5,988 results
Search Results
102. Comment on CASH, PAPER, AND ELECTRONIC PAYMENTS: A CROSS-COUNTRY ANALYSIS.
- Author
-
Avery, Robert B.
- Subjects
PAYMENT systems ,FORECASTING ,ELECTRONIC funds transfers ,ECONOMICS & culture ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
The author comments on the paper "Cash, Paper, and Electronic Payments: A Cross-Country Analysis," by David B. Humphrey, Lawrence B. Pulley, and Jukka M. Vesala, published in the November 2, 1996 issue of "The Journal of Money, Credit and Banking." He states that the writers expand on the payments system framework to consider cross-country variation, but suggests that if countries are idiosyncratic with basic cultural factors causing differences in the payment systems rather than the countries being at different development stages, then cross-country comparisons can give misleading forecasts. He comments on differences between the U.S. and several European countries concerning noncash transactions.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
103. New perspectives on business model innovations in emerging markets.
- Author
-
Kumar, V. and Srivastava, Rajendra
- Subjects
BUSINESS models ,INNOVATIONS in business ,EMERGING markets ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
This article discusses the ten research papers compiled for the Journal of Academy of Marketing Science (JAMS) Special Issue, which has the express purpose of laying new groundwork for the understanding of business model innovations in emerging markets. Altogether, the papers delineate a new organizational framework for doing business in emerging markets and for optimizing gains from emerging market innovations. This Special Issue defines and clearly differentiates emerging market innovations (EMIs) from developed market innovations (DMIs) and provides a generalizable framework. The proposed framework corresponds to the process whereby developed market firms do business in emerging markets, capitalize on the innovative potential therein, reap the benefits and drawbacks of reverse innovations back to developed markets, and, finally, continually refine and optimize their innovation strategies. This study offers crucial managerial guidance through discussion on marketing to the Bottom-of-Pyramid (BoP), the importance of Grassroots Innovation (GRI), the necessity of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) strategies, and the role of employees in open innovation. Lastly, this Special Issue posits conceptual and methodological limitations and future research direction to capture the emerging market phenomena entirely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
104. THE ESSENCE AND IMPLICATIONS OF INTEGRATED LOCAL DEVELOPMENT PLANNING.
- Author
-
Radovanović, Tihomir, Grandov, Zorka, and Filijović, Marko
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,SOCIAL forces ,DEVELOPED countries ,SOCIAL role ,SOCIAL development - Abstract
Local development planning (i.e. development planning of municipalities and cities) in all countries has always played an important social role. For this reason, in the last couple of decades, this area is regulated by adequate national laws, which differ in many ways due to insufficiently developed scientifically based local development theory. According to this, in the presently constituted first vision of the theory, two local planning systems were identified. The first system with a long tradition is called a partial system since the state with its development interests is exclusively responsible for all local and overall social development in a certain country. The second, new system, is called an integrated system and in it, both state and the most influential social forces, which have fought hard for such a role, participate together as partners. The integrated system has numerous advantages when compared to the partial system of local planning and is therefore, especially in developed countries, the reason for switching from partial to integrated system. This scientific paper has been created to support this, especially because of the insufficiently developed local planning theory, with the goal to contribute to the development of the local integrated development systems and the projection of its general implications on the local government, its nation state as well as the international community. In this paper, adequate research methods, primarily integrated, were used and the obtained results imply that when using this system, positive fundamental social changes are caused, which, especially in the less developed countries, facilitate faster and more efficient catching up with the developed countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
105. [A pattern of age-specific fertility and its use in estimating the total fertility rate].
- Author
-
De Simoni A
- Subjects
- Europe, Italy, Logistic Models, Population, Population Dynamics, Research, Birth Rate, Demography, Developed Countries, Fertility, Maternal Age, Models, Theoretical, Statistics as Topic
- Published
- 1982
106. Demographic change and income distribution.
- Author
-
Von Weizsacker RK
- Subjects
- Economics, Financial Management, Health Workforce, Population, Population Characteristics, Research, Socioeconomic Factors, Age Factors, Demography, Developed Countries, Employment, Financing, Government, Income, Models, Theoretical, Population Dynamics, Social Security, Taxes
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
107. Does population ageing impact inflation?
- Author
-
Radulović, Marija and Kostić, Milan
- Subjects
OLDER people ,POPULATION aging ,PRICE inflation ,DEVELOPING countries ,MONETARY unions ,DEMOGRAPHIC change - Abstract
Copyright of Stanovništvo is the property of Demographic Research Center of Institute of Social Sciences 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
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
108. DOES FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT LEAD TO ECONOMIC GROWTH? EVIDENCE FROM DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, AND LEAST DEVELOPED COUNTRIES.
- Author
-
Marjanac, Dražen and Grujić, Miloš
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,FOREIGN investments ,ECONOMIC expansion ,DEVELOPED countries ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
Copyright of Proceedings of the Faculty of Economics in East Sarajevo / Zbornik Radova Ekonomskog Fakulteta u Istočnom Sarajevu is the property of University of East Sarajevo 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
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
109. The Case of the Missing Currency
- Author
-
Sprenkle, Case M.
- Published
- 1993
110. Population Migration and the Spread of Types 1 and 2 Human Immunodeficiency Viruses
- Author
-
Quinn, Thomas C.
- Published
- 1994
111. Human Ecology and Behavior and Sexually Transmitted Bacterial Infections
- Author
-
Holmes, King K.
- Published
- 1994
112. Thoughts on the Use (and Abuse) of OR/MS in the Planning and Management of Development (Or: Can OR/MS Help in the Planning and Management of Revolutions?)
- Author
-
Sagasti, Francisco R.
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
113. Anglophone African, Asian & American Black Newspaper Coverage of the United Nations, 1949-1977
- Author
-
Petersen, Keith S.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
114. International Law Protection of Cross-Border Transmission of Personal Information Based on Cloud Computing and Big Data.
- Author
-
Ziyi, Xu
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL law ,DATA privacy ,CIVIL rights ,CLOUD computing ,BIG data ,DEVELOPED countries ,PERSONALLY identifiable information - Abstract
Cross-border data flow brings new growth and opportunities for the development of digital economy, but disordered cross-border data flow may damage national security, public interests, enterprise interests, and data sovereignty. At present, the unified rules for global regulation of cross-border data flow have not yet been formed. The existing rules are mainly led by developed countries like Europe and the United States. There is huge room for improvement in the international legal protection of cross-border transmission of personal information. This paper introduces the privacy protection mechanism of personal information data under the digital trade environment in China, that is, the privacy protection framework under the background of big data, cloud computing, and the cloud service selection method of data life cycle privacy protection. At the same time, we combined with many problems existing in the cross-border transmission of personal privacy information in China and compared with foreign advanced experience, and this paper puts forward China's response path to clarify the obligations of data controllers and exporters, improve the responsibilities of regulators, improve the legislation of cross-border data flow, and improve the operability of the law; we vigorously carry out international cooperation and actively participate in the formulation of international rules, so as to further protect the rights and interests of personal privacy information protection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
115. Superior recycled fiber industries leads pack in deinked pulp market
- Author
-
Rabasca, L
- Published
- 1994
116. Who continues to work after retirement age?
- Author
-
Zaccagni, Sarah, Sigsgaard, Anna Munk, Vrangbaek, Karsten, and Noermark, Laura Pirhonen
- Subjects
RETIREMENT age ,RETIREMENT policies ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DEVELOPED countries ,PRODUCTIVE life span - Abstract
Background: Demographic changes in all industrialized countries have led to a keen interest in extending working lives for older workers. To achieve this goal, it is essential to understand the patterns of retirement and specifically what characterizes individuals who continue to work beyond retirement age. Thus, the aim of this paper was to contribute to the international body of empirical knowledge about individuals who continue in the workforce after retirement age. We present evidence from Denmark and examine what characterizes individuals who continue in the workforce after retirement age and investigate the likelihood of continued work after retirement age while controlling for a set of socio-economic and lifestyle factors. Methods: The study population consisted of 5,474 respondents to the Copenhagen Aging and Midlife Biobank (CAMB) 2021 survey, divided into two groups. The first group included subjects (n = 1,293) who stayed longer in the workforce even though they had the possibility to retire. The second group consisted of subjects who had retired full-time at the time of the survey (n = 4,181). Survey data was linked to register data to provide a broader dataset. In order to investigate the heterogeneity between the two groups in terms of important socio-economic, work-related and health-related variables, t-test, Mann-Whitney U (Wilcoxon Rank) test, and chi-square tests were employed. Further, to examine the probability of an individual working after retirement age a logit model with step-wise inclusion was utilized. Results: Overall, individuals who continue to work even though they could retire tend to be wealthier, healthier, and males compared to individuals who are retired full-time. Further, there are more older workers who have partners and are co-habitants than retirees. The likelihood of continuing in the workforce past retirement age is affected by several work-related factors as well as life-style factors. The likelihood of working past retirement age decreases by years spent in the workforce (marginal effect of -0.003), if you have a partner (-0.080) and if your partner is outside of the workforce (marginal effect of -0.106). The likelihood increases by health (marginal effect of -0.044 of moving from excellent/very good health to good health or to fair/poor health, physical working capability (marginal effect of -0.083 of moving from no/some problems to severe problems or cannot work at all) and income (marginal effect of 0.083 from moving from the lowest income-quantile to higher quantiles). Conclusion: These results are in line with the previous literature and suggest the importance of designing retirement policies that tailor the transition toward retirement according to specific characteristics of both the individual and the segment of occupation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
117. A Subsidization Scheme for Maximizing Social Welfare in Mobile Communications Markets.
- Author
-
Agualimpia-Arriaga, Carlos, Vuelvas, José, Páez-Rueda, Carlos-Iván, Correa-Flórez, Carlos Adrián, and Fajardo, Arturo
- Subjects
COMMUNICATION in marketing ,SOCIAL services ,MOBILE games ,NASH equilibrium ,DEVELOPED countries ,CONSTRAINED optimization - Abstract
In contemporary mobile communications markets, various agents or players interact to pursue welfare. Regulatory policies enacted by governments in certain markets aim to maximize social welfare. However, some countries, both least developed and developing, often adopt successful models from developed nations without local market validation. Therefore, network economics serves as a pertinent framework for analyzing such policies. This paper introduces a novel scheme based on constrained optimization problems, where the constraints represent multilevel economic game equilibria within a system model involving three agents: the central planner, the mobile network operator, and the mobile data users. These agents strategically optimize their payoff functions by considering benefit factors and decision variables such as the subsidization factor, pricing, and data consumption. To this end, a three-stage dynamic game is proposed to model the players' interactions, employing the backward induction method to ascertain the subgame perfect equilibrium from the Nash equilibrium. A case study is presented, demonstrating a 31.16% increase in social welfare between scenarios involving no adoption of the subsidization factor and its adoption at the optimal value when the central planner enacts it to other players in the game, even if they do not necessarily attain maximum payoff values. In countries aligning with this proposed model, social welfare is maximized through a subsidization scheme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
118. Revisiting Islamic banking efficiency using multivariate adaptive regression splines.
- Author
-
Saâdaoui, Foued and Khalfi, Monjia
- Subjects
ISLAMIC finance ,SPLINES ,GROSS domestic product ,DEVELOPED countries ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Islamic banking is among rapidly-growing components in the world's financial system. Within its institutions, continuous criteria of efficiency facilitate the evaluation of the impact of the reforms and policies on the banks' performance. In this paper, we employ the Multivariate Adaptive Regression Splines (MARS) method for estimating the efficiency of Islamic banks in developed and developing countries. MARS is a well-known efficient method for the flexible modelling of high-dimensional data. Unlike previous work, using a nonparametric technique of such a robustness instead of parametric approaches contributes to the improvement of the various estimates, which provides investors with accurate and timely information they can immediately react upon for a better decision-making in turbulent times. On the one hand, the results of the experiments show that, in the emerging region, there is evidence of a strong linkage between Islamic banking efficiency and gross domestic product. On the other hand, in the developed region, the efficiency is rather based upon Sharia Supervisory Board and board committees. These outcomes confirm previous works showing that governance-related variables have a significant positive effect on Islamic banking efficiency. Furthermore, the overall MARS-based predictions reveal that Islamic banks operating in developed countries are relatively more efficient than their counterparts in emerging countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
119. Assessment of Green Growth in the Baltic States.
- Author
-
Streimikiene, Dalia
- Subjects
GREEN New Deal (United States) ,NATURAL resources ,ECONOMIC expansion ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
EU Green Deal and US Green New Deal strategies indicate that green growth is at the center of the policy agendas of many developed countries and regions. The green growth is a key element in achieving sustainable development. Green growth is an economic growth strategy that prioritizes human development while guaranteeing that natural resources continue to provide environmental services to the current and future generations to achieve their sustainable development. There are many definitions of green growth, and many indicators and measures have been developed to assess green growth results for countries. The paper aims to analyze green growth indicators and measures and develop a case for a comparative assessment of green growth achievements in the Baltic States. The Baltic States were ranked based on their achievements according to specific dimensions of green growth, and policy recommendations to promote green growth were developed based on conducted research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
120. Exploring Bitcoin dynamics against the backdrop of COVID-19: an investigation of major global events.
- Author
-
Guo, Xiaochun
- Subjects
BITCOIN ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,DEVELOPED countries ,FINANCIAL markets - Abstract
COVID-19 has significantly influenced global financial markets, including Bitcoin. Recent studies have focused on investigating the first wave of the COVID-19 outbreak and accounting for market changes, which were mostly due to the pandemic. This research not only analyzes the contagion effects of COVID-19 but also considers aftermath events beyond the first pandemic wave to examine spillovers of Bitcoin. The study employs Diebold and Yilmaz's method to explore the static and dynamic spillovers of the selected variables and identifies several major global events, including crypto-specific affairs, macroeconomic policies, and geopolitical conflicts, to explain the new market dynamics of Bitcoin using network analysis. The findings identify a few high-contagion periods related to Bitcoin. The paper also found that Bitcoin is more likely to produce extreme returns and is more connected to other markets. Contagion effects "from" and "to" other markets are asymmetrical in terms of arrival time and market response. Bitcoin is more likely to be affected by other markets in extreme situations and receives spillovers from them sooner than it transmits spillovers to others. In the context of various global events, impacts arising from developed countries are stronger. China still has some impact on cryptocurrency markets, but they are waning. Bitcoin is thus not a safe haven from the shocks of global events, but can sometimes work as a hedge or diversifier. The results offer alternative explanations for Bitcoin's different market dynamics and enrich our understanding of Bitcoin's safe haven, hedge, and diversifier properties within a diversified portfolio. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
121. The Evaluation of Industry 5.0 Concepts: Social Network Analysis Approach.
- Author
-
Slavic, Dragana, Marjanovic, Ugljesa, Medic, Nenad, Simeunovic, Nenad, and Rakic, Slavko
- Subjects
SOCIAL network analysis ,VALUE chains ,RESEARCH questions ,INDUSTRY 4.0 ,DEVELOPING countries ,SUSTAINABILITY ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
During 2022 and 2023, Industry 5.0 attracted a lot of attention. Many articles and papers regarding the basics of Industry 5.0, its pillars, and a comparison of Industry 5.0 and Industry 4.0, Society 5.0, and Operator 5.0 have been published. Although the concept of Industry 5.0 is relatively new, companies from developed countries that have a high level of implementation of Industry 4.0 have already started the transition to Industry 5.0. Even though Industry 5.0 enables developing countries to become a part of developed countries' value chains, it is not known which path to Industry 5.0 developing countries are taking. To fill this gap, the authors proposed research questions regarding the key indicators for measuring the levels of implementation of Industry 5.0 approaches in the manufacturing sector of the Republic of Serbia. This research includes insights from 146 manufacturing companies, gathered in 2022 as a part of the European Manufacturing Survey. The main findings of this study show that the most important indicator when it comes to human-centricity is training and competence development of production employees with a task-specific focus; the implementation of measures for improving efficiency in material consumption is significant for achieving sustainability; and the use of standardized and detailed work instructions is crucial in order to become resilient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
122. ICT4D Research: The Lame Duck of the Brazilian Academy of Management.
- Author
-
Antonio Joia, Luiz
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION & communication technologies for development , *INFORMATION resources management , *EMERGING markets , *INFORMATION & communication technologies ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Objectives: nearly 50% of people in developing countries suffer from extreme poverty. Consequently, a debate has emerged about the potential of ICT to improve socio-economic conditions prevailing in impoverished nations. This discussion has given rise to a burgeoning field of research known as ICT for development (ICT4D). However, most academics in the ICT4D arena do not come from developing countries, nor do they reside in these regions -- the main beneficiaries of ICT4D initiatives. This is the case of Brazil, a country characterized by significant socioeconomic disparities, where this field of study has aroused little interest among the scientific community and thus continues to be largely under-researched. Thus, the objective of this paper is to make sense of that phenomenon. Provocations: as most of the ICT4D knowledge base has been generated either by academics who are not originally from developing countries or by academics native to developing countries who currently reside in developed countries, a provocation can be made, namely, considering that ICT4D initiatives can improve the quality of life of people, why haven't Brazilian scholars prioritized research in this area? Conclusion: as a provocative paper, our main objective is to debate on the aforementioned issue. For this, we should listen to the Brazilian Academy of Management -- mainly the academics of the ANPAD's Information Management division -- to address and solve this puzzle, so that ICT4D research in Brazil can be encouraged with a view to causing a real impact on our society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
123. The Eclipse of Religion and Freud's "future of an illusion".
- Author
-
Ferrarotti, Franco
- Subjects
DEVELOPED countries ,RELIGIONS ,SOCIAL facts ,HUMAN beings - Abstract
The main contention of this paper is that, no matter whether one is a true believer or a professed atheist, religion remains a relevant social phenomenon. Serious scholars have written about an eclipse of the sacred in industrial societies through a sad confusion between «sacred» and «religious». The «religious» as a commodity administered by an organized church might well be in a state of crisis. But the «sacred» is actually the meta-human element that makes mankind exist and develop beyond the so-called «laws» of the market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
124. International completeness of death registration.
- Author
-
Karlinsky, Ariel
- Subjects
PROOF & certification of death ,DEVELOPING countries ,VITAL records (Births, deaths, etc.) ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Death registration completeness, the share of deaths captured by countries' vital registration systems, vary substantially across countries. Estimates of completeness, even recent ones, are outdated or contradictory for many countries. OBJECTIVE: We derive the most up-to-date and consistent estimates of death registration completeness in as many countries as possible. RESULTS: Death registration is complete in Europe, North America, and other developed countries. In developing countries, completeness varies by region. While some have complete death registration, many countries completeness ranges from 40% to 75%. Regionally, Africa has lowest death registration completeness, and in many countries no registration data was located. In Latin America and Asia, several countries have improved their registration compared to previously available estimates. CONTRIBUTION: This paper presents the publicly available International Completeness of Death Registration (ICDR) dataset: https://github.com/akarlinsky/death registration. ICDR contains the annual amount of deaths registered and death registration completeness in 193 countries from 2015 to 2019. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
125. The Recoil of Globalization and the Rising Aspects of Slowbalization, De-Globalization, Re-Globalization and Sustainability for Business and Companies.
- Author
-
Benabed, Anis
- Subjects
FOREIGN investments ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,DEVELOPED countries ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
This paper analyzes and presents the recoil of globalization and the rising aspects of slowbalization, de-globalization and re-globalization for business and companies. The analysis and results demonstrated that as globalization united economies and societies, it has led them as well to various challenges where some of them started to de-globalize by moving their business and companies home to avoid the negative impact of globalization and to secure their business values. The rising challenges in the global economy and society have made globalization recoil and move towards the process of slowbalization or de-globalization. The ups and downs in the global GDP, inequality between nations and economies in business values and benefits, the rise of geopolitical conflicts, the expensive technologies and its dominance by developed countries, the slowdown in foreign direct investments (FDIs) are some of the main factors of the slowdown of the process of globalization. In conclusion, there should be an extension and embrace of trade and international business rather than rejecting it to overcome the most pressing challenges of globalization. The reality of re-globalization or even sustainable globalization might be be visible when all the sustainable development goals (SDGs) will be fullfilled. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
126. Revisiting the carbon emissions hypothesis in the developing and developed countries: a new panel cointegration approach.
- Author
-
Du, Chonghua, Xue, Jing, Wang, Weiguo, and Tong, Jian
- Subjects
DEVELOPED countries ,CARBON emissions ,COINTEGRATION ,GLOBAL warming ,ECONOMIC expansion ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Since global warming worsens with economic development and emitted CO
2 is one of the main greenhouse gases, it is important to understand the relationship between CO2 emissions and economic growth. The paper applies a new panel cointegration test with cross-sectional dependence and structural breaks to examine this relationship in developed and developing countries, respectively. The results indicate that the "Environmental Kuznets Curve" does not hold in either group. For developing countries, there is neither linear nor quadratic long-term equilibrium relationship between CO2 emissions and economic growth. For developed countries, the quadratic relationship does exist between CO2 emissions and economic growth, whereas the linear one does not. A half of these countries have inverted U-shaped curves, while the other half have U-shaped curves. Besides, most of these countries are still on the rising stage of the curve. This paper gives new insights for policymakers to keep a balance between sustainable economic growth and suitable environmental quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
127. Does ethnicity affect pain management for people with advanced disease? A mixed methods cross-national systematic review of 'very high' Human Development Index English-speaking countries.
- Author
-
Clarke, Gemma, Chapman, Emma, Crooks, Jodie, Koffman, Jonathan, Ahmed, Shenaz, and Bennett, Michael I.
- Subjects
CINAHL database ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,DEVELOPED countries ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,DEVELOPMENTAL psychobiology ,ETHNIC groups ,THEMATIC analysis ,PAIN management ,PALLIATIVE treatment - Abstract
Background: Racial disparities in pain management have been observed in the USA since the 1990s in settings such as the emergency department and oncology. However, the palliative care context is not well described, and little research has focused outside of the USA or on advanced disease. This review takes a cross-national approach to exploring pain management in advanced disease for people of different racial and ethnic groups. Methods: Mixed methods systematic review. The primary outcome measure was differences in receiving pain medication between people from different racial and ethnic groups. Five electronic databases were searched. Two researchers independently assessed quality using JBI checklists, weighted evidence, and extracted data. The quantitative findings on the primary outcome measure were cross-tabulated, and a thematic analysis was undertaken on the mixed methods studies. Themes were formulated into a conceptual/thematic matrix. Patient representatives from UK ethnically diverse groups were consulted. PRISMA 2020 guidelines were followed. Results: Eighteen papers were included in the primary outcome analysis. Three papers were rated 'High' weight of evidence, and 17/18 (94%) were based in the USA. Ten of the eighteen (56%) found no significant difference in the pain medication received between people of different ethnic groups. Forty-six papers were included in the mixed methods synthesis; 41/46 (89%) were based in the USA. Key themes: Patients from different ethnically diverse groups had concerns about tolerance, addiction and side effects. The evidence also showed: cultural and social doctor-patient communication issues; many patients with unmet pain management needs; differences in pain assessment by racial group, and two studies found racial and ethnic stereotyping. Conclusions: There was not enough high quality evidence to draw a conclusion on differences in receiving pain medication for people with advanced disease from different racial and ethnic groups. The mixed methods findings showed commonalities in fears about pain medication side effects, tolerance and addiction across diverse ethnic groups. However, these fears may have different foundations and are differently prioritised according to culture, faith, educational and social factors. There is a need to develop culturally competent pain management to address doctor-patient communication issues and patients' pain management concerns. Trial registration: PROSPERO-CRD42020167890. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
128. Developing a Multidimensional Financial Inclusion Index: A Comparison Based on Income Groups.
- Author
-
Gharbi, Inès and Kammoun, Aïda
- Subjects
INTEREST rates ,PRINCIPAL components analysis ,ECONOMIC indicators ,LITERACY ,SAVINGS accounts ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
The aim of our paper is to construct a multidimensional financial inclusion (FI) index to measure the level of FI in 91 countries across different income groups. In order to address our research problem, we use the principal component analysis method. This approach addresses the criticism of the arbitrary selection of weights and reflects the degree of financial inclusion in depth. The data are drawn from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Financial Access Survey (FAS), the World Development Indicators (World Bank) and the Global Findex Database during the period of 2004–2020. This paper is the first to consider so many indicators of financial inclusion (13 indicators), belonging to three different dimensions of FI, in order to take into account the maximum number of aspects related to this concept. In addition, unlike previous work, this paper considers both developing and developed countries, which makes it possible to identify differences between them. The proposed index has some advantages. First, it is robust, comparable across countries and has good predictive power in tracking household microeconomic indicators (accounts and savings). It is also well correlated with macroeconomic variables such as literacy rate, poverty, GINI index, real interest rate and employers. Second, our results clearly show that, as a country's income level grows higher, its level of financial inclusion also grows higher. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
129. Scientometric analysis of lipid metabolism in breast neoplasm: 2012–2021.
- Author
-
Xiaobing Lin, Qiuping Yang, Daitian Zheng, Huiting Tian, Lingzhi Chen, Jinyao Wu, Zeqi Ji, Yexi Chen, and Zhiyang Li
- Subjects
LIPID metabolism ,BREAST tumors ,LIPID analysis ,DEVELOPED countries ,DATABASES - Abstract
Introduction: In recent years, more and more studies have proved that lipid metabolism plays an essential role in breast cancer’s proliferation and metastasisand also has a specific significance in predicting survival. Methods: This paper collected data from 725 publications related to lipid metabolism in breast neoplasm from 2012 to 2021 through the Web of Science Core Collection database. Bibliometrix, VOSviewer, and CiteSpace were used for the scientometrics analysis of countries, institutions, journals, authors, keywords, etc. Results: The number of documents published showed an increasing trend, with an average annual growth rate of 14.49%. The United States was the most productive country (n = 223, 30.76%). The journals with the largest number of publications are mostly from developed countries. Except for the retrieved topics, “lipid metabolism” (n = 272) and “breast cancer” (n = 175), the keywords that appeared most frequently were “expression” (n = 151), “fatty-acid synthase” (n = 78), “growth” (n = 72), “metabolism” (n = 67) and “cells“ (n = 66). Discussion: These findings and summaries help reveal the current research status and clarify the hot spots in this field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
130. An institutional view on the relationship between high-performance work system and organizational performance: the role of country of origin.
- Author
-
Zhai, Xiaoxuan and Tian, Xiaowen
- Subjects
COUNTRY of origin (Immigrants) ,ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,DEVELOPED countries ,DEVELOPING countries ,MANUFACTURING industries - Abstract
Purpose: This paper extends the institution theory to examine the relationship between high-performance work system (HPWS) and organizational performance (OP), and analyzes how country of origin interacts with performance measures and industrial affiliation in moderating the HPWS–OP relationship. Design/methodology/approach: The paper collects data of 60,142 firms and establishments in 252 studies published up to December 2021 and employs meta-analysis techniques to test hypotheses on the role of country of origin in moderating the HPWS–OP relationship in conjunction with performance measures and industrial affiliation. Findings: The paper finds that, firstly, there is a positive relationship between HPWS and OP, but the relationship is much stronger in developing than advanced countries. Secondly, the relationship is stronger when OP is measured in operational than financial term in both developing and advanced countries, but the moderating effect of performance measures is stronger in developing than advanced countries. Thirdly, the relationship is stronger in service than manufacturing industries in developing countries, but no such variation is found in advanced countries. Originality/value: The study for the first time unveils the important role of country of origin in interacting with performance measures and industry affiliation to condition the HPWS–OP relationship, and provides a coherent explanation based on institutional theory. The study sheds fresh light on the HPWS–OP relationship, and has important implications for managers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
131. Structural Origins of Poor Health Outcomes in Documented Temporary Foreign Workers and Refugees in High-Income Countries: A Review.
- Author
-
Yang, Borum, Kelly, Clara, Shamputa, Isdore Chola, Barker, Kimberley, and Thi Kim Nguyen, Duyen
- Subjects
CINAHL database ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,HEALTH status indicators ,REFUGEES ,MEDLINE ,TEMPORARY employment ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Despite growing evidence of racial and institutional discrimination on minoritized communities and its negative effect on health, there are still gaps in the current literature identifying health disparities among minoritized communities. This review aims to identify health barriers faced by relatively less studied migrant subgroups including documented temporary foreign workers and refugees residing in high-income Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries focusing on the structural origins of differential health outcomes. We searched Medline, CINAHL, and Embase databases for papers describing health barriers for these groups published in English between 1 January 2011 and 30 July 2021. Two independent reviewers conducted a title, abstract, and full text screening with any discrepancies resolved by consensus or a third reviewer. Extracted data were analyzed using an inductive thematic analysis. Of the 381 articles that underwent full-text review, 27 articles were included in this review. We identified housing conditions, immigration policies, structural discrimination, and exploitative labour practices as the four major emerging themes that impacted the health and the access to healthcare services of our study populations. Our findings highlight the multidimensional nature of health inequities among migrant populations and a need to examine how the broader context of these factors influence their daily experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
132. Recent Research Progress in Intelligent Construction: A Comparison between China and Developed Countries.
- Author
-
Yan, Jing-Ke, Zheng, Zhe, Zhou, Yu-Cheng, Lin, Jia-Rui, Deng, Yi-Chuan, and Lu, Xin-Zheng
- Subjects
DEVELOPED countries ,DEVELOPING countries ,KNOWLEDGE representation (Information theory) ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,MULTISENSOR data fusion ,KEYWORD searching - Abstract
Intelligent construction (IC) has emerged as a new approach to transforming the architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) industry through the integration of advanced information technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) and the Internet of Things (IoT). However, due to its interdisciplinary nature, the relevant documents on IC are diverse and fragmented. To provide a comprehensive understanding of research progress and future opportunities in IC and to offer suggestions for both developing and developed countries, this study employed VOSviewer and Gephi to conduct a comparative review of relevant literature from the 21st century. A keyword search of Web of Science (WOS) identified 2788 relevant documents which were subjected to an overall co-citation and co-authorship analysis. To illustrate the differences between developing and developed countries, China, a representative developing country, was taken as the candidate to be compared with developed countries via a co-occurrence analysis. Differences between China and developed countries in the three sub-directions of IC, research foundation and domain knowledge transformation; information perception, fusion, and decision making; and embodied AI, were qualitatively discussed. Finally, four future research directions were suggested: (1) data fusion and decision-making, (2) improving the accuracy and efficiency of knowledge representation, learning, and utilization, (3) the establishment of large, pre-trained models in the field, and (4) embodied AI for taking actions according to the decisions made. This paper provides an overview of the relevant literature and the IC context for practitioners and scholars in the AEC industry in countries with different levels of development, as well as suggestions for the future development of IC. The findings of this study can serve both academia and industry in promoting IC in the AEC industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
133. Generalised Performance Estimation in Novel Hybrid MPC Architectures: Modeling the CONWIP Flow-Shop System.
- Author
-
Vespoli, Silvestro, Grassi, Andrea, Guizzi, Guido, and Popolo, Valentina
- Subjects
DEEP learning ,PRODUCTION control ,PRODUCTION planning ,DEVELOPED countries ,INDUSTRY 4.0 ,STOCHASTIC processes - Abstract
The ability to supply increasingly individualized market demand in a short period of time while maintaining costs to a bare minimum might be considered a vital factor for industrialized countries' competitive revival. Despite significant advances in the field of Industry 4.0, there is still an open gap in the literature regarding advanced methodologies for production planning and control. Among different production and control approaches, hybrid architectures are gaining huge interest in the literature. For such architectures to operate at their best, reliable models for performance prediction of the supervised production system are required. In an effort to advance the development of hybrid architecture, this paper develops a model able to predict the performance of the controlled system when it is structured as a controlled work-in-progress (CONWIP) flow-shop with generalized stochastic processing times. To achieve this, we employed a simulation tool using both discrete-event and agent-based simulation techniques, which was then utilized to generate data for training a deep learning neural network. This network was proposed for estimating the throughput of a balanced system, together with a normalization method to generalize the approach. The results showed that the developed estimation tool outperforms the best-known approximated mathematical models while allowing one-shot training of the network. Finally, the paper develops preliminary insights about generalized performance estimation for unbalanced lines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
134. Population policies in industrialized nations: reactive or proactive?
- Author
-
Serow WJ and Sly DF
- Subjects
- Demography, Economics, Population, Research, Statistics as Topic, Developed Countries, Emigration and Immigration, Fertility, Forecasting, Industry, Mortality, Population Dynamics, Public Policy
- Published
- 1993
135. [Attitudes toward the environment: a North / South analysis].
- Author
-
Worcester RM and Corrado M
- Subjects
- Americas, Attitude, Behavior, Brazil, Canada, Central America, Communication, Economics, Europe, Guatemala, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Latin America, Mexico, North America, Peru, Psychology, Research, Sampling Studies, Socioeconomic Factors, South America, United Kingdom, Conservation of Natural Resources, Data Collection, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Environment, Environmental Pollution, Leadership, Perception, Public Opinion, Social Class
- Published
- 1992
136. The effects of in- and out-migration on urban growth in Turkey (1965-85) and a comparison with the developed countries.
- Author
-
Gedik A
- Subjects
- Asia, Asia, Western, Demography, Developing Countries, Emigration and Immigration, Geography, Population, Turkey, Urban Population, Developed Countries, Population Dynamics, Urbanization
- Abstract
The author examines the relative weight of pull and push factors affecting rural-urban migration in Turkey. Data are from the 1970, 1980, and 1985 censuses. "The results of this study indicate that, for the Turkish case, the effects of migration on urban growth had been contrary to those found in the developed countries, but that, as Turkish development increased over the time period 1965-85, the effects of migration increasingly came to resemble those of developed countries.", (excerpt)
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
137. Could Postnatal Women’s Groups Be Used to Improve Outcomes for Mothers and Children in High-Income Countries? A Systematic Review
- Author
-
Lorna Benton, Anthony Costello, Michelle Heys, Monica Lakhanpaul, Catherine Sikorski, Sietske Van Hees, and Jennifer Martin
- Subjects
Postnatal Care ,Community-Based Participatory Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Participatory approaches ,Epidemiology ,Maternal Health ,Health Behavior ,Groups ,MEDLINE ,Psychological intervention ,Mothers ,Women’s groups ,Postnatal support ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intervention (counseling) ,Infant Mortality ,Humans ,Medicine ,Infant Health ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Review Paper ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Developed Countries ,Public health ,Community Participation ,Infant, Newborn ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Attendance ,Infant ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Cognition ,Sample size determination ,Family medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neonatal health ,Female ,business - Abstract
Introduction Participatory postnatal women's groups have been shown to have a significant impact on maternal and neonatal mortality in low-income countries. However, it is not clear whether this approach can be translated to high-income countries (HICs). We conducted a systematic review to answer the question: "Can postnatal women's groups improve health outcomes for mothers and children in high-income countries?" Methods MEDLINE, EMBASE and Cochrane databases were searched for randomised controlled trials testing any group-based intervention during the postnatal period, in HICs. No limitations were applied to stated outcomes. Results Nine trials, including 3029 women, fulfilled the criteria. Group-based interventions, facilitated by health professionals, ranged from didactic to participant-led. Three trials addressed postnatal depression, one addressed physical activity, whilst the remainder looked at multiple health or social outcomes. Three trials reported a significant association between their intervention and at least one outcome measure. Study limitations included poor and inequitable intervention uptake, low participant retention, small sample size and incomplete intervention description. Discussion This review found limited and incompletely described evidence testing the use of postnatal group-based interventions to improve health outcomes in HICs. Promising results were reported when the obstacles of sample size and group attendance were overcome. Studies reporting positive impacts on primary outcomes reported higher attendance rates and involved a psychoeducational or cognitive behavioural component in their group approaches. Further research should design and evaluate implementation strategies, assess the use of lay support workers in community settings to improve attendance and retention, and examine the effect of the group environment on outcomes.
- Published
- 2018
138. Medicines Information and the Regulation of the Promotion of Pharmaceuticals
- Author
-
Barbara Mintzes, Teresa Leonardo Alves, and Joel Lexchin
- Subjects
Direct-to-consumer advertising ,Deception ,Prescription Drugs ,Health (social science) ,Drug Industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Direct-to-Consumer Advertising ,World Health Organization ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Promotion (rank) ,Codes of Ethics ,Physicians ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Humans ,Promotion ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Product (category theory) ,0101 mathematics ,Marketing ,Pharmaceutical industry ,media_common ,Original Paper ,Government ,Information Dissemination ,business.industry ,Developed Countries ,Health Policy ,010102 general mathematics ,Commerce ,Opinion leadership ,Information quality ,Prescribing ,Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Government Regulation ,Business ,Regulation - Abstract
Many factors contribute to the inappropriate use of medicines, including not only a lack of information but also inaccurate and misleading promotional information. This review examines how the promotion of pharmaceuticals directly affects the prescribing and use of medicines. We define promotion broadly as all actions taken directly by pharmaceutical companies with the aim of enhancing product sales. We look in greater detail at promotion techniques aimed at prescribers, such as sales representatives, pharmaceutical advertisements in medical journals and use of key opinion leaders, along with the quality of information provided and the effects thereof. We also discuss promotion to the public, through direct-to-consumer advertising, and its effects. Finally, we consider initiatives to regulate promotion that come from industry, government and nongovernmental organizations.
- Published
- 2018
139. The global role, impact, and limitations of Community Health Workers (CHWs) in breast cancer screening: a scoping review and recommendations to promote health equity for all.
- Author
-
Hand, Taylor, Rosseau, Natalie A., Stiles, Christina E., Sheih, Tianna, Ghandakly, Elizabeth, Oluwasanu, Mojisola, and Olopade, Olufunmilayo I.
- Subjects
BREAST tumor diagnosis ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,HEALTH policy ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,MIDDLE-income countries ,DEVELOPED countries ,PROFESSIONS ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EARLY detection of cancer ,DISEASE incidence ,WORLD health ,PUBLIC health ,LOW-income countries ,CHI-squared test ,COST analysis ,LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
Introduction: Innovative interventions are needed to address the growing burden of breast cancer globally, especially among vulnerable patient populations. Given the success of Community Health Workers (CHWs) in addressing communicable diseases and non-communicable diseases, this scoping review will investigate the roles and impacts of CHWs in breast cancer screening programs. This paper also seeks to determine the effectiveness and feasibility of these programs, with particular attention paid to differences between CHW-led interventions in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and high-income countries (HICs).Methods: A scoping review was performed using six databases with dates ranging from 1978 to 2019. Comprehensive definitions and search terms were established for 'Community Health Workers' and 'breast cancer screening', and studies were extracted using the World Bank definition of LMIC. Screening and data extraction were protocolized using multiple independent reviewers. Chi-square test of independence was used for statistical analysis of the incidence of themes in HICs and LMICs.Results: Of the 1,551 papers screened, 33 were included based on inclusion and exclusion criteria. Study locations included the United States (n=27), Bangladesh (n=1), Peru (n=1), Malawi (n=2), Rwanda (n=1), and South Africa (n=1). Three primary roles for CHWs in breast cancer screening were identified: education (n=30), direct assistance or performance of breast cancer screening (n=7), and navigational services (n=6). In these roles, CHWs improved rates of breast cancer screening (n=23) and overall community member knowledge (n=21). Two studies performed cost-analyses of CHW-led interventions.Conclusion: This review extends our understanding of CHW effectiveness to breast cancer screening. It illustrates how CHW involvement in screening programs can have a significant impact in LMICs and HICs, and highlights the three CHW roles of education, direct performance of screening, and navigational services that emerge as useful pillars around which governments and NGOs can design effective programs in this area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
140. Comments on "International Development Perspectives for the 90s".
- Author
-
Klein LR
- Subjects
- International Agencies, Organizations, Commerce, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Economics, Evaluation Studies as Topic, United Nations
- Published
- 1991
141. A bottom up approach to evaluate the carbon footprints of a higher educational institute in India for sustainable existence.
- Author
-
Kulkarni, Sunil D.
- Subjects
- *
ECOLOGICAL impact , *FACULTY-college relationship , *ACADEMIC departments , *CARBON paper , *CHEMICAL laboratories , *ECOLOGICAL houses ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Carbon footprints (CFs) are the measure of extent of green house gases (GHGs) emitted from any organization or activity. Reporting of extent of CFs in terms of CO 2 e from educational campus may be considered as a first step towards sustainable educational practices. The present study employs a bottom up approach where CFs due to consumption of resources from each academic department is evaluated separately and net is obtained by adding contributions from individual departments. This method has the advantage of avoiding the potential overlaps in the calculation. Hence this approach to calculate carbon footprints can lead to their precise CF evaluation. In order to justify above hypothesis, CF evaluation was carried out at Shikshana Prasarak Mandali's Sir Parashurambhau College, Pune for three consecutive years starting from 2015 to 2016. The average carbon footprints over the study period were 3630.57 ± 296.79 tones CO 2 e per year with per capita emission of 0.81 ± 0.06 tones CO 2 e. The emission density determined from the average value was found to be 0.0361 ± 0.0029 tCO 2 e m−2 of the campus. It was observed that emission sources classified as scope-1, scope-2 and scope-3 contribute 28%, 48% and 25% respectively to total emission. Out of all the emission sources identified, apart from human contribution through respiration, electricity (35%), biodegradable and non-biodegradable waste, stationary paper, 7%, use of chemicals in the laboratories (5%), paper for official purpose (12%), LPG (3%) and transport (27%) were main contributors. As this is a multi faculty college, science faculty contributes almost 62%, commerce 9% and arts 11% of the total emission. • Present paper highlights carbon footprints from an Indian HEI using bottom up approach. • A questionnaire based survey was used to arrive at departmental and net footprints. • Carbon footprints of HEI in India are much less as compared to developed countries. • The carbon footprints of Indian HEIs are expected to grow at 5–6%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
142. ANALYZING THE QUALITY ASPECTS OF THE EEW MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENT PROCESS.
- Author
-
BAKATOR, Mihalj, ĐORĐEVIĆ, Dejan, and STANISAVLJEV, Sanja
- Subjects
HAZARDOUS substance exposure ,ELECTRONIC waste ,WATER quality management ,DEVELOPED countries ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The problem of electrical and electronic waste (EEW) management is present in developing countries as well as in developed countries. Inadequate EEW management leads to exposure of hazardous materials into the environment. In this paper a theoretical EEW management model is developed. Additionally, the use of quality practices and quality management systems for EEW management improvement is addressed. For every element of the developed model, an appropriate quality practice is suggested. The proposed quality practices are generic in nature in order to provide a broad framework for future research on specific EEW management system segments. In sum, the paper provides a solid basis for future research in the domain of quality practices and EEW management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
143. A goal programming model to study the impact of R&D expenditures on sustainability-related criteria: the case of Kazakhstan.
- Author
-
Colapinto, Cinzia, Jayaraman, Raja, and La Torre, Davide
- Subjects
GOAL programming ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,ECONOMIC expansion ,GOAL (Psychology) ,ELECTRIC power consumption ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Purpose: Most countries face important economic, social and environmental challenges and are strongly committed to invest in research and development (R&D) activities to help support the long-run economic sustainable growth. This paper aims to extend the previous research on macro-economic growth models and introduces endogenous variables to determine the amount of investments in R&D activities. Design/methodology/approach: The model considers four different criteria and six economic sectors and aims at finding the optimal allocation of labor across different sectors. The model also endogenously determines the amount of investments in pollution abatement activities together with energy-related R&D efforts. The paper presents an application to the case of Kazakhstan, an emerging Asian country, that aims to become one of the top 30 most developed countries in the world by 2050. Findings: The model shows the limits of the Kazakh agenda that identified too ambitious goals as the country has to go through a sociotechnical transition that involves a range of modifications in institutional structures, together with changes in user practices and the technological dimension. Kazakhstan should invest more in R&D activities able to develop sustainable energy sources to face the current electricity consumption demand and to reduce the greenhouse gas emission in the future. Originality/value: The paper provides valuable knowledge for researchers and policy makers interested in the impact of R&D on the long-run economic sustainable growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
144. Gridcore corners the market on lightweight panels
- Author
-
Rabasca, L
- Published
- 1994
145. Three-Dimensional Paradigm of Rural Prosperity: A Feast of Rural Embodiment, Post-Neoliberalism, and Sustainability.
- Author
-
Shahraki, Hassan
- Subjects
RURAL geography ,DEVELOPING countries ,RURAL development ,SUSTAINABILITY ,SMALL business ,DEVELOPED countries ,ECONOMIC systems - Abstract
Each practical action in rural areas should be based on a comprehensive, new, and innovative theoretical paradigm. For nearly three decades, the global economic system has embraced rural entrepreneurship as a "productive" and innovative strategy in rural development in many countries, including both underdeveloped and developed countries. At present, we have large companies, which due to government development interventions, are replaced with small- and medium-sized businesses under inflexible and extreme entrepreneurialism. The purpose of this conceptual paper is to shed light on the prevailing entrepreneurship practice and discourse, criticize them, and finally introduce a new paradigm known as "paradigm of rural prosperity" (PRP). In this work, Aram Ziai's theory of skeptical post-development was used, along with Campbell Jones and André Spicer's critical theory of entrepreneurship and Rosenqvist's theory of the conceptualization of rurality and rural environment called "hermeneutical realism". The present paper attempts to base the paradigm of rural prosperity on three pillars of analysis and explanation: (a) rural embodiment, (b) neoliberalism, and (c) concept of sustainability. Although some case studies in Iran have been used as empirical evidence, this paper argues that the paradigm of rural prosperity is universal in nature and can be used in any geographical and cultural context to provide new rural development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
146. How Digital Economy Affects High-Quality Economic Development: Based on International Comparison.
- Author
-
LIU Jiaqi and RU Shaofeng
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,DIGITAL transformation ,DEVELOPING countries ,TECHNOLOGICAL progress ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
This paper estimates the size of the digital economy in 38 countries between 2005 and 2018 and conducts an empirical study on this foundation. The results show that the digital economy has a significant role in promoting highquality economic development, primarily through industrial digitalizaion. Further research shows regional heterogeneity in the impact of the digital economy, which is greater in developed countries. Analysis of the underlying mechanisms shows that the digital economy promotes high-quality economic development in both developed and developing countries by improving technological efficiency and technological progress. However, the effect of technological progress in developing countries is clearly weaker than that in developed countries. In addition, scale efficiency in developing countries are not strengthened by the digital economy. Therefore, high-quality economic development requires the digital transformation of traditional industries and promoting their integration with digital technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
147. POVERTY ALLEVIATION POLICIES: CATALYST FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF NIGERIA.
- Author
-
ITIVEH, R. A.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC policy ,POVERTY reduction ,NATURAL resources ,DEVELOPED countries ,HUMAN resources departments ,POVERTY - Abstract
The word poverty had been and is still one of the most familiar and serious problems facing different economies of the world. While the developed countries try to minimize this menace to some extent, other underdeveloped countries wallow in its dominance with impunity. Poverty has been identified to be more associated with rural country side, and linked with some known barriers for its reduction such as government failures, deprivation, inflation and diseases. In Nigeria, although several poverty alleviation policies and programmes have been implemented the problem still persists, it is against this background that this paper examines whether poverty alleviation policies could be a catalyst to the development of the economies of the south-Saharan region that is mostly affected. This paper finds out whether it is lack of democratization, inability to tap the abundance of human and natural resources in Nigeria that could be the bane for the persistent increases in the poverty status of the populace. The paper also suggests positive and attitudinal changes that could properly implement the numerous policies and programmes, to reduce poverty to the bearrest minimum, towards the development of the Nigerian economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
148. ADOPTION OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE FOR EFFECTIVE LIBRARY SERVICE DELIVERY IN ACADEMIC LIBRARIES IN NIGERIA.
- Author
-
ADEBAYO, O. A., BELLO, L. A., KAYODE, J. O., and YUSUF, T. I.
- Subjects
ACADEMIC libraries ,DEVELOPING countries ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,LIBRARY administration ,LIBRARY personnel ,LAYOFFS ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Due to the growing presence of artificial intelligence (AI) in developed countries, this paper looks at the adoption of artificial intelligence for effective library services in academic libraries in Nigeria. The paper describes the concept of artificial intelligence while tracing its origin. It further established the advantage of adopting artificial intelligence in academic libraries which include user-friendly, infinite functions, ability to take complex work among others; and the challenges faced by library management towards the adoption of artificial intelligence which include financial uncertainty, job loss, technological disadvantages among others. The paper concluded that the adoption of AI in academic libraries is setting a new level of efficient and effective library service delivery but the adoption in developing countries such as Nigeria is low due to some of the identified challenges. The paper recommended that government and library management must come together to proffer the way forward for academic libraries in terms of meeting up with the latest standard of the use of AI in libraries; Library staff should be exposed to training and retraining in the use of artificial intelligence in delivering of libraries' services; among others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
149. Braking factors influencing the long-term stagnation of development in the SEE countries.
- Author
-
Grgurevic, Niksa
- Subjects
MONISM ,PLURALISM ,DEVELOPED countries ,COUNTRIES ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,BRAKE systems ,NEOLIBERALISM - Abstract
The subject of the paper is to explain the impact of three braking negative transition factors causing the long-term stagnation of socio-economic development in the three selected countries of South East Europe (SEE) - Bosnia & Herzegovina, Montenegro, and Serbia. It is about institutional inefficiency (which is generated in the synergistic action of alternative institutions and neoliberalism), the post-socialist totalitarian legacy related to the nomenclatures of power, and the underdevelopment of socio-cultural capital. The aim of this paper is to prove their dominant influence on the reproduction of the socioeconomic development deficit (in fact: stagnation) in the observed countries through a hypothetically constructed survey model. The starting point is the basic hypothesis that the overall phenomenology of developmental stagnation is caused by wrong, slow, and inefficient institutional changes (political and macroeconomic), which have caused the dominance of alternative institutions. It also starts with the auxiliary hypothesis that privileged institutional monism (expressed in pronounced non-market appropriation) was the basic motive for the action of these braking factors, although methodologically and essentially it was in paradoxical contradiction with the proclaimed promises of “reformers”. In addition to the usual methods of social sciences, the paper used the results collected through an electronic survey of 900 respondents. In conclusion, the set hypotheses were verified, confirming the imperative need for democratization of society and the application of institutional pluralism on the model of developed countries, which implies the elimination of the considered braking factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
150. Drivers of deindustrialisation in internationally fragmented production structures.
- Author
-
Lábaj, Martin and Majzlíková, Erika
- Subjects
GROUP of Seven countries ,MANUFACTURED products ,OFFSHORE outsourcing ,DEVELOPED countries ,DEVELOPING countries ,REMANUFACTURING - Abstract
This paper provides detailed evidence on the extent of outsourcing and offshoring of manufacturing employment and value added using a regional subsystem input–output framework. The paper argues that direct employment and the value-added shares of manufacturing in the totals underestimate manufacturing's importance. Jobs in manufacturing subsystems accounted for more than 25% of total worldwide employment, in contrast to just 15% recorded in direct statistics. In major developed countries, the level of intersectoral outsourcing reached its upper limit at the beginning of the new millennium. At the same time, the offshoring of activities interlinked with manufacturing has become the dominant driver of deindustrialisation in these countries. While direct manufacturing employment and intersectoral outsourcing declined between 2000 and 2014, offshoring experienced a significant increase of 6.5 percentage points, from 29% to 35.5% of the total employment generated under the G7 manufacturing subsystem. Furthermore, 84% of the value added that existed to meet the final demand for manufactured products in G7 countries remained in G7 countries, while most of the jobs needed to meet G7 final demand have been offshored to developing countries. The paper concludes that the importance of manufacturing subsystems for the world economy did not decline over 2000–14, but there was a significant shift of manufacturing activities and related services from G7 countries to China and other rapidly growing economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.