Internalisation definition

Internalisation means the transactions more fully described in the Blackstar Investors Plc Circular to Shareholders, dated on or about 5 June 2009;
Internalisation means the internalisation by the company of its investment advisor, NEPI Investment Management Limited pursuant to a Sale-Purchase agreement dated 21 June 2010;

Examples of Internalisation in a sentence

  • The OeAD – Austria’s Agency for Education and Internalisation – will be in charge of administering all relevant programme procedures on the Austrian side.

  • Internalisation is a central process in socialisation that describes an active, natural process in which individuals attempt to transform socially sanctioned rules or requests into personally endorsed values and self-regulations [17].

  • All of the business models studied present concerns related to the Internalisation of Externalities, especially concerning congestion and decrease of truck-km.

  • Furthermore, since articulating TK is difficult, there has been considerable research on transforming knowledge either through Socialisation (Tacit-Tacit), Externalisation (Tacit-Explicit), Combination (Explicit- Explicit) and Internalisation (Explicit-Tacit) (Nonaka, 1994).

  • Road infrastructure cost and revenue in Europe Produced within the study Internalisation Measures and Policies for all external cost of Transport (IMPACT) – Deliverable 2.

  • BBI covenants that it will take all necessary steps, before and after Transaction Completion, to complete the Separation and Internalisation as soon as reasonably practicable after Transaction Completion.

  • Internalisation and subsequent degradation by lysosomes occurs after binding of the Fc portion to Fc receptors expressed on the surface of macrophages, natural killer cells, B and T cells and platelets (▇▇▇▇▇▇ et al., 1989).