Academic literature on the topic 'Corporation reports - China - Hong Kong'

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Journal articles on the topic "Corporation reports - China - Hong Kong"

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Zhang, Yafei, and Chuqing Dong. "Understand corporate social responsibility from an agenda setting perspective: a cross-national analysis of newspaper using computer-assisted content analysis." Journal of Global Responsibility 12, no. 2 (May 18, 2021): 262–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jgr-08-2020-0084.

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Purpose This study aims to explore multifaceted corporate social responsibility (CSR) covered in popular English newspapers in the UK, USA, mainland China and Hong Kong from 2000 to 2016 via a computer-assisted analytical approach. This study moves the understanding of CSR away from corporate self-reporting to the mass media and raises interesting questions about the role of the news media in presenting CSR as a multifaceted, socially constructed concept. Design/methodology/approach Data were retrieved from CSR-related news articles from 2000 to 2016 that were archived in the LexisNexis database. Guided by the theoretical framework of agenda setting, a computer-assisted content analysis (Latent Dirichlet Allocation) was used to analyze 4,487 CSR-related articles from both business and non-business news sources. Analysis of variance was used to compare salient CSR topics in each country/region. Findings This study identifies newspapers as an alternate to corporations’ attempts to distribute CSR information and construct CSR meaning. The findings revealed that the news communicates a variety of CSR issues that are aligned or beyond what CSR was defined in corporate CSR reporting, as suggested in previous studies. In addition, CSR news coverages differ between the business and nonbusiness news sources. Furthermore, the media tone of CSR coverage significantly differed across the regions and between the business and nonbusiness newspapers. Social implications Emerging topics in CSR news coverage, such as business education, could help companies identify untapped CSR realms in the market. Originality/value This study contributes to CSR communication research by adding a non-corporate perspective regarding what CSR means and should be focused on. The news media presents CSR using a heterogeneous approach as they not only provide surface reports on corporations’ CSR activities but also offer in-depth discussions.
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Lo, T. Wing, Duncan Chappell, Sharon Ingrid Kwok, and Joseph Wu. "Workplace Violence in Hong Kong, China." International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 56, no. 6 (July 4, 2011): 955–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0306624x11414545.

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This article reports a survey of workplace violence in Hong Kong. A sizable number of the 1,198 organizations that were questioned reported that they had experienced such violence over the 2 years preceding the study, but the problem was not prevalent. In both the private and government sectors, nonphysical violence happened more frequently than physical violence, and there was a reported lack of preparedness of many organizations to deal with the violence. Compared with private organizations, government organizations experienced more coworker and customer violence, but more private than government organizations believed that workplace violence caused the loss of key employees and clients. Correlation analysis found that a subculture of workplace violence appears to emerge over time, such that the more customer violence is experienced, the more is coworker violence, and the more the nonphysical violence, the more the physical violence. These findings are discussed with reference to international findings.
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HAO, SHULIAN, ROGER C. KENDRICK, and HOUHUN LI. "Microlepidoptera of Hong Kong: Checklist of Pterophoridae, with description of one new species (Insecta, Lepidoptera)." Zootaxa 1821, no. 1 (July 11, 2008): 37. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1821.1.4.

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This paper reports 16 species of the family Pterophoridae from Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China. One species, Pterophorus attenuatus sp. nov. is described as new to science. Images of all the adults and the illustration of the genitalia of the new species are provided. A key for the identification of Hong Kong pterophorid moths is given.
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Adorjan, Michael, and Wing Hong Chui. "Colonial responses to youth crime in Hong Kong: Penal elitism, legitimacy and citizenship." Theoretical Criminology 17, no. 2 (May 2013): 159–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1362480612472784.

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This article examines colonial responses to youth crime in Hong Kong, focusing on the 1960s, when riots involving large numbers of youth drew concern among officials over spillover from the Cultural Revolution in Mainland China; and on the 1970s, when the Government initiated a program of state building focused on instilling citizen identification with Hong Kong, youth in particular. Elite reaction is examined through a series of Legislative Council debates, declassified official reports and governmental Annual Reports. The article argues that youth crime control in Hong Kong’s colonial context could best be understood using a penal elitist framework, one which remains influential today.
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Cai, Kevin G. "Outward Foreign Direct Investment: A Novel Dimension of China's Integration into the Regional and Global Economy." China Quarterly 160 (December 1999): 856–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741000001363.

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It is now receiving wide attention that since the adoption of the open-door policy at the end of the 1970s China has been extremely successful in attracting foreign direct investment (FDI). Particularly, according to UNCTAD's World Investment Report 1997: Transnational Corporations, Market Structure and Competition Policy, China has become the second largest recipient of FDI in the world since 1993, after the United States. On the other hand, however, it seems less noticed that China has also become a growingly important FDI exporting country. According to UNCTAD's same report, China now ranks as one of the largest outward investors among developing economies in the 1990s. By the end of 1996, the cumulative stock of Chinese outward FDI had reached over $18 billion, next only to Hong Kong ($112 billion), Singapore ($37 billion) and Taiwan ($27 billion). Consequently, China increased its share in world-wide FDI outflows from less than 0.5 per cent until 1991 to an average of 1.3 percent in 1991–95. As China is rapidly rising as a new economic power, its deepening participation in the regional and global economy, through both inward and outward FDI as well as trade, will inevitably bring about significant implications in the international political economy. This article attempts to explore the development of Chinese outward FDI, its characteristics and motives, the outward FDI regime, the government's policies and existing problems, and the prospects for the future trend of Chinese outward FDI.
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Ke, Bin, Clive S. Lennox, and Qingquan Xin. "The Effect of China's Weak Institutional Environment on the Quality of Big 4 Audits." Accounting Review 90, no. 4 (October 1, 2014): 1591–619. http://dx.doi.org/10.2308/accr-50943.

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ABSTRACT This study examines whether China's weak institutional environment results in lower-quality audits by the Big 4 firms. We find that the Big 4 assign their less experienced partners to companies that are listed only in China compared with clients cross-listed in Hong Kong. The Big 4 are less likely to issue modified audit reports, and they charge lower audit fees for clients that are listed only in China. Finally, companies listed only in China have larger signed abnormal accruals than do companies cross-listed in Hong Kong. Overall, we conclude that the weak institutional environment in China results in the Big 4 firms providing lower-quality audits to companies that are listed only in China.
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Chan, Clara Ho-yan. "English-Chinese translation of financial terminology in Mainland China and Hong Kong." Babel. Revue internationale de la traduction / International Journal of Translation 61, no. 3 (December 7, 2015): 335–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/babel.61.3.02cha.

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The main purpose of this study is to compare and contrast the English-Chinese translated financial terms of Mainland China and Hong Kong in light of the necessary criteria for special communication terminology, and explore the feasibility of standardisation. Some distinctive linguistic properties and translation methods of the two regions’ Chinese financial terminology will be illustrated based on data from an industry glossary and major bank annual reports. The present situation is that Mainland China and Hong Kong display both similarities and differences in their Chinese translation of financial terms. With the increasing contact since the 1997 handover, the two regions appear to have been influencing each other, especially in that Mainland China has been adopting Hong Kong’s Chinese translations. In view of the fact that some translation scholars and practitioners advocate the standardisation of Chinese financial terminology in Mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan for the sake of better economic development, this paper outlines the main properties of the two regions’ terminologies and evaluates how such standardisation might possibly proceed. Limited research has been done with regard to the translation of Chinese financial terminology and this exploratory study will fill that gap and attract similar studies in the translation and terminology fields.
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Jackson, Jane. "In search of a home: identities in transition in post-colonial Hong Kong." English Today 18, no. 2 (April 2002): 39–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266078402002067.

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Excerpts from the cultural identity narratives and follow-up interviews of a group of ethnic Chinese majors in English at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, identifying recurrent issues and metaphors.IN HONG KONG, how have recent political events such as the Handover (change of sovereignty from Britain to China) in 1997 impacted on young people's sense of self? What cultural groups do they now identify with and why? What self-labels do they prefer? This article reports on a qualitative, sociocultural investigation that took place at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, a bilingual English/Chinese institution. Hong Kong have had a significant impact on shaping and sometimes changing students' cultural identities. The Handover, in particular, caused them to reflect on and even question their place in the world. Just before the change of sovereignty, many applied for passports whose nature sometimes brought them into conflict with their parents and grandparents.
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Fun Chan, Yuk, and Susan Quine. "Utilisation of Australian health care services by ethnic Chinese." Australian Health Review 20, no. 1 (1997): 64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ah970064.

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Australia is a multicultural society in which migrants from non-English-speakingbackgrounds may be more vulnerable to illness after their new settlement, andlanguage difficulties and cultural differences may affect their use of health services.The present qualitative study used focus group interviews to explore the health servicesused by Chinese migrants from Hong Kong and China. The general findings includedstrong preference for Chinese-speaking general practitioners, insufficient interpreterservices, low use of preventive services, and lack of knowledge about the existence androle of ethnic health workers. The paper reports specific differences between migrantsfrom China and Hong Kong, and by age group. It discusses reasons for these findingsand notes the implications.
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Hua, Minchao. "The 2014 Scottish Referendum in the Chinese imagination." Scottish Affairs 28, no. 2 (May 2019): 200–215. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/scot.2019.0277.

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This paper lays out the perceptions of three different regions to describe Chinese perspectives on the 2014 Scottish Independence Referendum. Mainstream newspapers, cyber-opinions, and scholarly writings are three vectors to assess Mainland Chinese perception. Considering the limited number of academic reports about the referendum in Taiwan and Hong Kong, compared to that on the mainland, our conclusion about their perceptions is primarily based on mainstream newspapers. The article identifies two ideologically opposed perspectives. On the one hand, the dominant view in Mainland China (and in mainstream newspapers in Hong Kong and Taiwan) framed the referendum in negative terms, presenting it as a ‘threat’ and a ‘problem’. On the other hand, the dominant view in Hong Kong and Taiwan praised the Scottish referendum as a model of participatory democracy. These contrasting perspectives are deeply rooted in distinctive ideologies and historical experiences.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Corporation reports - China - Hong Kong"

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Hui, Wing-chi, and 許榮枝. "Corporate sustainability and environmental reporting in Hong Kong: current status and future prospects." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2004. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31255851.

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Tsui, Wai-kit, and 徐偉傑. "Corporate sustainability reporting in Hong Kong: just a new form of propaganda?" Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2004. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31256016.

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So, Ming-tat, and 蘇明達. "Tracking the evolution of corporate environmentalism in Hong Kong: a study of environmental reporting." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2004. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31245948.

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Cooper, Alan Jeffrey. "Governance of Hong Kong companies." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1990. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31264621.

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Hong, Hiu-suet Heidi, and 康曉雪. "Mortgage corporation: the case of HongKong." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1997. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31267944.

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何劍剛 and Kim-kong Ken Ho. "The role of Owners' Corporation in private property management in HongKong." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2002. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31968867.

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林彰玲 and Cheung-ling Lam. "From Land Development Corporation to Urban Renewal Authority: meeting the challenge ahead." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2001. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31968880.

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Lee, Siu-fong, and 李少芳. "The influences of owners' corporation on the performance of the housing management." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2003. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B4257741X.

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Chu, Bo-kwun Michael, and 朱寶君. "An assessment of the privatisation of the Hong Kong Mass Transit Railway Corporation." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2000. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31966147.

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吳建城 and Kin-shing Ng. "Land acquisition for urban renewal and urban design by Land Development Corporation." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1997. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31980260.

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Books on the topic "Corporation reports - China - Hong Kong"

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Stott, Vanessa. Hong Kong company law. 2nd ed. London: Pitman, 1988.

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Stott, Vanessa. Hong Kong company law. Hong Kong: Longman Hong Kong Education, 2005.

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Hong Kong company law. London: Pitman, 1987.

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Stott, Vanessa. Hong Kong company law. 9th ed. London: Financial Times/Prentice Hall, 2000.

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Stott, Vanessa. Hong Kong company law. 2nd ed. London: Pitman, 1988.

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Leung, Alice. The Hong Kong Companies Ordinance (Cap. 622): Commentary and annotations. Hong Kong: Sweet & Maxwell, 2014.

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Tyler, E. L. G., and Stefan H. C. Lo. The new Companies Ordinance (Cap 622): Xin gong si tiao li (di 622 zhang). Hong Kong: LexisNexis, 2014.

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Secretary, Hong Kong Financial. Companies Ordinance (Cap.622) subsidiary legislation. Hong Kong: Sweet & Maxwell/Thomson Reuters, 2013.

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Roza, Antonio M. Da. The companies law rewrite: A visual (comparative) guide to Cap. 622 : from Cap. 32 to the new Companies Ordinance Cap. 622. Hong Kong: Sweet & Maxwell, 2014.

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Roza, Antonio M. Da. Amendments & transitions to Cap. 32: A visual (comparative) guide : the Companies Law rewrite : amendments and transitional to Cap. 32 : from the Companies Ordinance to the Companies (Winding Up and Miscellaneous Provisions) Ordinance. Hong Kong: Sweet & Maxwell/Thomson Reuters, 2014.

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Book chapters on the topic "Corporation reports - China - Hong Kong"

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"Hong Kong (China)." In Country-by-Country Reporting – Compilation of Peer Review Reports (Phase 2), 231–36. OECD, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/a3f4ecbb-en.

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"Hong Kong (China)." In Country-by-Country Reporting – Compilation of Peer Review Reports (Phase 3). OECD, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/7cedc54f-en.

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Jackson, B. Jane. "The Academic Second Language (L2) Socialization and Acculturation of International Exchange Students." In Academic Mobility Programs and Engagement, 80–110. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-1607-2.ch004.

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As internationalization efforts intensify across the globe, the number of higher education (HE) students who are gaining some form of international educational experience is on the rise. A large percentage of study abroad participants are from East Asian nations (Mainland China, Hong Kong SAR, Japan, Korea, Macau SAR, Taiwan), and most enroll in English language enhancement modules or English-medium content courses during their stay abroad, depending on their level of proficiency. To better meet their needs and ease their adjustment in an unfamiliar academic and social environment, it is imperative for researchers to conduct systematic studies that delve into study abroad experience. This chapter reports on a mixed-method study that investigated the second language socialization and acculturation of international exchange students from a Hong Kong university who took part in a semester-long stay in their host country. The findings have implications for both home and host institutions.
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Tong, Carrison K. S., and Eric T. T. Wong. "Picture Archiving and Communication System for Public Healthcare." In Encyclopedia of Multimedia Technology and Networking, Second Edition, 1162–70. IGI Global, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60566-014-1.ch158.

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For the past 100 years, film has been almost the exclusive medium for capturing, storing, and displaying radiographic images. Film is a fixed medium with usually only one set of images available. Today, the radiologic sciences are on the brink of a new age. In particular, Picture Archiving and Communication System (PACS) technology allows for a near filmless process with all of the flexibility of digital systems. PACS consists of image acquisition devices, storage archiving units, display stations, computer processors, and database management systems. These components are integrated by a communications network system. Filmless radiology is a method of digitizing traditional films into electronic files that can be viewed and saved on a computer. This technology generates clearer and easier-to-read images, allowing the patient the chance of a faster evaluation and diagnosis. The time saved may prove to be a crucial element in facilitating the patient’s treatment process. With filmless radiology, images taken from various medical sources can be manipulated to enhance resolution, increasing the clarity of the image. Images can also be transferred internally within hospital departments and externally to other locations such as the office of the patient’s doctor or medical specialist in other parts of the world. This is made possible through the picture-archiving and communication system (Dreyer, Mehta, & Thrall, 2001), which electronically captures, transmits, displays, and saves images into digital archives for use at any given time. The PACS functions as a state-of-the-art repository for long-term archiving of digital images, and includes the backup and bandwidth to safeguard uninterrupted network availability. The objective of the picture-archiving and communications system is to improve the speed and quality of clinical care by streamlining radiological service and consultation. With instant access to images from virtually anywhere, hospital doctors and clinicians can improve their work processes and speed up the delivery of patient care. Besides making film a thing of the past, the likely benefits would include reduced waiting times for images and reports, and the augmented ability of clinicians since they can get patient information and act upon it much more quickly. It also removes all the costs associated with hard film and releases valuable space currently used for storage. According to Dr. Lillian Leong, Chairman of the Radiology IT Steering Group of the Hong Kong Medical Authroity, a single hospital can typically save up to 2.5 million Hong Kong dollars (approximately US$321,000) a year in film processing cost (Intel, 2007). The growing importance of PACS on the fight against highly infectious disease such as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) is also identified (Zhang & Xue, 2003). In Hong Kong, there was no PACS-related project until the establishment of Tseung Kwan O Hospital (TKOH) in 1998. The TKOH is a 600-bed acute hospital with a hospital PACS installed for the provision of filmless radiological service. The design and management of the PACS for patient care was discussed in the first edition of this encyclopedia (Tong & Wong, 2005). The TKOH was opened in 1999 with PACS installed. At the beginning, due to immature PACS technologies, the radiology service was operating with film printing. A major upgrade was done in 2003 for the implementation of server clustering, network resilience, liquid crystal display (LCD), smart card, and storage-area-network (SAN) technologies. This upgrade has greatly improved the reliability of the system. Since November 2003, TKOH has started filmless radiology service for the whole hospital. It has become one of the first filmless hospitals in the Greater China region (Seto, Tsang, Yung, Ching, Ng, & Ho, 2003; Tsou, Goh, Kaw, & Chee, 2003).
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Rock, Michael T., and David P. Angel. "East Asia’s Sustainability Challenge." In Industrial Transformation in the Developing World. Oxford University Press, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199270040.003.0009.

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Since the 1960s, developing Asia has been going through a historically unprecedented process of urbanization and industrialization. This process, which began in East Asia with Japan after World War II (Johnson 1982), then spread first to Korea (Amsden 1989; Rock 1992; Westphal 1978), Taiwan Province of China (Wade 1990), Hong Kong, China (Haggard 1990), and Singapore (Huff 1999) and subsequently to Indonesia (Hill 1996), Malaysia (Jomo 2001), Thailand (Pongpaichit 1980; Rock 1994), and China has spawned enormous interest. While most of the debate surrounding the East Asian development experience has centered on the proximate causes of its development trajectory and the economic and political consequences of this trajectory for the East Asian newly industrializing economies (NIEs), because Asia looms so large in the global economy and ecology, interest has belatedly turned to the environmental consequences of East Asia’s development path and to the political economy of governmental responses to deteriorating environmental conditions in the region (Brandon and Ramankutty 1993; Rock 2002a). The focus on the environment came none too soon. Rapid urbanization, industrialization, and globalization in the East Asian NIEs, when combined with ‘grow first, clean up later’ environmental policies, have resulted in average levels of air particulates approximately five times higher than in OECD countries and twice the world average (Asian Development Bank 1997). Not surprisingly, of the 60 developing country cities on which the World Bank (2004: 164–5) reports urban air quality, 62% (10 of 16) are in developing East Asia, all but one of the rest are in South Asia. Measures of water pollution in East Asia, such as biological oxygen demand (BOD) and levels of suspended solids are also substantially above world averages (Lohani 1998). With the prospect for further rapid urban-industrial growth rooted in the attraction of foreign direct investment and the export of manufactures in East Asia, the rest of Asia, and the rest of the developing world as the East Asian ‘model of development’ spreads, local, regional, and global environmental conditions may well get worse before they get better (Rock et al. 2000). At the core of this environmental challenge in East Asia is rapid urban industrial growth.
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