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All English-language publications are shown here. You can find all publications, including the German ones hereSearch term: SME
| Year | Title / Citation | Document type | Links / Downloads |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | 2026: GenAI Role in Redefining Learning and Skilling in Companies Citation: Hamburg, I. (2026): GenAI Role in Redefining Learning and Skilling in Companies. European Journal of Applied Sciences, 14 (01), 230-235. https://doi.org/10.14738/aivp.1401.19836 | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2026 | 2026: Power Relations and Outsider Entrepreneurship: Facets of Marginalisation Tendencies Toward Migrant Entrepreneurs Citation: David, A., Terstriep, J. & Zaghow, L. (2026): Power Relations and Outsider Entrepreneurship: Facets of Marginalisation Tendencies Toward Migrant Entrepreneurs. Journal of Organizational Change Management, 1–28. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOCM-10-2024-0668 | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2025 | 2025: AI for promoting diversity and inclusion within the workplace and learning Citation: Hamburg, I. (2025): AI for promoting diversity and inclusion within the workplace and learning. In EDULEARN25 Proceedings. 17th International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies (4383-4388). Palma, Spain. https://doi.org/edulearn.2025.1131Artificial intelligence (AI) has significant potential to enhance work and learning in companies, such as developing suitable technologies, analyzing employees' progress and preferences, and creating a tailored working and learning environment. This helps learners focus on the areas where they need the most improvement. AI also has the potential to support diversity and inclusion (DI) in the workplace and in learning. So, working and learning approaches using AI should be developed to be accessible, usable, and beneficial to all employees. Companies that support the use of AI to enhance diversity and inclusion practices within the workplace and the learning environment are more successful. Inclusive workplaces enhance employee engagement, and employees are more likely to maximize their potential and achieve satisfaction. AI has the potential to provide immediate, detailed feedback, enable personalized learning experiences, and promote digital literacy among employees. AI can also facilitate accessibility, fostering an inclusive culture. However, the development and use of AI in companies' DI approach initiatives also have many critical challenges, and this process should be carefully done. There is a need for ethical design and continuous monitoring of AI systems used in work and learning to ensure that they support DI goals. AI should complement human-led initiatives and efforts. It is necessary to address the potentially adverse consequences of AI, i.e., by supporting DI. education. Due to their profile, the author focused first on an optimistic DI view in education, but a critical view should address potentially adverse consequences of AI, i.e., by supporting DI also in the workplace. This paper presents the benefits and challenges of AI use in work and learning, promoting inclusive working technologies, effective communication, equitable outcomes in the workplace, company success, and employee satisfaction. These are also the results of a, a systematic review and analysis of the existing literature on the potential impacts of AI to support DI in the workplace and have been validated through survey research, i.e., by using an online survey questionnaire sent to five European companies that were partners within different projects, discussions with employees, managers, and trainers from these companies This should contribute to using the power of AI to develop DI initiatives. Examples of how AI can contribute to creating inclusive learning environments, such as Personalized Learning, Language Translation and Accessibility, Assistive Technologies, Early Intervention, and Reducing Bias, are provided, along with AI tools for inclusive learning. Inclusive learning environments can be created by selecting the right tools and implementing them effectively. Big companies have the resources to invest in research for developing such approaches, but ethical concerns, such as risks of AI use, i.e., in amplifying existing bias, should be further monitored; a critical evaluation of various AI applications to contribute positively to DI efforts is necessary. The author works solutions particularly in cooperation with small and medium-sized companies (SMEs), which have limited resources to evaluate the long-term impact of AI on DI in the workplace and lifelong learning, including its effects on organizational culture, employee well-being, and societal implications; The author helps SMEs to develop and use approaches that combine AI with human-centered work and learning strategies. These include supporting AI literacy, fostering a culture of continuous lifelong learning and adaptation, and creating an inclusive future for all employees. Based on her own experience, she collaborates with policymakers and trainers in developing Competence Frameworks to guide SMEs through this process, supporting both employees and employers in understanding the potential as well as the risks of AI, while engaging them in a safe, ethical, and responsible manner in work and learning. This would include the intersection of AI and other emerging working technologies, which is a significant step forward and a company’s duty to create more equitable and inclusive workplaces and learning approaches. | Document type: Article in | Links / Downloads: |
| 2025 | 2025: LIFELONG LEARNING AND CONTINUOUS TRAINING AS REMOTE WORK REQUIREMENTS Citation: Hamburg, I. (2025): LIFELONG LEARNING AND CONTINUOUS TRAINING AS REMOTE WORK REQUIREMENTS. In International Academy of Technology, Education and Development (IATED), INTED2025 Proceedings (857-864). 46010 Valencia, Spain: IATED. https://doi.org/10.21125/inted.2025.0308 | Document type: Article in | Links / Downloads: |
| 2025 | 2025: Too robust to fail: (international) entrepreneurial resilience as coping mechanisms in crisis for SMEs Citation: Terstriep, J., David, A., Rosenberger, T., & Zaghow, L. (2025): Too robust to fail: (international) entrepreneurial resilience as coping mechanisms in crisis for SMEs. European Journal of International Management, 25 (3/4). https://doi.org/10.1504/EJIM.2024.10065839 | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2024 | 2024: A holistic concept for measuring stress factors: Future sensor technologies for outpatient nursing staff and exoskeleton development Citation: Wirth, L.M., Peters, M., Will, N., Tabie, M., Rossol, T., Pfeiffer, N., Wittenberg, T., Behrens, J., Lienenbrink, S. & Thron, C. (2024): A holistic concept for measuring stress factors: Future sensor technologies for outpatient nursing staff and exoskeleton development. Gerontechnology, 23 (2), 1-1. https://doi.org/10.4017/gt.2024.23.s.1060.opp | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2024 | 2024: Anchoring challenges through citizen participation in regional challenge-based innovation policies Citation: Butzin, A., Rabadjieva, M. & Terstriep, J. (2024): Anchoring challenges through citizen participation in regional challenge-based innovation policies. Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions, 52. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eist.2024.100856 | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2024 | 2024: Challenges for using remote work within SMEs Citation: Hamburg, I. (2024): Challenges for using remote work within SMEs. In IATED, ICERI2024 Proceedings. 17th annual International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation (2617-2623). Seville, Spain. https://doi.org/10.21125/iceri.2024.0692 | Document type: Article in | Links / Downloads: |
| 2024 | 2024: Cybersecurity and flexible work Citation: Hamburg, I. (2024): Cybersecurity and flexible work. In IATED, ICERI2024 Proceedings. 17th annual International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation (3301-3307). Seville, Spain. https://doi.org/10.21125/iceri.2024.0854 | Document type: Article in | Links / Downloads: |
| 2024 | 2024: Interdisciplinary, AI-based cybersecurity awareness training in SMEs Citation: Hamburg, I. (2024): Interdisciplinary, AI-based cybersecurity awareness training in SMEs. In IATED, INTED2024 Proceedings. 18th International Technology, Education and Development Conference (657-661). Valencia, Spain. https://10.21125/inted.2024 | Document type: Article in | Links / Downloads: |
| 2023 | 2023: Injecting climate finance into SME lending in Germany: Opportunities for and limitations of regional savings and cooperative Banks Citation: Flögel, F. (2023): Injecting climate finance into SME lending in Germany: Opportunities for and limitations of regional savings and cooperative Banks. ZFW – Advances in Economic Geography, 2023, 13. https://doi.org/10.1515/zfw-2022-0011 | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2022 | 2022: Private Equity in Germany: An assessment of transactions, structures and players Citation: Scheuplein, C. (2022): Private Equity in Germany: An assessment of transactions, structures and players. Study der Hans-Böckler-Stiftung, February 2022 (470). Hans-Böckler-Stiftung. | Document type: Internet document | Links / Downloads: |
| 2021 | 2021: Lessons learned in stroke care during COVID-19 pandemic and preparing for future pandemics in the MENA+region: A consensus statement from the MENA+-SINO Citation: von Bandemer, S. (2021): Lessons learned in stroke care during COVID-19 pandemic and preparing for future pandemics in the MENA+region: A consensus statement from the MENA+-SINO. Journal of the Neurological Sciences, 2022 (432), 7. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jns.2021.120060 | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2019 | 2019: Chapter 2: Entrepreneurship and research skills in SMEs Citation: Hamburg, I., O'Brien, E. & Öz, F. (2019): Chapter 2: Entrepreneurship and research skills in SMEs. In Dirksen, D. (ed.), The power of entrepreneurship (45-76). New York: Nova Science Publishers. | Document type: Article in | Links / Downloads: |
| 2019 | 2019: Problem-based learning in the Irish SME workplace Citation: O'Brien, E., McCarthy, J., Hamburg, I. & Delaney, Y. (2019): Problem-based learning in the Irish SME workplace. Journal of workplace learning, 31 (6), 391-407 . https://doi.org/10.1108/JWL-10-2018-0131 | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2019 | 2019: Will FinTech make regional banks superfluous for small firm finance? Observations from soft information-based lending in Germany Citation: Beckamp, M. & Flögel, F. (2019): Will FinTech make regional banks superfluous for small firm finance? Observations from soft information-based lending in Germany. Economic notes: review of banking, finance and monetary economics, 48 (3), 1-20. https://doi.org/10.1111/ecno.12159 | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2018 | 2018: Distance and modern banks’ lending to SMEs: ethnographic insights from a comparison of regional and large banks in Germany Citation: Flögel, F. (2018): Distance and modern banks’ lending to SMEs: ethnographic insights from a comparison of regional and large banks in Germany. Journal of economic geography , 18 (1), 35-57. | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2016 | 2016: Cloud computing in SMEs Citation: Hamburg, I. & Bucksch, S. (2016): Cloud computing in SMEs. In IARIA, International Academy, Research, and Industry Association (IARIA): ICIW 2016 - the Eleventh International Conference on Internet and Web Applications and Services, Valencia, Spain, from May 22, 2016, to May 26, 2016 (54-57). | Document type: Article in | Links / Downloads: |
| 2016 | 2016: Distance and modern banks' lending to SMEs: decentralised versus centralised banking in Germany Citation: Flögel, F. (2016): Distance and modern banks' lending to SMEs: decentralised versus centralised banking in Germany. IAT discussion paper, 2016 (01). Gelsenkirchen: Institut Arbeit und Technik. | Document type: Internet document | Links / Downloads: |
| 2016 | 2016: Ex-ante impact assessment and value network analysis for SI Citation: Dhondt, S., van de Ven, H., Ziauberyte, R., van der Torre, W., Cressey, P., Kaderabkova, A., Luna, Á., Modhadam Saman, S., Castro Spila, J. & Terstriep, J. (2016): Ex-ante impact assessment and value network analysis for SI (December 2016). SIMPACT working paper, 2016 (2). Gelsenkirchen: Institute for Work and Technology. | Document type: Report | Links / Downloads: |
| 2016 | 2016: The use of cloude computing in SMEs Citation: Assante, D., Castro, M., Hamburg, I. & Martin, S. (2016): The use of cloude computing in SMEs. Procedia Computer Science, 83, 1207-1212. | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2015 | 2015: Improving e-learning in SMEs through cloud computing and scenarios Citation: Hamburg, I. (2015): Improving e-learning in SMEs through cloud computing and scenarios. In E-learning - instructional design, organizational strategy and management (481-498). Rijeka: InTech. https://doi.org/10.5772/61009 | Document type: Article in | Links / Downloads: |