffing
directing 6. Cross-cultural trainings in international companies-state of reality.
● factors which determine the cross-cultural trainings
● models of cultural trainings R.Tung‟s model,
S.Ronen‟s model
D.Landis and R.Brislin‟ model M.Mendenhall‟s model
7. The triad model of the international management
● The Asian model –“Japan Inc”, three pillars of management ● The American model- “American Dream”, myths and heritage as corner stone of the American way of
management
The European model- Euromanagement 8. International managers
9. The international manager‟ s qualification profile
The triangle of the managerial qualifications: ● Psychological features ( the most demanding psychological features on the basis of Big Five)
● Knowledge (cool and hot knowledge)
● Skills (social, conceptual)
10. The Polish manager‟s characteristic Contact person: Dr Sylwia Przytuła, Katedra Zarządzania Kadrami, room 816Z,
phone +4871 3680672, e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1. Beardwell I., Holden L., HRM a contemporary approach, Pearson Education, Edinburgh, UK 2001
2. Deresky H., International Management: Managing Across Borders and Cultures, Prentice Hall,Upper
Saddle River
NJ,2002
3. Sanyal R.N., International Management.A Strategic Perspective, Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New
Jersey,
2001
4. Hofstede G., Culture „ s consequences, Sage, London, 2001
5. Magala S., Cross-cultural competence, Routledge, London 2005
Faculty: All
Title:
DECISION ANALYSIS FOR MANAGEMENT
Code: DAM 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 20 hrs of lecture + 10 hrs labs
Study period: Winter or spring
Level: Intermediate/Advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: The following elements will contribute to a student`s final
grade in the course: class attendance and participation 20%
team assignment report and presentation 40 % final test
40%
Language: English
Prerequisites: Basic Statistics, OR/MS and Economics
Course content: Course objective and characteristics:
In an increasingly complex world, decision analysis has a major role to play in
helping decisions makers to gain a great understanding of the problem they face.
The main aim of this course is to make decision analysis accessible to its largest
group of potential users, specially to those studying for professional
qualifications in areas like accountancy, finance and banking. An important
feature of the course is the way in which it integrates the quantitative and
behavioral aspects of decision making. The selected elements of normative and
descriptive decision theories are focused on three themes characterizing the
decision making: uncertainty, multiple objectives and participation of divergent
interest groups. Course contents:
1. Introduction: eclectic approches to decision making
Behavioral and quantitative disciplines for decision making: descriptive versus
normative decision methodology, towards integrative approach. Decision-
making process, H. Simon paradigm. Definitions and functions of decision
making. Decision-making models.
2. Uncertainty and risk perception in descriptive theories
The nature of risk and uncertainty, notion of internal and external uncertainty.
Risk perception: qualitative and quantitative dimensions. A psychology of
decision maker: empirical perspectives on risk acceptance/avoidance and a
conceptual model.
3. Uncertainty and risk management in normative models (1)
Classes of decision problems. Tools of decision problem representation:
decision trees and payoffs matrix. Decision making in uncertainty: dominance,
decision criteria, judgment and factual data.
4. Uncertainty and risk management in normative models (2)
Probabilistic models: the modal outcome criterion, expected value criterion,
expected regret criterion. Sensitivity analysis. Value of information (EVPI).
Bayes theorem. Decision analysis with sample information (EVSI).
5. Developing model formulation and decision analysis skills
Using the decision trees and payoffs matrix (labs)
6. Utility and preferences
Limitations of EMV criterion. Fundamentals of utility theory and its
developments. Single-attribute utility, attitudes towards risk, utility functions,
certainty equivalents, expected utility criterion, utility functions for non-
monetary attributes, multi-attributes utility.
7. Stochastic dominance concept in decision theory
Stochastic dominance of first, second and third order. Relations between utility
theory and stochastic dominance theory. Probabilistic dominance. Applications
in risk diversification problems.
8. Modeling of decision maker preferences: non – classical approach
Limitations of classical decision axioms in modeling the decision maker and his/
her rationality. Basic decision making situations and their representations using
the binary relations, enlargement of decision making situations. Outranking
relation based system of preferences.
9. Case study analysis
Team assignment presentations (labs).
10. Multiple objective decision making in descriptive models
How people make decisions involving multiple aspects: decision process,
decision rules. Montgomery model of decisional behavior in the presence of
multiple decision criteria.
11. Multiple criteria analysis and optimization models
Concept of Pareto optimum and generating the effective decisions. Concept of
compromise solution: goal programming and compromise programming
methods. Bipolar method using the outranking relation based preference system.
12. Developing model formulation and decision analysis skills
Using goal programming, AHP and Bipolar methods (labs).
13. Group decision making
Social context of decisions. Pros and cons of group thinking. System of voting.
Coalition games. Negotiotions and mediation. Theoretical contribution of Arrow
and Debreu.
14. Summary and final test
Contact person: Prof. Dr habil. Ing.Ewa Konarzewska-Gubała
phone: +48 71 3680-35; e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: Goodween P., Wright G. (2004): Decision analysis for management judgment
(3rd edition). John Willey and Sons, Chichester
Harrison E.F. (1999): The managerial decision-making process. Mifflin
Company, Boston
Keeney R.L., Raiffa H. (1976): Decisions with multiple objectives: preferences
and value tradeoffs. Willey, New York
Keeney R.L. (1982): Decision Analysis: An Overview, Operations Research 30,
803-838
Konarzewska-Gubała E. (1989): BIPOLAR: Multiple criteria decision aid using
bipolar reference system. Documents du LAMSADE, No.56, Universite de Paris
Dauphine, Paris
Von Neumann J., Morgenstern O. (1953): The theory of games and economic
behavior. Princeton University Press
In Polish:
Heilpern S. (2000): Podejmowanie decyzji w warunkach ryzyka i niepewności.
Wydawnictwo Akademii Ekonomicznej we Wrocławiu
Konarzewska-Gubała E. (1991): Wspomaganie decyzji wielokryterialnych.
System BIPOLAR Prace AE we Wrocławiu Nr 551. Seria: Monografie i
Opracowania nr 56
Kozielecki J. (1977): Psychologiczna teoria decyzji. Warszawa: PWN
Luce R. D., Raiffa H. (1964): Gry i decyzje. Warszawa: PWN
Malawski M., Wieczorek A., Sosnowska H. (2004): Konkurencja i kooperacja.
Teoria gier w ekonomii i naukach społecznych. Warszawa: Wydawnictwo
Naukowe PWN
Nosal Cz. (1994): Umysł menedżera. Wrocław: Wydawnictwo Przecinek
Roy B. (1990): Wielokryterialne wspomaganie decyzji. Warszawa: WNT
Trzaskalik T.red. (2006): Metody wielokryterialne na polskim rynku
finansowym. Warszawa: PWE
Tyszka T. red. (2004): Psychologia ekonomiczna. Gdańsk: Gdańskie Wyd.
Psychologiczne
Faculty: All students
Title:
EFFICIENT MANAGEMENT OF CORPORATE
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
Code: EMCSR 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: spring
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test
Language: English
Prerequisites: One year of education in economics
Course content: 1. Short history, definition and principles of corporate social
responsibility (CSR)
2. Corporate social responsibility system creation
3. Levels and areas of CSR
4. The organization culture role in implementing CSR
5. The communication process as a part of efficient management of
CSR
6. Human resources management in socially responsible corporate
7. Management style as an influence on social responsibility
principles realization
8. Examples of principles, codes of conduct and tools of CSR
Contact person: dr Magdalena Rojek-Nowosielska, Department of Sociology and Social
Policy, [email protected]
Literature: Please contact the lecturer for information
Faculty: All students
Title:
GENERAL MANAGEMENT
Code: GEMA 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: Spring semester
Level: Basic
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Written test
Language: English
Prerequisites: None
Course content: Basic knowledge of organization and its environment. General view
on functions of management - planning and decision making,
organizing, leading and controlling. Focus on human resources
management, managerial profile (knowledge and skills) and
management styles. Management in international perspective.
Contact person: Janusz Marek Lichtarski, (0048)713680653
Literature: 1. Stoner J.A.F, Wankel Ch. : Management. Prentice Hall
International, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1986
2. Donnelly J.H. Jr., Gibson J.L., Ivancevich J.M.: Fundamentals
of Management. IRWIN, 1992
3. Hall R.H.: Organizations. Structures, Processes and Outcomes.
Prentice Hall, New Jersey 1999
4. Robbins S.P.: Organization Theory. Structure, Design and
Applications. Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
1990
Faculty: All students
Title:
HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
Code: HRM 09/10
ECTS credits: 6
Lecture hours: 45 hrs altogether, including:
30 hrs of interactive lectures + 15 hrs of practical classes
Study period: Conducted twice a year: winter and spring
Level: Specialized (major)
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Evaluation & completion: two separate grades
1) Lectures: formal final written exam
2) Classes: As class sessions will include interactive discussions, case studies,
role playing and individual and group assignments - class attendance and
participation is expected and will contribute to a student‟s final grade in the class
course.
Language: English
Prerequisites: completed course on General Management
Course content: General outline 1) The scope, evolution and significance of HRM
2) The environmental context of HRM
3) Strategic approach to HRM: models and components
4) Personnel planning
5) Staffing the organization: recruitment, selection, placement
6) Directing people: motivating, communicating, leading
7) Employee compensation & pay systems
8) Training & development
9) Performance appraisal
10) Employee termination
11) Personnel function control
12) International aspects of HRM
13) Multiculturalism and intercultural communication
14) Managing international teams and workforce diversity
15) Legal, social and ethical responsibility covered in HRM policy
Contact person: dr Marzena Stor; [email protected]
building “Z”, Office Room No 817
phone: 071-368-06-73
Literature: Required prime texts:
1) Deresky, H.: International Management. Managing Across Borders and
Cultures. Pearson Education International. New Jersey, 2006.
2) Dessler, G.: Human Resource Management. Pearson Education
International. New Jersey, 2006.
3) Stor, M.: The Basics of Human Resources Management. Key Issues and
Related Exercises. Wydawnictwo Akademii Ekonomicznej we Wrocławiu.
Wrocław, 2009.
Faculty: all
Title:
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCES
MANAGEMENT
Code: IHRM 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 hrs lecture in e-learning (only e-learning)
Study period: winter 2009
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: activity on-line+tests+cases
Language: English
Prerequisites: none
Course content: 1. Personnel function and its components in international context
2. External and internal factors determining the IHRM
3. Planning human resources in international organizations
4. Qualification profile of the international manager
5. Staffing personnel (recruitment, selection, placement)
6. Training and development in international companies
7.Compensation and motivation systems
8. Communication skills
9. Appraisal system
10. Cultural context of the IHRM –managing cultural differences
11. The triad model of management (Asian, American and European)
12. Euromanagement
13. International companies
14. Leadership in global business
Contact person: dr Sylwia Przytuła, Katedra Zarządzania Kadrami, room 816Z, tel.
+4871 3680672, [email protected]
Literature: 1. Beardwell I., Holden L., HRM a contemporary approach, Pearson
Education, Edinburgh, UK 2001
2. Deresky H., International Management: Managing Across Borders
and Cultures, Prentice Hall,Upper Saddle River NJ,2002
3. Dessler G., Human resource management, Prentice Hall, 2003
4. Harris P., Managing cultural differences
5. Hodgetts R., Modern human relations at work, Dryden Press,
1996
6. Hofstede G, Culture‟s concequences:Comparing values, behaviors,
institutions and organizations across nations, Sage Publications,
2001
7. Intercultural Communication in Contexts, Martin, J.N. and
Nakayama, T.K. Third Edition. McGraw Hill, 2004
8. Intercultural Communication, by Ron Scollon and Suzanne Wong
Scollon, Blackwell, 2000
9. Intercultural Communication: A Global Reader, ed. Fred E. Jandt,
Sage, 2004
10. Intercultural management studies, ed. M.Hess, T.Massey,
Ł.Sułkowski, Clark University, Łódź-Worcester, USA, 2008
11. Magala S., Cross-cultural competence, Routledge, London 2005
12. Marcic D., S.Puffer, Management intrewnational.Cases,
exercises,readings
13. Mendenhall, M.E., Oddou, G.R., Stahl, G.K. Readings and Cases
in International Human Resource Management, 4th
Ed., New York,
Routledge,2007
14. Sanyal R.N., International Management. A Strategic Perspective,
Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, 2001
15. Scullion H., Global staffing, Routledge, New York, 2006
16. Stone D., The influence of culture on Human Resources
17. The strategic managing of human resources, ed. J.Leopold,
L.Harris, Prentice Hall, 2005
18. Torrington D., Human resources management, Prentice Hall,
1998
19. Trompenaars F., Riding the waves of culture, N.B.Publishing,
London, 1999
Faculty: All
Title:
INTERPERSONAL BUSINESS COMMUNICATION
Code: IBC 09/10
ECTS credits: 5
Lecture hours: 45 hrs altogether, including:
30 hrs of interactive lectures + 15 hrs of practical classes
Study period: Conducted twice a year: winter and spring
Level: basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Evaluation & completion: two separate grades
1) Lectures: formal final written exam
2) Classes: As class sessions will include interactive discussions, case studies, role
playing and individual and group assignments - class attendance and participation is
expected and will contribute to a student‟s final grade in the class course.
Language: English
Prerequisites: No specific requirements
Course content: General outline 1) The social foundations of communication process.
2) The basic terminology in communication science.
3) The role & functions of communication in business organization.
4) Barriers to communication within an organization.
5) Communication for individual working vs. team working.
6) Temperaments and their characteristics.
7) Interpersonal communication between superiors & subordinates.
8) Types of interviews.
9) Means of influencing conversation atmosphere & character.
10) Interpersonal style as management skill.
11) Conflict management.
12) Business meetings & presentations.
13) Negotiations in business setting.
14) Cross-cultural communication.
15) Written communication: reports & formal mail.
Contact person: dr Marzena Stor; [email protected]
building “Z”, Office Room No 817
phone: 071-368-06-73
Literature: Reading texts: 1) Lahiff J. M., Penrose J. M.: Business Communication: Strategies and Skills. Prentice
Hall. New Jersey, 2000.
2) O‟Hair, D., Friedrich, G.W., Dee Dixon, L.: Strategic Communication in Business and
the Professions. Houghton Mifflin Company. Boston, 2002.
3) Stor, M.: Directing people: motivating, leading, communicating. [in:] Stor, M.: The
Basics of Human Resources Management. Key Issues and Related Exercises.
Wydawnictwo Akademii Ekonomicznej we Wrocławiu. Wrocław, 2008.
4) Stor, M.: Effective Communication as Motivational Stimulator.[in:] „Argumenta
Oeconomica” No 1-2 (9). Wydawnictwo Akademii Ekonomicznej we Wrocławiu, 2000.
5) Stor, M: The Effectiveness of Transcorporate Communication in International
Organizations in Poland – Research Findings on Managing Managerial Staff. [in:]
”Intercultural Communication Studies”. Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts,
2008.
Faculty: all
Title:
KNOWLEDGE DIFFUSION IN THE
INTERNATIONAL NETWORK OF
ENTERPRISES
Code: KDINE 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30
Study period: full year
Level: intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: case study
Language: English
Prerequisites: Fundamentals of Organisation of Management
Course content: 1. Knowledge in the networking enterprise.
2. Networking economy.
3. Time and space in the networking enterprise.
4. Paradigma of the networking economy.
5. Atomization of the society and economy.
6. Vectors of the globalization and virtualization.
7. Knowledge as the system integrator.
8. Knowledge diffusion in the international enterprises.
9. Change of the organizational culture in the multinational enterprise.
10. Virtual networking enterprise as the instrument of the diffusion of the tacit
knowledge.
11. Key competencies of the company – integrator in the networking system.
12. Value creation in the networking enterprises.
13. Networking marketing.
14. Knowledge workers, agents and managers.
15. The methods of the knowledge diffusion.
16. Asymmetric knowledge diffusion.
17. Processes of the knowledge transfer.
18. Development of the knowledge management in the future enterprise.
Contact person: Prof. zw. dr hab. Kazimierz Perechuda, room 610 „Z”, phone 071 3 680 655
Literature: 1. Davenport, Gilbert J.B. Probst: Knowledge Management, Case Book: Siemens
Best Practices.
2. White D.: Knowledge Mapping and Management, IRM Press 2002.
3. Tiwana A.: Knowledge Management: E-business and Customer Relationship
Management Applications, Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ, 2001.
4. Probst G., Raub S., Romhardt K.: Managing Knowledge. Building Blocks for
Success, John Wiley and Sons Ltd., 2000.
5. Handzic M., Zhou A.Z.: Knowledge Management. An Integrative Approach.
Chandos Publishing, 2005.
6. von Krogh G., Ichijo K., Nonaka I.: Enabling Konwledge Creation, Oxford
University Press, 2000.
7. Nonaka I., Takeuchi H.: The knowledge-Creating Company, Oxford University
Press, 1995.
8. Perechuda K.: Dyfuzja wiedzy w przedsiębiorstwie sieciowym. Wizualizacja i
kompozycja, Wydawnictwo AE we Wrocławiu, Wrocław 2005.
9. Perechuda K. (red.): Zarządzanie wiedzą w przedsiębiorstwie, PWN, Warszawa
2005.
Faculty: Finance and Banking, Management and Marketing, Computer Science and
Econometrics
Title:
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT IN THE
INTERNATIONAL ENTERPRISE
Code: KMIE 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30
Study period: full year
Level: intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: case study
Language: English
Prerequisites: Fundamentals of Organisation of Management
Course content: 1. Introduction to knowledge management.
2. Knowledge management components and relationships.
3. The company`s knowledge base.
4. Building Blocks of knowledge management.
5. Incorporating knowledge management.
6. The limits of knowledge management.
7. Strategy and knowledge creation.
8. Unraveling the role and organizational controls in knowledge
management.
9. Strategically-focused enterprise knowledge management.
10. Evaluating organizational patterns for supporting business knowledge
management.
11. Implementing knowledge management: issues for managers.
12. A research model for knowledge management.
13. Atomization of the society and economy.
14. Knowledge as the system integrator.
15. Knowledge diffusion in the international enterprises.
16. Change of the organizational culture in the multinational enterprise.
17. Knowledge workers, agents and managers.
18. Processes of the knowledge transfer.
19. Development of the knowledge management in the future enterprise.
Contact person: Prof. zw. dr hab. Kazimierz Perechuda, room 610 „Z”, phone 071 3 680 655
Literature: 1. Davenport, Gilbert J.B. Probst: Knowledge Management, Case Book:
Siemens Best Practices.
2. White D.: Knowledge Mapping and Management, IRM Press 2002.
3. Tiwana A.: Knowledge Management: E-business and Customer
Relationship Management Applications, Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle
River, NJ, 2001.
4. Probst G., Raub S., Romhardt K.: Managing Knowledge. Building Blocks
for Success, John Wiley and Sons Ltd., 2000.
5. Handzic M., Zhou A.Z.: Knowledge Management. An Integrative
Approach. Chandos Publishing, 2005.
6. von Krogh G., Ichijo K., Nonaka I.: Enabling Konwledge Creation, Oxford
University Press, 2000.
7. Nonaka I., Takeuchi H.: The knowledge-Creating Company, Oxford
University Press, 1995.
8. Perechuda K. (red.): Zarządzanie wiedzą w przedsiębiorstwie, PWN,
Warszawa 2005.
9. Perechuda K.: Dyfuzja wiedzy w przedsiębiorstwie sieciowym.
Wizualizacja i kompozycja, Wydawnictwo AE we Wrocławiu, Wrocław
2005.
Faculty: Finance and Banking, Management and Marketing, Computer Science and
Econometrics
Title:
LOGISTICS AND SUPPLY CHAIN
MANAGEMENT
Code: LSCM 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15h lecture
Study period: Winter or spring
Level: Advanced
Location: Jelenia Góra
Examination: Written test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Fundamentals of Management
Course content: The course gives a contemporary knowledge of logistics and supply chain management.
The course develops analytical and managerial skills necessary to successfully apply this
knowledge.
Lectures will cover following subjects:
1. Introduction to logistics
a. Development of business logistics;
b. Logistics system in a company;
c. Logistics strategies
d. Logistics in organizational structures
e. Logistics infrastructure
2. Logistics customer service
a. Customer policy;
b. Links between marketing and logistics;
c. Logistics service standards
d. Customer service level vs. logistic costs;
3. Transport and Inventory Management
a. Own transport vs. outsourcing;
b. Freight modes and costs options;
c. Transport factors in location analysis
d. Role and types of inventory in logistics systems;
e. Inventory control models;
4. Theoretical basis of supply chain management
a. Origins, essence and goals of contemporary supply chain management;
b. Supply chain models;
c. Supply chain relations;
d. Synchronization of supply and demand streams;
e. Supply chain integration levels;
5. Supply chain strategies and analysis;
a. Contemporary supply chain strategies and techniques (ECR, QR, VMI, CPFR)
b. Benchmarking of supply chain management processes;
c. Measuring value added in a supply chain.
Contact person: Prof. Dr hab. Jarosław Witkowski, phone+48 75 75-38-216 , e-mail: [email protected]
Dr Bartłomiej Rodawski, phone +48 75 75-38-215, e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1. R. H. Ballou, Business Logistics Management, Prentice Hall, New Jersey, 1999
2. S. Chopra, P. Meindl, Supply Chain Management. Strategy, Planning and Operation,
Prentice Hall, New Jersey, 2001
3. A. Harrsion, R. van Hoek, Logistics Management and Strategy, Prentice Hall, Harlow
2002
4. D. Simchi – Levi, P. Kaminsky, E. Simchi – Levi, Designing and Managing the Supply
Chain. Concepts, Strategies and Case Studies, Irwin McGraw – Hill, New York 2000
5. J. Witkowski, Zarządzanie łańcuchem dostaw. Koncepcje, procedury, doświadczenia,
PWE, Warszawa 2003
6. J. Witkowski, B. Rodawski, Logistics Infrastructure as Factor of Regional
Development, Case of Euroregion NISA, E+M Economics and Management 1/2006, p.
67 - 72
Faculty: All
Title:
LOGISTICS SIMULATION GAME “LOGISTIX”
Code: LSG 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 2 hours of computers laboratories
13 hours of game by Internet
Notice: workshops can be performed in groups of maximum 30 students
Study period: spring semester
Level: specialize
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Result of the game – profit
Language: English
Prerequisites: Logistics especially inventory and sales planning, ability to teamwork
Course content: Students managed the production company which produces and sales
different products. They have to plan stock, purchase of materials and
sales of final goods. It is possible by using correct inventory polices and
forecasting methods. Students learn how to use this methods in the
marketplace and become stronger competitors. After each period
students will see how their decisions affect the performance of their
organization. Students use specialist computer program which was
prepared for this simulation.
Contact person: dr Natalia Szozda – [email protected] - Logistics Department
mgr Marek Wąsowicz – [email protected] - Designing of
Management System Department
Literature: Logistics Simulation Game Manual
Cecil Bozarth, Robert B. Handfield ―Introduction to Operations and
Supply Chain Management‖, Prentice Hall PTR, 2006 New Jersey
Faculty: All
Title:
MANAGERIAL GAMES AND CASE STUDIES
Code: MGCS 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: Winter semester
Level: Basic
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Presence and completing practical exercises
Language: English
Prerequisites: None
Course content: The course is focused on developing key managerial skills, e.g. team
working, team building and leading, individual and group decision
making in uncertain conditions, time managing, communicating,
setting free people‟s creativity and motivation. Interactive training
methods are used during the course: managerial games and exercises,
case studies, discussions.
Contact person: Janusz Marek Lichtarski, (0048)713680653
Literature:
Faculty: All students
Title:
MANAGING INTERNATIONAL TEAMS
Code: MIT 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 30 hrs of interactive lectures
Study period: winter and spring
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: No exams, evaluation & completion: on the passing grades only
As class sessions will include lectures, class interactive discussions, case
studies and individual and group assignments - class attendance and participation
is expected and will contribute to a student‟s final grade in the course.
Language: English
Prerequisites: No specific requirements
Course content: General outline 1) The specificity of multinational teams (MNTs): composition, types,
development, tasks and models. 2) Creating value with diverse teams: diversity as liabilities or assets 3) Formation and uses of transnational teams: advantages & disadvantages. 4) Tying international team formation and performance to corporate, company
and HRM strategies. 5) The impact of cultural and individual values on employee resistance to
teams. 6) Multicultural team performance & self-managing work team effectiveness. 7) Cross-cultural role expectations in superior-subordinate relations. 8) The impact of culture on managerial perception of equality. 9) Visible and underlying diversity of team social and personal identities and
their influence on appraisal of issues and events. 10) Experiencing conflict and emotions in MNTs. 11) Person perception in workgroup contexts (categorization and specification). 12) Leadership in cross-cultural studies. 13) Multinational perspectives on work values and commitment. 14) Intercultural communication competence and cultural intelligence.
Contact person: dr Marzena Stor; [email protected]
building “Z”, Office Room No 817
phone: 071-368-06-73
Literature: Reading texts:
1) Francesco, A.M., Gold, B.A.: International Organizational Behavior.
Text, Cases, and Exercises. Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle
River. New Jersey, 2005.
2) Hofstede G., Hofstede G.J.: Cultures and Organizations. Software of
the Mind. McGraw-Hill. New York, 2005.
3) Lane, H.W., Distefano, J.J., Maznevski, M.L.: International
Management Behavior. Text, Reading, and Cases. Blackwell
Publishing. Malden, USA, 2006.
4) Stor, M.: Creating Value with Diverse Teams in Transnational
Management: Diversity as Liabilities & Assets. [in:] "Argumenta
Oeconomica" nr 1-2/18. Wydawnictwo Akademii Ekonomicznej we
Wrocławiu, 2006.
5) Stor, M.: Glocal Affairs Teams (GATs) in Transnational Companies:
Dimensions within Strategies. [in:] “Management”. 2007, Vol. 11,
No.1, Uniwersytet Zielonogórski, 2007.
6) Trompenaars F., Hampden-Turner C.: Riding the Ways of Culture.
Understanding Diversity in Business. Nicholas Brealey Publishing.
London, 1997.
Faculty: all
Title:
MARKETING MANAGEMENT
Code: MAMA 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: Lecture: 15 hours; cases: 15 hours
Study period: winter semester
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Cases, small essay, test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Basic marketing and marketing research courses
Course content: 1. Opportunity analysis and market targeting; 2. Strategy formulation and
and management (product, price, place and promotion); 3. Marketing
strategy control and reformulation; 4. Comprehensive marketing
programs; 5. Financial consequences of marketing decisions – marketing
and value.
Contact person: Dr hab. Ryszard Kłeczek, rtof UE
Literature: 1. R.Kerin, R.Peterson: Strategic Marketing Problems. Cases and
Comments. McGraw Hill, 1998. P. Doyle: Value Based marketing.
Marketing strategies for Corporate Growth and Shareholder Value. Wiley
2000. 3. Articles from ABI and EBSCO databases.
Faculty: Management, marketing
Title:
MARKETPLACE - BUSINESS SIMULATION
GAME
Code: MBSG 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 24 hrs of computer laboratories
Study period: Winter or Spring
Level: Basic
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Final result in the simulation game and day-to-day involvement
Language: English
Prerequisites: Recommended courses in: Strategic Management, Marketing and
Business Finance. Good English skills and ability to teamwork required
Course content: Marketplace game began more than 15 years ago as experiential learning
exercise. Today, fully web-based Marketplace simulations are used by
thousands of students and managers all around the world. Marketplace
can be viewed as a Business flight Simulator. It is a sophisticated
computer program that mimics the competitive, ever changing
marketplace. The consequences of the students' decisions are quickly
reflected in the simulated marketplace. Students learn to adjust their
strategy to become stronger competitors.
“Business Management” version of Marketplace Simulation integrates
all functional areas of business and enables students to understand how
the pieces fit together as a coherent whole. In eight decision rounds teams
choose a business strategy, evaluate tactical options, and make a series of
decisions regarding marketing, sales, production, human resources
management, R&D, and business finance. After each round the students
will see how their decisions affect the performance of others and the
entire organization. More information can be found at http://www.marketplace-simulation.com
Contact person: dr Anna Witek-Crabb; email: [email protected]
dr inż. Letycja Soloducho-Pelc; email: [email protected]
dr Jarosław Ignacy; email: [email protected]
dr Przemyslaw Wolczek; email: [email protected]
Department of Strategic Management
Literature: Marketplace Students‘ Manual
Faculty: All
Title:
MODERN INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
Code: MIM 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15 lectures
Study period: Winter 2009
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: examination
Language: English
Prerequisites: Introduction to Management
Course content: Theory of information, sources of information, acquiring, processing and
dissemination of information, information management, reengineering
information processes, influencing behavior with the proper use of
information.
Contact person: Dr hab. inż. Jacek Unold, prof. UE; [email protected]
Literature: Unold J. (2005): Marketing information systems (in Polish). AE Wrocław
Faculty: Inter-faculty (All students)
Title:
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOUR
Code: ORBE 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: Spring
Level: Master studies
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Examination papers
Language: English
Prerequisites: Theory of Management, Human Resources Management, Microeconomics
Course content: The lecture examines the social and organizational aspects of
organizational behaviour. Models of human participation, psychological
contract, social attitudes and behaviour of individuals and groups in
organization, ethics of social communication in organization, team work,
corporate authority, change management, organizational development,
(OD) organizational culture, management by values, are the main topics
of the lecture.
Contact person: Czesław Zając Ph.D. Assoc. Prof., tel. (071) 36 80 597,
Literature: 1. S.P. Robbins,Essentials of Organizational Behavior, 7 th Edition,
published by Pearson Education, Inc, publishing as Prentice Hall,
Copyright 2003 by Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, New
Jersey, 07458
2. D. Goleman, Emotional Intelligence, Bantam, New York 1995
3. Individual Differences, and Behavior in Organizations, K.R. Murphy
ed. Jossey – Bass, San Francisco 1996
4. E.F. Harrison, The Managerial Decision – Making Process, 5 th
Edition, Houghton Mifflin, Boston 1999
5. Schein E.H., Organizational Culture and Leadership, San Francisco:
Jossey – Bass Publisher 1988
6. B. Kożusznik, Zachowania człowieka w organizacji, Polskie
Wydawnictwo Ekonomiczne, Warszawa 2002
7. J. Łucewicz, Organizacyjne zachowania człowieka, Wydawnictwo
Akademii Ekonomicznej we Wrocławiu, PN nr 806, Wrocław 1999.
Faculty: All students
Title:
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Code: PROMA 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 18 hrs of interactive lecture + 12 hrs labs
Study period: Spring
Level: Advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Form: oral presentation + written project
Language: English
Prerequisites: General Management, Basic Quantitative
Methods
Course content: Goal of the course:
The course is intended to provide a realistic overview of Project
Management body of knowledge. It contains global concepts that tie PM
to other disciplines such as quality and product development, the OR/MS
methods for planning, and controlling a project and the major
responsibilities of a project manager.
Skills: How to use a PM tool set for managing budgets, monitoring a
project`s scope and keeping a project on track.
Methodology: Lecture, workshop, and group presentations, computer
labs
Content: 1.Introduction
Nature of Project Management
Characteristics of Projects (definitions, phases of project, risk and uncertainty)
Life Cycle of a Project: strategic and tactical issues
Success critical factors
2.Process Approach to Project Management
Project Management Processes
Project Integration Management
Project Scope Management
Project Time Management
Project Cost Management
Project Quality Management
Project Human Resources Management
Project Communications Management
Project Risk Management
Organizational Project Management Maturity Model
3.Project Screening and Selection
Components of the Evaluation Process
Dynamics of Project Selection
Checklist and scoring models
Benefit - Cost Analysis
Cost - Effectiveness Analysis
Risk - Benefit Analysis
Use of Decision Trees
4. Multiple Criteria Methods for Evaluation
MCDM framework for Evaluation and Selection
Multiatribute Utility Theory
Analytic Hierarchy Process
5. Scope and Organizational Structure
Organizational Structure
Project Scope
Project Manager
Project Team and HRM
6. Project Scheduling
Network technique
Estimation of the duration of Project Activity
CPM, PERT
Critical chain method (by E.M. Goldratt)
7. Project Budget
Preparing the Budget
Techniques for Managing Budget (crashing, PERT/COST)
8. Project Control
Using Earned Value to project monitoring
9. Computer Support for Project Management
MS Project and AIMS applications.
Contact person: Prof. Dr habil. Ing.Ewa Konarzewska-Gubała
phone: +48 71 3680-358
e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1) Gido J., Clements J.P.: Successful Project Management (2 ed.).
Thomson South –Western, 2003
2) Kerzner H.: Project Management. A systems approach to planning,
scheduling and controlling (7 ed.). John Wiley& Sons, INC. , 2001
3) Kerzner H.: Using the Project Management Maturity Model. Strategic
planning for Project Management (2 ed.). .). John Wiley& Sons, INC.,
2005
4) Shtub A., Bard J.F., Globerson S.: Project Management. Processes,
methodologies, and economics (2 ed.) Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005
Faculty: All students
Title:
SALES MANAGEMENT
Code: SAMA 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: Lecture: 15 hours; cases: 15 hours
Study period: winter semester
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Cases, small essay, test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Basic marketing and marketing research courses
Course content: 1. Analysis of sales costs and profitability. 2. Identifying and using
potentials of profitability improvement. 3.Time management and sales
profitability; 4. Motivation systems and profitability potentials; 5.
Training the sales force; 6. Sales planning (sales budgeting).
Contact person: dr hab. Ryszard Kłeczek, prof UE
Literature: 1. Ch. Futrell: Sales management. Dryden Press1994, W.Dalrymple,
W.Cron: Sales management. Concepts and cases. Wiley 1992, 3. Articles
from ABI and EBSCO databases.
Faculty: Management, marketing
Title:
SEMINAR THESIS’ FOR STUDENTS
Code: STS 09/10
ECTS credits: 10
Lecture hours: 15 hrs seminar and own work
Study period: Winter and Spring
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Form: oral presentation + written project
Language: English
Prerequisites: none
Course content: Proposal of seminar thesis’ for students:
Human Resources Management:
Staffing (recruitment, selection, placement)
Motivation and compensation systems
Development
Appraisal and control of personnel
The international management:
External and internal factors determining the international
business
Motives of foreign investors for setting up new business
The triad model of the international management:
The Asian model
The American model
The Euromanagement
The international manager-qualification profile and role in
globalizing
business
Management in Central Eastern Europe
Cross cultural management:
Cultural approaches in international business
Models of the organizational cultures in global management
Cross cultural trainings for the international managers
Cross-cultural implications for global management-problems and
dysfunctions
Contact person: Sylwia Przytuła, phD, Department: Human Resources Management,
room 816Z,
phone +4871 3680672, e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1. Bartlett C., Lawler J.L. i in., Differences in International Human Resources
Development among Indigenous Firms and Multinational Affiliates in East
and Southeast Asia, “Human Resources Development Quarterly”, San
Francisco, Vol. 13, 2002
2. Bartlett C., Managing Across Borders, Harvard Business School Press, 1998
3. Beardwell I., Holden L., HRM a contemporary approach, Pearson Education,
Edinburgh, UK 2001
4. Brewster C., International Comparisons in HRM, Pitman, London, 1991
5. Brewster Ch., Harris H., Sparrow P.: Globalization of HR, Routledge, UK,
2003
6. Deresky H., International Management: Managing Across Borders and
Cultures, Prentice Hall,Upper Saddle River NJ,2002
7. Dowling P., Welch D.F.: International HRM. Managing people in a
multinational context, South-Western College Publishing, Cincinnati, OH 1999
8. Hetric S., Transferring HR Ideas and Practices: Globalization and
Convergence in Poland, HRDI 5:3 (2002),
9. Hodgets R.M., Modern Human Relations At Work, The Dryden Press,
Orlando, Florida, 1989
10. Hofstede G., Culture „ s consequences, Sage, London, 2001
11. Hofstede G., Cultures and organizations: software of the mind. Harper
Collins Publishers, London,1994
12. Kirkbride P.S., HRM In Europe. Perspectives for the 1990s, Routledge,
1994
13. Magala S., Cross-cultural competence, Routledge, London 2005
14. Mendenhall, M.E., Oddou, G.R., Stahl, G.K. (2007): Readings and Cases in
International Human Resource Management. 4th Ed., New York, Routledge
15. Sanyal R.N., International Management.A Strategic Perspective, Prentice
Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, 2001
16. Snape E., Managing Managers, Blacwell Publihers, Oxford 1994
17. Torrington D., Hall L., Human Resource Management, Prentice Hall,
Essex, UK, 1998
Faculty: only exchange students
Title:
SERVICE QUALITY MANAGEMENT
Code: SQM 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: Winter and Spring
Level: Specialization
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Written report
Language: English
Prerequisites: Fundamentals of Management and Marketing, Basic Statistics
Course content: 1. Characterization of services. Definitions and classifications of
services. Weight of services in economy.
2. Development of concepts and models of service quality.
3. Theory and scales of service quality measurement.
4. Development of SERVQUAL scale and other tools of
measurement.
5. Measurement of quality of different types of services: e.g.
financial, public, retail.
6. Designing services. Qualitative methods.
7. Concepts and development of total quality management,
definitions and systems of quality.
8. Quality of products vs. quality of services. Sets of quality
management tools.
9. Control charts.
10. Continuous improvement, costs of service quality, six sigma
methodology.
Contact person: dr Cyprian Kozyra, e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: 1. Besterfield D.H. and others, Total Quality Management. 3rd Edition.
Upper Saddle River: Pearson Education 2003.
2. Chakrapani Ch.: How to Measure Service Quality and Customer
Satisfaction. The Informal Field Guide for Tools and Techniques.
Chicago: Standard Research Systems 1999.
3. Gitlow H., Gitlow S., Oppenheim A., Oppenheim R.: Tools and
Methods for the Improvement of Quality. Boston: Irwin 1989.
4. Øvretveit J.: Measuring Service Quality. Hertfordshire: Technical
Communications 1993.
5. Wadsworth H.M., Stephens K.S., Godfrey A.B.: Modern Methods for
Quality Control and Improvement. 2nd edition. New York: Wiley
2002.
6. Zeithaml V.A., Parasuraman A., Berry L.L.: Delivering Quality
Service: Balancing Perceptions Customer and Expectations. New
York: Free Press 1990.
Faculty: All
Title:
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
Code: STMA1 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15-30 hours classes and/or 15-30 hours lectures
Study period: Spring 2009/2010
Level: Basic
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Students should have basic knowledge in management theory
Course content: Strategic management genesis
Corporate environment analysis
SWOT analysis
Benchmarkig analysis
Corporate growth theories
BCG and McKinsey matrixes
Strategic alliances
Mergers and acquisitions
Drafting a strategy
Implementing a strategy
Case studies
Contact person: [email protected] dr Maciej Czarnecki
Literature: Strickland and Thompson: Cases in strategic management
Students may also use other literature, including Polish
Faculty: Any faculty
Title:
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
Code: STMA2 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: Lectures 30hours/ classes 30 hours – e-learning
Study period: Winter/spring
Level: advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test/cases
Language: english
Prerequisites: Basic knowledge in Management
Course content: The module develops in depth knowledge, understanding, and practical
awareness of how to design and implement strategies, how to make
strategic choices in a competitive and uncertain environment, and how to
lead strategic positioning of companies in the market place. The module
aims to provide participants with both a theoretical and practical
understanding of how corporate strategy can be formulated in the light of
environmental and internal conditions and requirements. More
specifically, the module equips participants with a framework for
understanding corporate strategy as an interdisciplinary activity within the
context of a competitive market economy, leading to corporate decision-
making.
The module aims to enhance a broad and ethically sound picture of
business policy and corporate strategy development with dynamic and
stakeholder focus. The scope and limitations of strategic planning and
strategic decision making will be introduced in comparative context.
List of topics:
Strategic management process; mission, vision, strategy, STEP/PEST
analysis, Stakeholders analysis, Five forces analysis, Strategic group map,
Key Success Factors analysis, Scenario planning, Value chain analysis,
Invisible resources analysis (VRIN)
Competition and Porter‟s generic strategies, Strategic choice - Ansoff‟s
product – market strategy.
Contact person: Ewa Stańczyk – Hugiet, [email protected]
Literature: Besanko D., Dranove D., Shanley M., Schaefer S., (2006) Economics
of Strategy, Wiley.
Grant R., M., Contemporary Strategy Analysis. Concepts, Techniques,
Applications, Blackwell Business Oxford 2008.
Faculty: Management, Computer Science and Finance
Title:
TOOLS OF THE INFLUENCE ON THE
CUSTOMERS
Code: TIC 09/10
ECTS credits: 2
Lecture hours: 15
Study period: full year
Level: Intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: case study
Language: English
Prerequisites: Fundamentals of Organisation of Management
Course content: 1. Introduction to the methods of selling.
2. Building the loyalty of the customers.
3. Atomization of the society and economy.
4. The art of the ―Active listening‖- communication with clients.
5. Rules of influence.
6. Neurolinguistic Programming (NLP).
7. Cryptomarketing, hidden strategies of influencing on the clients.
8. Neuromarketing.
9. Negotiations In helling.
10. Customer Relationship Management.
11. Customer Experience Management.
12. Corporate Identity and Produkt Identity.
13. Telemarketing – how to convince to your product.
14. Call and Contact Center – how to organize contacting with clients.
15. Coopetition (cooperation with competitors).
16.Innovations in trade.
17. Product knowledge diffusion in the international enterprises.
Contact person: Ph.D. Aleksander Binsztok
Literature: 1. Kevin Hogan, „Persvasion‖.
2. Kevin Hogan, Hidden manipulations.
3. Robert Cialdini, How to influence on people.
4. Richard Bandler, Alchemy of manipulation.
5. Andrzej Batko, Sztuka perswazji I manipulacji.
Faculty: Finance and Banking, Management and Marketing, Computer Science
and Econometrics
Title:
TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT
Code: TQM 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 20 hrs of lecture + 10 hrs labs
Study period: Winter
Level: Advanced
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Oral presentation +written paper
Language: English
Prerequisites: General Management, HRM, Basic Quantitative Methods
Course content: Objectives: With the widespread interest in quality in any organization,
this course will give students the background they need to design,
implement, and evaluate quality improvement programs. Additionally, the
course will show the international differences in quality management
context and actual business examples.
Skills: How to use the quality philosophies, methods and tools for
initiating, contributing and managing quality programs at any
organization.
Methodology: Lecture, workshop, and group presentations, computer
labs
Contents:
1. Introduction to TQM (Concept of Quality and its evolution in
historical and cultural perspective, Quality in modern organization,
Philosophies of TQM).
2. Basic concepts of TQM (Deming`s 14 points, TQM principles and
implementation: Customer focus, Continual Process Improvement, Total
involvement).
3. Selected quality methods and tools (QFD and House of Quality, KJ,
basic and advanced statistical tools, SPC, Six Sigma, management tools)
4. TQM implementation with Quality Award models (Malcolm Baldrige
Quality Award criteria, European Business Exellence Model,
selfassesment methodology)
5. Quality costing (Basic cost categories, PAF model, ISO model, quality
system and cost system in organization)
6. Case studies of TQM organizations (European Way to Exelence
selection, Quality orientation of Polish firms: survey results and cases)
Contact person: Prof. Dr habil. Ing. Ewa Konarzewska-Gubala;
phone: +48 71 3680-358 [email protected]
Literature: Bank J. (2000): Total Quality Management, 2nd edition, Prentice Hall
Besterfield D. and al. (1999): Total Quality Management, Prentice Hall
Konarzewska-Gubała E. (ed.) (2006):Total Quality Management, 2nd ed.:
Concepts, Methodes, Cases; WUE Publishing House (in Polish)
Faculty: All
Title:
VALUE BASED MANAGEMENT (VBM) AS A
COMPREHENSIVE TOOL IN STRATEGIC
MANAGEMENT
Code: VBM 09/10
ECTS credits: 4
Lecture hours: 15 – 30 hours, classes or lectures
Study period: Spring 2009/2010
Level: Basic
Location: Wroclaw
Examination: Test
Language: English
Prerequisites: Students should have basic knowledge in management, strategic
management and corporate finance; good English skills essential
Course content: VBM genesis
Value as a main corporate goal
Value sources
VBM systems general features
Cost of capital invested
Traditional motivation systems disadvantages in the context of value
creation
Traditional financial indexes disadvantages in the context of value
creation
Value measures: EVA (Economic Value Added), MVA (Market Value
Added), Cash Value Added (CVA), others
VBM in Polish companies
Designing VBM system
VBM system implementation
Contact person: [email protected] dr Maciej Czarnecki
Literature: A. Black, P.Wright, J.E.Bachman: In Search for Shareholder Value, FT
Pitman Publishing, London 1998
P. C. Brewer, G. Chandra, C. A. Hock: Economic Value Added (EVA):
It‘s Uses and Limitations, „SAM Advanced Management Journal”, 1999
P. C. Brewer, G. Chandra, C. A. Hock: Economic Value Added (EVA):
It‘s Uses and Limitations, „SAM Advanced Management Journal”, 1999
http://www.sternstewart.com/evaabout/evacomp.shtml
http://www.pl.capgemini.com/services/vbm.shtml
Faculty: Any faculty
LANGUAGES *)
Title:
POLISH LANGUAGE
Code: POL 09/10
ECTS credits: 3
Lecture hours: 60 hours of workshop
Study period: Winter and Spring
Level: Beginners, intermediate
Location: Wrocław
Examination: Written test
Language: -
Prerequisites: -
Course content: Students learn the basic rules of the Polish language pronunciation and
intonation, the basics of grammar. Vocabulary practice provides
students with the necessary skills to successfully communicate in
everyday situations.
The course content will also help to get acquainted with the Polish
culture.
Students have an opportunity to visit Wrocław and to participate in the
cultural life of the city.
Contact person: mgr H. Karaszewska
e-mail: [email protected]
Literature: -
Faculty: All exchange students
*) There could be a possibility to select foreign language course (English, German, French
etc.) on at least an Intermediate level.