19,643 results on '"industrialization"'
Search Results
202. Leaving post-industrial urban studies behind?
- Author
-
Luger, Jason and Schwarze, Tilman
- Subjects
POSTINDUSTRIAL societies ,URBAN geography ,URBAN studies ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
In this forum paper, we question the lasting utility of the framework and language of urban post-industrialism. We suggest that, while such conceptual metaphors are useful to understand economic, social and cultural change at specific times, post-industrial may obscure more nuanced explorations of the realities of today's multi-faceted, planetary, and digitally-mediated urban processes and socio-spatialities. Post-industrial speaks primarily to dramatic and violent changes that happened in the twentieth century, and continue to happen today, but, we suggest, the story is more complex. Specifically, we bring forward a few critiques of the post-industrial, that a revitalized agenda might begin to move beyond. Firstly, is that industrialisation is always-ongoing, and not something that can be fixed into place. Where it is absent, it continues to haunt. Second, is that over-use of post-industrial as a descriptor and critical lens can lead to territorial, class, racial/ethnic, political, and world-regional stigmatizations. In particular, it can reinforce colonialist hierarchies of prototype Northern/Western cities versus those in the majority world, and certain assumptions about linearity and path dependencies about industrial trajectories. Thirdly, we suggest post-industrial frameworks can calcify gender binaries and obscure counterhegemonies and fluidities, especially given the realities of global urban industrial labour today. Finally, we propose that moving beyond the post-industrial might open more radical space for vibrant art and politics, from cross-spectrum alliances and solidarities (like revitalized labour movements), to joyful artistic expression that transcends rust, decay, and ruin. We do not propose throwing away post-industrialism, but rather, to invite other possibilities to coexist. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
203. Early Validation of SysML Architectures by Extending MBSE with Co‐Simulation using FMI and SSP.
- Author
-
Cederbladh, Johan and Krems, Daniel
- Subjects
SYSTEMS engineering ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,PRODUCT quality ,MARKET timing ,SIMULATION methods & models - Abstract
Due to complexity increases in modern systems and the digitalization paradigm shift, industrial development requires the integration of new technologies and methods to keep product quality high while reducing time to market. One emerging paradigm in the Systems Engineering (SE) discipline is ModelBased methods and technologies, and correspondingly Model‐Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) is seeing increased adoption. With mature MBSE application, several benefits can be expected from the availability of models, even from the very early stages of development, enabling increased communication clarity, cross‐domain collaboration, traceability, and analysis. Notably, MBSE enables (Co‐)simulation even at the early stage of architecture/design by leveraging model‐based capabilities. Co‐simulation specifically enables a smooth and seamless integration of different models defined across layers of abstraction, for example, system logical architecture and system physical architecture. However, while MBSE is assisting with many aspects of development it is still a predominantly isolated set of activities throughout the development, especially on the left‐hand side of the traditional V‐model. In this work we discuss the status of Co‐simulation in industrial MBSE and list several existing challenges, then we propose a novel framework for implementing Co‐simulation and exemplify using a real scenario how we might address the observed challenges. The framework hinges on the newly proposed SSP standard and extends the currently industrially adopted FMI (version 3) standard through embedding the FMI file format using various scripts, demonstrated in the Python language for this paper. Finally, we propose a set of recommendations for future investigations to strengthen Co‐simulation in industrial MBSE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
204. Industrialization and Democracy.
- Author
-
Noort, Sam Van
- Abstract
This article provides a new theory about the relationship between economic development and democracy. The author argues that a larger share of employment in manufacturing—that is, a higher level of industrialization—makes mass mobilization both more likely to occur and more costly to suppress. This in turn increases the power of the masses vis-à-vis autocratic elites, making democracy more likely. Novel manufacturing employment data for 145 countries over 170 years (1845–2015) suggest that industrialization is strongly correlated with democracy, even after accounting for income, equality, education, and urbanization. Unlike with many other socioeconomic determinants, the effect of industrialization is robust to country and time fixed effects, occurs on both transitions to and consolidations of democracy, is present in both the short and long run, and is equally large after 1945. Results from a novel instrument and several sensitivity analyses suggest that the correlation is unlikely to be spurious. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
205. The Effect Of Green Intellectual Capital, CEO Characteristic, Free Cash Flow On Prudence Moderated By Enviromental Performance.
- Author
-
Hakki, Tandry Whittleliang, Herlina, Akwila, Karvicha, and Jurjanta, Priccilya
- Subjects
INTELLECTUAL capital ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,CASH flow ,ENVIRONMENTAL quality ,CHIEF executive officers ,FINANCIAL statements - Abstract
The rapid development of many industries in the world has resulted in environmental damage due to excessive use and exploitation of natural resources. As a result, there is a decline in environmental quality resulting in global warming, ozone depletion, pollution, and acid rain. The impact of environmental conventions in the world Montreal Convention, Kyoto Protocol, Ban on the Use of Certain Hazardous Materials and increasing consumer environmentalism can change the context of competition in industries around the world. This study aims to examine the effect of Green Intellectual Capital, CEO Characteristic, Free Cash Flow on Prudence moderated by Environmental Performance. This study took the research population in the energy sector companies listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange for the period 2019-2023. The type of data used in this study is secondary data in the form of financial reports of companies that are used as samples. The research method used in this study is a quantitative research method. The sample was selected using the purposive sampling method. For hypothesis testing, this study uses multiple linear regression analysis. Based on the results of this study, it shows that Green Intellectual Capital, Busy Director, and Free Cash Flow have an effect on prudence but CEO Tenure has no effect on Prudence. Environmental Performance strengthens the influence of Green Intellectual Capital, Busy Director, and Free Cash Flow on prudence and Environmental Performance strengthens the influence of CEO Tenure on prudence [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
206. Study on project current situation and industry development of CCUS in domestic oil and gas enterprises.
- Author
-
SUN Haiping and SUN Yangzhou
- Subjects
CARBON sequestration ,INDUSTRIAL costs ,PETROLEUM industry ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,INDUSTRIAL buildings - Abstract
Carbon dioxide capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) technology is one of the important ways to achieve net zero emissions. In the context of dual-carbon, the number of CCUS projects and the scale of the industry show a rapid growth trend. Based on their business characteristics, oil and gas enterprises have carried out global arrangements in the field of CCUS, and are deeply involved in the development and operation of projects. However, due to the high cost of the industrial chain and the limit of key technologies, the scale development of the CCUS industry still needs overall planning and reasonable arrangement. The project status and industry development of CCUS at home and abroad were systematically analyzed, as well as the arrangement and practice of oil and gas enterprises in the field of CCUS. The development prospects of the industry were analyzed from the perspectives of industry scales, technologies and cost trends. And then, suggestions were put forward for the future development of CCUS industry in domestic oil and gas enterprises, such as building a complete industrial chain of CCUS, advancing the goal steadily by stages, carrying out the top-level design of technology research and development, selectively entering the key links of the industrial chain and paying attention to the training of industrial chain operation capabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
207. Regional Industrial Policy in the Western Balkans: Neither Specialization nor Spatialization?
- Author
-
Zeković, Slavka and Perić, Ana
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL policy ,REGIONAL development ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,HERFINDAHL-Hirschman index ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
This paper analyzes post-socialist industrial development and policy in the Western Balkans through the lens of its regional specialization and spatial concentration. Against a conceptual framework revolving around place-based industrial policy, and using the Concentration index (modified Herfindahl-Hirschman index) and location coefficients (Balassa index), a comparative analysis over three decades (1990–2020) highlights weak regional diversification and intra-regional integration of industrial activity. The findings offer a new industrial policy that transcends regional specialization and spatial concentration to address regional development, planning and governance. The concluding remarks reveal some basic paths toward effective and pro-European regional industrial policy in the Western Balkans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
208. Research on the competitive landscape of global rare earth resources demand.
- Author
-
Guo, Qing and Guo, Tianyue
- Subjects
RARE earth metals ,IMPORTS ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,SUPPLY & demand - Abstract
Rare earth elements play a crucial role in modern industrial development. However, the global supply and demand dynamics of rare earth resources have encountered significant challenges due to the escalating conflict between rapidly increasing demand and limited supply in the international market. This study utilizes a gray prediction model to project the future demand of major rare earth‐consuming countries and examines the competitive landscape of global rare earth resource demand. The findings indicate that: (1) China's rare earth consumption is expected to continue its upward trend, while the consumption in the United States and Japan may decline; (2) China, the United States, and Japan are likely to maintain their positions as major consumers of rare earth elements, although the competition for rare earth resources among these countries may weaken; (3) the United States and Japan heavily rely on the import of rare earth upstream products, while China's reliance on midstream and downstream imports remains prominent. Finally, based on these research conclusions, the article presents corresponding policy recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
209. Thirlwall’s Law, Investment, Productive Chains and Domestic Markets.
- Author
-
Vázquez Muñoz, Juan Alberto
- Subjects
DOMESTIC markets ,FOREIGN investments ,DEMAND function ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,COINTEGRATION - Abstract
Copyright of Mexican Journal of Economics & Finance / Revista Mexicana de Economia y Finanzas is the property of Instituto Mexicano de Ejecutivos de Finanzas and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
210. The Impact of Cultural and Creative Products Arising from Intangible Cultural Heritage on Economic Development: A Case Study of Ebian County, China.
- Author
-
Lei, Zhang and Jialing, Wan
- Subjects
CULTURAL property ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL tourism ,CULTURAL industries ,INDUSTRIALIZATION - Abstract
With the promotion of the rural revitalization strategy, cultural and creative industries of tourism have gradually become an important driving force for rural revitalization. Since the economic level of minority areas is low and the concept of industrial development lags behind, developing the cultural and creative industries of tourism has a positive role in cultural revitalization and economic structure transformation. In recent years, Ebian Yi Autonomous County (Ebian County) has relied on rich intangible cultural heritage resources and achieved fruitful results in the development of cultural and creative products of rural tourism, adding vitality to its rural tourism and rural revitalization. Starting from the economy and the development of cultural and creative industries empowered by intangible cultural heritage (ICH), this study analyzed the impact of related cultural and creative products of Ebian County on its economic development in the five-year period from 2018 to 2022 by means of qualitative and quantitative research methods. Three main conclusions could be drawn. (1) The impact of intangible cultural heritage cultural and creative industries of Ebian County on the economy has been positive and expanding gradually with time. (2) The number of inheritors and workshops, and the business income of workshops are the three major factors affecting the development of cultural and creative industries. (3) Ebian already has a good foundation of cultural and creative industries of intangible cultural heritage, so the investment of funds and training of talents have played a major role in promoting the development of cultural and creative industries of intangible cultural heritage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
211. Demand‐led industrialisation policy in a dual‐sector small open economy.
- Author
-
Nomaler, Önder, Spinola, Danilo, and Verspagen, Bart
- Subjects
BALANCE of payments ,ELASTICITY (Economics) ,FREE trade ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,GOVERNMENT policy ,INCOME inequality - Abstract
This article models the process of structural transformation and catching‐up in a demand‐led Southern economy constrained by its balance of payments. Starting from the Sraffian Supermultiplier Model, we model a dual‐sector small open economy with a traditional and a modern sector that interacts with a technologically advanced Northern economy. We propose two (alternative) autonomous elements that define the growth rate of this demand‐led economy: government spending and exports. Drawing from the Structuralist literature, productivity in the technologically laggard Southern economy grows by absorbing technology from the Northern economy, by both embodied and disembodied spillovers, and potentially closing the technology gap. The gap affects the income elasticity of exports, bringing a supply‐side mediation to the growth rates in line with the Balance of Payments Constrained Model. We observe that a demand‐led government policy plays a central role in structural change, pushing the modern sector to a larger share of employment than what results under export‐led growth. Such a demand policy is the only way in which partial catching up (in productivity and GDP per capita) can result, and this is facilitated by a global market place in which the balance of payments constraint is relatively soft. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
212. Predicting the Future Distribution and Habitat Suitability of Ilex latifolia Thunb. in China under Climate Change Scenarios.
- Author
-
Ma, Yunyang, Liu, Ying, Xiang, Yangzhou, He, Ji, Zhao, Ling, and Guo, Xinzhao
- Subjects
CLIMATE change models ,GREENHOUSE gases ,CLIMATE change ,COLD (Temperature) ,INDUSTRIALIZATION - Abstract
Ilex latifolia Thunb., a plant of significant economic and medicinal value, is both edible and medicinal. Assessing the climate suitability for I. latifolia has profound implications for advancing medical progress and enhancing the quality of human life. This study comprehensively utilized data on the field distribution of I. Latifolia, as well as corresponding climatic, topographical, and soil data at these distribution points, with the aid of future climate data predicted by global climate models, and employed the MaxEnt model to predict and analyze the climate suitability areas of I. latifolia under three greenhouse gas emission scenarios (SSP126, SSP245, and SSP585). The research covers the spatiotemporal distribution characteristics, suitable growth range, and influencing factors from the present to the end of the 21st century (2041–2100). The predictive results of the MaxEnt model indicate that, under current climatic conditions, the main suitable growth areas for I. latifolia are concentrated in the southeastern part of China, especially in the provinces of Fujian and Zhejiang. However, facing the challenges of future climate change, it is expected that the moderately high suitable growth areas for I. latifolia will show a trend of gradual reduction. The primary climatic factors crucial for I. latifolia's growth are annual precipitation (1469.05 to 4499.50 mm), the lowest temperature in the coldest month (−18.72 to 3.88 °C), seasonal precipitation changes (11.94 to 64.69 mm), and topographic slope (0.37 to 3.00°), with annual precipitation being the most influential. The findings of this study provide a scientific basis for the introduction of I. latifolia and offer important reference information for the artificial cultivation, resource development, and achievement of sustainable industrial development of this species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
213. Estimation of Chemical and Mineral Composition, Structural Features, and Pre-Firing Technological Properties of Waste Coal Heaps for Ceramic Production.
- Author
-
Yavruyan, Khungianos and Kotlyar, Vladimir
- Subjects
COAL mine waste ,CERAMIC materials ,RAW materials ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,MUDSTONE - Abstract
The relevance of the investigation and creation of a new non-traditional raw material base for wall ceramics for the south of Russia is shown in connection with the decreasing availability of traditional raw materials—loams. Characterizations of the mineral and chemical constituent rock formations of the rocks composing the dumps of coal waste heaps and enrichment plants are given. A serious constraint for the industrial development of coal wastes is the requirement for a great variety of mineral constituents. The chemical and mineralogical compositions and the pre-firing ceramic properties of the waste coal heaps are studied and presented in detail. It is mentioned that fine and thin materials contain coal in an increased amount; due to this, they cannot be considered as the main raw material for the production of wall ceramics. The materials of the medium-sized grain group (2.0–5.0 mm, sifting) can contain up to 2–3% of coal and are most often represented by a mixture of mudstones, siltstones, and sandstones, with the predominance of one or another type of rock. The granulometric composition and the content of large-grained inclusions, molding moisture, plasticity, cohesiveness, desiccation properties, and air shrinkage were studied and determined. It is concluded that the middle group of waste coal heaps in particular are of the greatest interest as a basic raw material for the production of wall ceramic products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
214. Einkommens- und Vermögensverteilung in Deutschland.
- Author
-
Bartels, Charlotte and Neef, Theresa
- Subjects
WEALTH distribution ,SOCIAL order ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,TREND analysis ,INCOME inequality - Abstract
This article outlines income and wealth distribution trends in Germany since the 19th century, compared to other Western industrialised countries. We first discuss the evolution of aggregate wealth-to-income ratios. We then explore how the concentration of income and wealth among the top percentile evolved since the 19th century. For the period after 1990, we analyse the entire distributions from top to bottom, exploring why Germany differs from France and the U.S. Among European countries, Germany exhibits one of the highest concentrations of income and wealth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
215. Regional development assessment based on POIs and Geotree: a case study in Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region.
- Author
-
Liang, Yuting and Hu, Yunfeng
- Subjects
REGIONAL development ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,BIG data - Abstract
The use of Internet data to carry out geographic study has become an academic hotspot in recent years. We referred to the "Zhongke Beauty Index" and crawled 530 thousand POIs (POI: Point of interest) to carry out regional construction evaluation in Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region. The results showed that: (1) Geographic big data provided detailed information for fine-grained regional research, and the POI evolution tree model revealed the shortcomings of regional development. (2) The Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei comprehensive beauty index in 2019 was 0.21, and Beijing and Tianjin are far ahead of Hebei in terms of ecology and culture. Specifically, the POI types of eco-environment construction of research area were single; the industrial development construction presented a trend of multi-center gathering; the social harmony construction has formed a gathering circle in Beijing; the eastern and central regions were the dominant regions in terms of institutional improvement construction; and the cultural inheritance construction was the shortest board in research area. (3) The evaluation ranking was sensitive to the population and the size of the area in Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region. When evaluating, the uncertainty caused by the characteristics of indicators and POIs should be fully considered. This article indicated the shortcomings in five dimensions of Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region and can provide reference for the evaluation of regional construction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
216. Impacts of Epihomobrassinolide and Thiamethoxam·Flutolanil·Azoxystrobin on the Continuous Cropping Stress of Pinellia ternata.
- Author
-
Tian, Bing, Tang, Chenglin, Liu, Jiaqi, Wang, Qiuping, Feng, Wenhao, Su, Yue, Zhang, Cheng, and Lei, Yang
- Subjects
LEAF area ,AGRICULTURAL productivity ,SEED yield ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,PLANT growth ,BULBS (Plants) - Abstract
Continuous cropping (CC) stress severely limits the growth and industrial development of Pinellia ternata. Epihomobrassinolide (EBR) is a natural product that widely participates in many the physiological activities of many plants. Thiamethoxam·flutolanil·azoxystrobin (TFA) has been registered as a seed coating agent in crop production. In this work, the effects of seeds soaked with EBR, seeds coated with TFA, and their co-application on the plant growth, electrophysiological information (as physiological activities related to plant electrical signals), leaf photosynthesis, plant resistance, bulb quality, and yield of CC P. ternata were evaluated. The aim of this work is to excogitate a practicable agronomic measure for ameliorating the growth of CC P. ternata. The results show that soaking the seeds with EBR or coating the seeds with TFA could effectively enhance the plant height, leaf area, and stem diameter of CC P. ternata, promote its emergence seedling ratio, and decrease its inverted seedling ratio, and their associated application was found to be more efficient. Additionally, their associated application effectively enhanced the intrinsic capacitance (IC), intracellular water metabolism, nutrient transport, and metabolic activity and decreased the intrinsic resistance (IR), impedance (IZ), capacitive reactance (IXc), and inductive reactance (IXL). Meanwhile, their associated application could reliably enhance the photosynthetic capacity and stress resistance, and effectively improve the bulb quality and yield. This study emphasizes that the associated application of seeds soaked with a 0.004% aqueous EBR solution diluted 1000 times and seeds coated with a 24% TFA flowable concentrate at 1.6 mL kg
−1 seed can be used as a novel and practicable technology for alleviating the CC stress of P. ternata and ameliorating its growth, electrophysiological information, resistance, quality, and yield. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
217. El abastecimiento de agua en una ciudad industrial: Bilbao (España), 1877-1936.
- Author
-
Larrinaga Rodríguez, Carlos
- Abstract
Copyright of Water & Landscape (WAL) / Agua & Territorio (AYT) is the property of Editorial de la Universidad de Jaen and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
218. THE IMPACT OF AGRICULTURAL VALUE CHAINS ON SUSTAINABLE INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA.
- Author
-
Osinowo, Olatokunbo H. and Oseni, Isiaq O.
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL equipment ,VALUE chains ,HUMAN capital ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,RAW materials - Abstract
This research identifies the critical challenges surrounding agricultural value chains and their role in fostering sustainable industrial development in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) between 1990 and 2022, utilizing the Panel Least Squares (PLS) technique. The paper reports that agricultural value added (p < 0.01), farm machinery (p < 0.05), human capital (p < 0.01), and access to electricity (p < 0.01) exhibited a positive and significant influence on industrial sector output. Conversely, agricultural raw materials exports (p < 0.01) had a negative and significant impact on industrial sector output (p < 0.01). In conclusion, the study underscores the critical role of agricultural value chains in fueling sustainable industrial development in SSA and recommends that policymakers formulate plans to leverage agricultural value chains as catalysts for enduring economic growth and development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
219. INOVAÇÕES NA INDUSTRIALIZAÇÃO DA TILÁPIA.
- Author
-
Fernandes Oliveira, Diana Carla, Hipólito Souza, Roberta, Corrêa Albergaria, Francielly, Souza Miranda, Ana Luiza, Aleixo Batista, Giovani, de Sousa Gomes, Maria Emília, Souza Ramos, Alcinéia de Lemos, and Fonseca de Freitas, Rilke Tadeu
- Subjects
SCIENTIFIC literature ,FOOD habits ,SCIENCE databases ,TILAPIA ,BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases ,INDUSTRIALIZATION - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Foco (Interdisciplinary Studies Journal) is the property of Revista Foco and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
220. The Demographic Transition and Rural Industrialization in China.
- Author
-
Huang, Qing, Xie, Yu, and Zhang, Xiaobo
- Subjects
DEMOGRAPHIC transition ,RURAL industries ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,LABOR mobility ,INTERNAL migration ,SEX ratio - Abstract
The potential effect of a demographic transition on industrialization is of interest to scholars in both demography and economics. This study contributes to the literature by providing empirical evidence that a demographic transition creates population pressure that can facilitate rural industrialization. By studying China's rapid demographic transition in the late twentieth century before massive internal labor migration took off and linking it to large regional variations in the process of rural industrialization in the wake of the country's market-oriented reforms, we find that initial local population pressure is positively associated with subsequent rural industrial development, proxied by the extensive growth in local privately and collectively owned enterprises. Population pressure was more significantly associated with rural industrialization than other demographic factors considered, such as birthrate, dependency ratio, and sex ratio at younger ages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
221. The industrial degradation of the workplace that Thorstein Veblen overlooked.
- Author
-
Wisman, Jon D
- Subjects
CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,CAPITALISM ,NOBILITY (Social class) ,SOCIAL institutions ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,WORK experience (Employment) ,CONSPICUOUS consumption - Abstract
Thorstein Veblen gave special importance to work. He claimed that once humans became tool users, their work activity was driven by an instinct of workmanship. This instinct is 'an object of attention and sentiment in its own right' beyond providing provisioning and serving another instinct, that of parental bent, or society's wellbeing. Given appropriate social institutions, 'labor might... assume that character of nobility in the eyes of society at large'. Yet, Veblen took little notice that during his lifetime between 1857 and 1929, the rapid industrialisation of the American economy massively proletarianised workers, greatly degrading their work experience. In Europe, this proletarianisation and degradation of the work process had begun centuries earlier with the rise of capitalism, and greatly accelerated with rapid industrialisation during Veblen's lifetime. Although Veblen addressed how capitalism, as the latest predatory society, exploited workers, he presented industrialisation of the work process as positive for workers. This article first surveys the process of proletarianisation, focussing on the American experience. It then explores Veblen's understanding of the impact of industrialisation on workers and how he missed a far-reaching labour-degrading process that was important in provoking massive violent insurrection, and which had earlier been addressed by political economists as diverse as Adam Smith and Karl Marx. Because he failed to recognise the degradation of the work process that accompanied industrialisation, he missed its contributing role in the explosion of conspicuous consumption by Americans of all classes, the subject of his most renowned work, The Theory of the Leisure Class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
222. Regeneration of Black Powders of Waste Lithium Iron Phosphate Battery Produced by Large‐Scale Industrialization.
- Author
-
Jiang, Xin, Zhang, Huan, Li, Ruiqi, Jin, Yachao, Song, Li, and Zhang, Mingdao
- Subjects
INDUSTRIALIZATION ,WASTE recycling ,POWDERS ,LITHIUM cells ,BATTERY industry ,CATHODES ,ALUMINUM-lithium alloys - Abstract
Because the waste battery materials in the industry usually come from a rough shredding process, the most available waste battery materials consist of both cathode and anode materials. However, the separate recycling of waste cathode and anode materials requires a significant investment of time and manpower. Investigation on the rational disposal of mixed cathode/anode materials is in great need for the large‐scale recycling of spent lithium‐ion batteries. Taking the mixed materials of waste LiFePO4 cathode and graphite anode as the research object, this article puts forward a simple solid‐state method to effectively solve the problems in waste LiFePO4 materials such as structural defects, lithium site loss, and poor conductivity. By optimizing the concentration of the reducing agent and lithium supplement agent, the optimal regeneration condition for material is obtained. Ultimately, the obtained LiFePO4 material achieves efficient electrochemical performances. The first‐round capacity reaches 132 mAh g−1, accounting 84.6% of the new material (0.05 C). After 100 cycles in 1 C, the capacity remains at 99%, exhibiting good cycling stability. The total cost of the regenerated LiFePO4 material has been calculated to be only 41.2% of the new material cost. This work provides new ideas for the regeneration of waste LiFePO4 material by large‐scale industrialization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
223. Rational design of practical layered transition metal oxide cathode materials for sodium-ion batteries.
- Author
-
Wang, Yan, Ding, Ning, Zhang, Rui, Jin, Guanhua, Sun, Dan, Tang, Yougen, and Wang, Haiyan
- Abstract
Sodium-ion batteries (SIBs), which serve as alternatives or supplements to lithium-ion batteries, have been developed rapidly in recent years. Designing advanced high-performance layered Na
x TMO2 cathode materials is beneficial for accelerating the commercialization of SIBs. Herein, the recent research progress on scalable synthesis methods, challenges on the path to commercialization and practical material design strategies for layered Nax TMO2 cathode materials is summarized. Co-precipitation method and solid-phase method are commonly used to synthesize Nax TMO2 on mass production and show their own advantages and disadvantages in terms of manufacturing cost, operative difficulty, sample quality and so on. To overcome drawbacks of layered Nax TMO2 cathode materials and meet the requirements for practical application, a detailed and deep understanding of development trends of layered Nax TMO2 cathode materials is also provided, including high specific energy materials, high-entropy oxides, single crystal materials, wide operation temperature materials and high air stability materials. This work can provide useful guidance in developing practical layered Nax TMO2 cathode materials for commercial SIBs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
224. Analysis of ripple effect of Chinese textile and clothing industry based on input-output model.
- Subjects
CLOTHING industry ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,TEXTILE industry ,INPUT-output analysis ,RAW materials - Abstract
In Older to explCMe the cunwit development status and inwact of China's textile and clothing industry, the latest input-output tables of Qlina for the years 2012, 2015, 2017, 2018 and 2020 published by the National Bureau of Jftetjetics were used for empirical analysis through input-output models. The results show that China's textile and clothing industry has the nature of producing raw materials, belongs to the high to medWtf input rate, low value-added industry, intermediate product industry sector, and has a significant impact on other industrial sectors, with a more obvious driving effect on the national economy. When afianges occur in the textile and clothing industry sector, the driving effecBpn the closely related industry sectors is relatively high, but the promoting effect of changes in other sectors on China's textile and clothing industry is relatively small. In this regard, it is recommended that China's textile and clothing industry seize the opportunity to upgrade its industry, enhance industrial connections, increase product added value, build its own brand, and promote industrial development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
225. The role of education in moderating the impact of development on environmental sustainability in OECD countries
- Author
-
Muskan Sahu, Twinkle Prusty, Waleed M. Alahdal, Akmalia Mohamad Ariff, Faozi A. Almaqtari, and Hafiza Aishah Hashim
- Subjects
CO2 emissions ,Industrialization ,Urbanization ,Education ,Foreign direct investment ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Abstract This study explores the interconnections among industrialization, urbanization, Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), and carbon emissions (CO2e) across 31 OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) countries from 1998 to 2020. In addition, it analyzes how education moderates these relationships. This study employs CO2e as the explained variable, while industrialization, urbanization, and FDI serve as explanatory variables, with education as a moderator. This research utilized Hierarchical regression analysis to examine how education moderates the associations among industrialization, urbanization, FDI, and CO2e. Additionally, to validate the reliability of our results, we utilized the Generalized Method of Moments (GMM). The results of this study imply that CO2e levels increase with the level of industrialization and urbanization. The pursuit of education also contributed to the increase in CO2e. Moreover, education and industrialization have detrimental effects on CO2e. To fill this gap in the existing literature, this study investigates the relationship between industrialization, urbanization, FDI, and CO2e, a domain with scarce empirical investigations. Furthermore, this study contributes uniquely to the literature by investigating the moderating influence of education on the relationships between independent variables and CO2e. This original aspect of this research aims to enhance our understanding of the complex connections between these factors.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
226. External Financial Flows and Domestic Credit Volatility Effect on Industrialization in Selected African Countries
- Author
-
Wushibba Bako
- Subjects
africa ,volatility ,growth ,financial flows ,external finance ,industrialization ,foreign direct investment ,remittances ,Economics as a science ,HB71-74 ,Business ,HF5001-6182 - Abstract
Countries all over the world focus on industrialization as a foundation for rapid economic development and unemployment reduction. Without stable external and domestic finance, we cannot achieve this goal. Financial volatility has an impact on a country’s industrialization process. The aim of this study is to determine how external and domestic credit volatility affect industrialization in Africa. Data for some selected countries for 1992–2020 was used. The author used the Prais-Winsten regression method with Panel Corrected Standard Errors (PCSE) to estimate and analyze the model. Descriptive and quantitative methods of analysis were also used to analyze the long-balanced panel data set for the 17 selected African countries with available data. The results showed a combination of positive and negative effects of financial volatility on industrialization in Africa. The study concludes that domestic credit volatility has adversely affected industrialization in Africa and recommends the development of financial institutions on the continent through recapitalization, skilled manpower development and innovative development of different financial instruments.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
227. Anorexia, Bulimia, and the Embodiment of Capitalist Consumer Culture
- Author
-
Weinreb, Alice
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
228. Imperialism and Treaty Port Industrialization
- Author
-
Chi-Kong, Lai
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
229. CFD analysis of shock/water column interaction using OpenFOAM.
- Author
-
Vitulano, Maria Cristina, Mezzacapo, Antonio, and Stefano, Giuliano De
- Subjects
- *
SHOCK tubes , *COMPLEX fluids , *SHOCK waves , *INDUSTRIALIZATION , *INDUSTRIAL research - Abstract
The interaction between a traveling shock wave and a cylindrical water column was predicted using the open-source CFD toolbox OpenFOAM. The two-dimensional flow in a shock tube device was simulated by using the volume-of-fluid method for tracking the transient interface between the two immiscible fluids. The analysis was based on the Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes approach, where an eddy-viscosity model was supplied for the turbulence closure. The acceptably accurate results achieved for this complex fluids engineering problem confirmed the viability of this toolbox for industrial research and development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
230. Performance analysis of 1 PK split AC with variation of capillary and refrigerant pipe length R410a.
- Author
-
Miharja, Jaja, Lesmana, Adin, Adri, and Gea, Yedidiza
- Subjects
- *
CAPILLARY tubes , *REFRIGERANTS , *REFRIGERATION & refrigerating machinery , *MACHINE parts , *CAPILLARIES , *INDUSTRIALIZATION - Abstract
Technological developments in the industrial sector are overgrowing from time to time—especially the machining part and the demands of consumers who want workpieces of good quality and efficiency. Product quality is an absolute thing that must be considered in the machining process, especially in the cooling machine. The capillary tube in the Air Conditioner engine expansion device is essential because it connects two different pressure sections, high pressure, and low pressure. Although in this study, the method used is the experimental method, the practical approach serves to determine how effective the variation of the length of the capillary tube is on the performance of the 1 PK split AC cooling machine with capillary pipe lengths of 70 cm, 60 cm, and 50 cm, diameter of 3.4 mm, parameters determine performance. AC by determining its COP value. The results of the research conducted for 60 minutes showed that the variation of the capillary tube length on the version of the LG branded Split 1 PK AC led to the highest COP results in modifying the 70 cm capillary tube length of 6.8557 kJ/kg. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
231. Inspiration or indication? Evaluating the qualities of design inspiration boards created using text to image generative AI.
- Author
-
Ranscombe, Charlie, Tan, Linus, Goudswaard, Mark, and Snider, Chris
- Subjects
ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,MEDICAL care ,DIGITAL twins ,EVALUATION - Abstract
This study explores the application of image generative AI to support design process by creating inspiration boards. Through an evaluative study, we compare the diversity, quantity, fidelity, and ambiguity of boards generated by image generative AI and traditional methods. The results highlight how generative AI produces a quantity of images, it exhibits limited diversity compared to traditional methods. This suggests a tendency for supporting interpolation rather than extrapolation of ideas, in turn providing insights on best practice and into the optimal stage for its application. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
232. Self-optimizing digital factory twin: an industrial use case.
- Author
-
Nigischer, Christian, Reiterer, Florian, Bougain, Sébastien, and Grafinger, Manfred
- Subjects
DIGITAL twins ,DISCRETE event simulation ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,SIMULATION methods & models ,ACCURACY - Abstract
Digital Twins (DTs) are intended to be utilized for a wide range of applications, promising benefits like visualization, monitoring, simulation and control of a physical system. Not only the development of a DT for a production facility is a time-consuming task, but also to keep the virtual counterpart up to date in the use phase. In this work, the implementation of an industrial-scale DT of an automotive supplier production site based on a Discrete-Event Simulation (DES) model with self-optimization capabilities for easier maintainability and increased simulation accuracy is presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
233. Integration of sustainability into product development: insights from an industry survey.
- Author
-
Vilochani, Sachira, McAloone, Tim C., and Pigosso, Daniela C. A.
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,NEW product development ,SUSTAINABLE development ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Sustainable Product Development (SPD) enables the systematic incorporation of sustainability into product development and can be achieved by implementing a number of management practices. An industry survey was conducted to investigate the capability of manufacturing companies to apply a consolidated set of 61 SPD management practices. The results indicate that despite the high interest for SPD, the uptake of SPD practices in industry is still behind the state-of-the-art literature. Hence, a greater improvement opportunity exists in the industrial uptake in SPD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
234. Assessment of empowerment via inclusion of people in product lifecycle processes.
- Author
-
Yaldiz, Naz and Chakrabarti, Amaresh
- Subjects
PRODUCT life cycle ,PRODUCT management ,SELF-efficacy ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,SOCIAL values - Abstract
To address the issue of unbalanced development during a product's lifecycle, a change in the approach to product development processes is necessary. One way to achieve this is by development of the product that encourages the inclusion of people in the entire lifecycle. Inclusion is intended to influence societal empowerment via sharing of power among the people included in the lifecycle. This study proposes a framework for assessment of empowerment by the inclusion of people within a product lifecycle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. Chronobiology of pupil dilation in design students during idea generation.
- Author
-
Colombo, Samuele, Gero, John S., Mazza, Alessandro, and Cantamessa, Marco
- Subjects
CHRONOBIOLOGY ,EDUCATIONAL background ,DESIGNERS ,COGNITIVE load ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Chronobiology studies physiological variations due to the time of day, an unexplored factor in design research. This paper explores the effect of time of day on designers' physiological responses in idea generation. Convergent (CT) and divergent (DT) thinking, as building blocks of designing, are explored using pupil dilation as a proxy for cognitive load. Time of day and educational background are explored for engineering and industrial designers. Results show a larger pupil diameter in the afternoon than in the morning, especially for DT, with higher values for industrial designers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
236. A novel heuristic approach to detect induced forming defects using point cloud scans.
- Author
-
Saeed, Muhammad Shahrukh, Faisal, Sheharyar, Eisenbart, Boris, Kreimeyer, Matthias, Khan, Muhammad Hamas, Arshad, Muhammad Zeeshan, Radjef, Racim, Wagner, Markus, and Nadeem, Eiman
- Subjects
CLOUD computing ,HEURISTIC algorithms ,METHODOLOGY ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,EVALUATION - Abstract
The research paper delves into the importance of point cloud data obtained from 3D scanning technology ensuring quality control in industrial settings. It presents a new heuristic approach that utilizes the wavelet algorithm and other techniques to detect and characterize induced forming defects accurately. The proposed approach offers more flexibility, ease of use, and better results based on descriptive and prescriptive analyses from DRM. The results demonstrate that the wavelet algorithm was successful in identifying and characterizing forming defects in point cloud data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
237. Learnings from developing a custom virtual assembly environment for mountability issues of cooling cabinets.
- Author
-
Hackenberg, Georg and Zehetner, Christian
- Subjects
COMPUTER simulation ,AIRCRAFT cabins ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,VIRTUAL reality ,TURBINES - Abstract
Various industries use computer simulation for verifying product properties in early phases of development. Traditionally, such properties include the stability of mechanical structures or the efficiency of aircraft turbines. More recently, research also focuses on the mountability of industrial products using virtual assembly. While research on virtual assembly already started in the mid-1990s, the applicability in different industries remains largely unclear today. To advance the state-of-the-art, in this paper we present learnings from developing a virtual assembly environment for cooling cabinets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
238. A review on cloud computing security challenges, attacks and its countermeasures.
- Author
-
Arunkumar, M. and Ashokkumar, K.
- Subjects
- *
CLOUD computing security measures , *CLOUD computing , *INDUSTRIALIZATION , *COMPUTING platforms , *SOFTWARE as a service , *SECURITY systems - Abstract
The security challenges are more in the area of Cloud computing platform. The On-demand service of Cloud Computing secures a vital role in the industrial development and other IT sectors. This paper will try to provide the information based on the current threats and attacks on Cloud Computing and the solution to those attacks. Cloud Computing provides various set of service models like Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS), Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) and Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) respectively. The cloud security measures are still a challenging task for organizations and other IT Sectors to handle the external attacks. Concluding that this survey will leads to give an overview of threats, attacks and vulnerabilities in the era of Cloud platform as well as some of the countermeasures to protect the cloud. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. Structural change, productive development, and capital flows: does financial "bonanza" cause premature deindustrialization?
- Author
-
Botta, Alberto, Yajima, Giuliano Toshiro, and Porcile, Gabriel
- Subjects
DEINDUSTRIALIZATION ,CAPITAL movements ,CAPITAL controls ,DEVELOPING countries ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Recent contributions to the literature on industrialization and development have confirmed that manufacturing continues to play a key role as a driver of economic development. As a corollary, these contributions highlight the importance of premature industrialization as a barrier to economic development and as one of the main sources of the middle-income trap. In this paper, we analyze the factors that may have hindered industrial development in the past four decades. In particular, we focus on the role of (non-Foreign Direct Investment) net capital inflows as a potential source of premature deindustrialization. We consider a sample of 36 developed and developing countries from 1980 to 2017, with major emphasis on the case of emerging and developing economies (EDEs) in the context of increasing financial integration. We show that periods of abundant capital inflows may have caused a significant contraction of manufacturing share to employment and GDP, as well as the decrease of the economic complexity index. We also show that the phenomena of "perverse" structural changes are significantly more relevant in EDE countries than in advanced ones and that they may similarly occur across EDE countries, regardless of structural differences in the way manufacturing contributed to their development. Based on such evidence, we conclude with some policy suggestions highlighting capital controls and external macroprudential measures taming international capital mobility as useful policy tools for promoting long-run productive development on top of strengthening (short-term) financial and macroeconomic stability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
240. Technology transfer, technological progress and economic growth: The role of institutional quality in Pakistan
- Author
-
Nazeer, Nazia and Rasiah, Rajah
- Published
- 2024
241. Conservatism as localism: Sometime in Steubenville, Ohio
- Author
-
McCann, Daryl
- Published
- 2024
242. Gendered work arrangement and precarious working conditions: A descriptive case study of special economic zones
- Author
-
Parwez, Sazzad, Khan, Gazala, and Khan, Tabassum
- Published
- 2024
243. The Reciprocal Development of Craft and Industry in Twentieth-Century Japan Through the Lens of Plywood as a Material
- Author
-
Ko, Kaon, Botti, Giaime, Editor-in-Chief, Mangi, Eugenio, editor, and Shinohara, Hiroyuki, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
244. Distributed and Bottom-Up Investments to Promote Innovation for Inclusive Industrialization
- Author
-
Mamphiswana, Rendani, Sinha, Saurabh, Addaney, Michael, Section editor, Leal Filho, Walter, Series Editor, Abubakar, Ismaila Rimi, editor, da Silva, Izael, editor, Pretorius, Rudi, editor, and Tarabieh, Khaled, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
245. Productivity and Labor Force Participation in the Ancash Region of Peru: Implications for Sustainable Development Goals 8 and 9
- Author
-
Garcia-Ramos, Taryns, Cruz-Castillo, Nelson, Roca-Vasquez, Karim, Cuno-Chunga, Uvaldo, Asnate-Salazar, Edwin, Hamdan, Allam, Editorial Board Member, Al Madhoun, Wesam, Editorial Board Member, Alareeni, Bahaaeddin, Editor-in-Chief, Baalousha, Mohammed, Editorial Board Member, Elgedawy, Islam, Editorial Board Member, Hussainey, Khaled, Editorial Board Member, Eleyan, Derar, Editorial Board Member, Hamdan, Reem, Editorial Board Member, Salem, Mohammed, Editorial Board Member, Jallouli, Rim, Editorial Board Member, Assaidi, Abdelouahid, Editorial Board Member, Nawi, Noorshella Binti Che, Editorial Board Member, AL-Kayid, Kholoud, Editorial Board Member, Wolf, Martin, Editorial Board Member, El Khoury, Rim, Editorial Board Member, Jaheer Mukthar, K. P., editor, Mansour, Nadia, editor, and Asis, Edwin Ramirez, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
246. Primary Exports and Employment at the Subnational Level in Peru: 2007–2021 and Its Implications for Sustainable Development Goal 9
- Author
-
Cáceres, Jorge Manrique, Asencio, Roger Rurush, Sigueñas, Edme Vergara, Ramirez-Asis, Hernan, Hamdan, Allam, Editorial Board Member, Al Madhoun, Wesam, Editorial Board Member, Alareeni, Bahaaeddin, Editor-in-Chief, Baalousha, Mohammed, Editorial Board Member, Elgedawy, Islam, Editorial Board Member, Hussainey, Khaled, Editorial Board Member, Eleyan, Derar, Editorial Board Member, Hamdan, Reem, Editorial Board Member, Salem, Mohammed, Editorial Board Member, Jallouli, Rim, Editorial Board Member, Assaidi, Abdelouahid, Editorial Board Member, Nawi, Noorshella Binti Che, Editorial Board Member, AL-Kayid, Kholoud, Editorial Board Member, Wolf, Martin, Editorial Board Member, El Khoury, Rim, Editorial Board Member, Jaheer Mukthar, K. P., editor, Mansour, Nadia, editor, and Asis, Edwin Ramirez, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Research on IP Creation and Industrialization Development Strategy of Silk Road Spirit from the Perspective of Cultural Sociology
- Author
-
Chen, Yiying, Striełkowski, Wadim, Editor-in-Chief, Black, Jessica M., Series Editor, Butterfield, Stephen A., Series Editor, Chang, Chi-Cheng, Series Editor, Cheng, Jiuqing, Series Editor, Dumanig, Francisco Perlas, Series Editor, Al-Mabuk, Radhi, Series Editor, Scheper-Hughes, Nancy, Series Editor, Urban, Mathias, Series Editor, Webb, Stephen, Series Editor, Zhan, Zehui, editor, Liu, Jian, editor, Elshenawi, Dina M., editor, and Duester, Emma, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
248. Recent Advancements and Future Prospects of Phytoremediation
- Author
-
Sharma, Anjali, Mittal, Vishnu, Aashima, Sharma, Devkant, Madhav, Sughosh, editor, Gupta, Gyan Prakash, editor, Yadav, Rajiv Kumar, editor, Mishra, Ritu, editor, and Hullebusch, Eric van, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. Application of Cloud Computing in the Industrialization System Construction of Mountain Outdoor Teaching Base
- Author
-
Jing, Shen, Sha, Li, Akan, Ozgur, Editorial Board Member, Bellavista, Paolo, Editorial Board Member, Cao, Jiannong, Editorial Board Member, Coulson, Geoffrey, Editorial Board Member, Dressler, Falko, Editorial Board Member, Ferrari, Domenico, Editorial Board Member, Gerla, Mario, Editorial Board Member, Kobayashi, Hisashi, Editorial Board Member, Palazzo, Sergio, Editorial Board Member, Sahni, Sartaj, Editorial Board Member, Shen, Xuemin, Editorial Board Member, Stan, Mircea, Editorial Board Member, Jia, Xiaohua, Editorial Board Member, Zomaya, Albert Y., Editorial Board Member, Zhang, Yinjun, editor, and Shah, Nazir, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. Female Factory Owners in the Industry of Moscow, 1840s–1860s
- Author
-
Ulianova, Galina, Diebolt, Claude, Series Editor, Haupert, Michael, Series Editor, and Le Chapelain, Charlotte, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.