Academic literature on the topic 'Industrial promotion Industrialization Benin'

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Journal articles on the topic "Industrial promotion Industrialization Benin"

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Li, Meng Ling, and Liang Liang. "On Function Promotion and Sustainable Development Strategy of Old Industrial Relocation Area." Applied Mechanics and Materials 295-298 (February 2013): 2639–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.295-298.2639.

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With the acceleration of the development progress of industrialization and urbanization, a batch of old industrial relocation areas are playing the irreplaceable role in improving city functions, developing regional economics and integrating & configuring resources after their reconstruction. This paper discusses the function promotion methods of old industrial relocation area and the specific responding strategy of old industrial relocation area’s sustainable development from the angle of service industry development by taking Tiexi District, Shenyang as an example.
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WEI, Houkai, and Songji WANG. "Analysis of and Theoretical Reflections on China’s “Excessive De-Industrialization” Phenomenon." Chinese Journal of Urban and Environmental Studies 07, no. 04 (December 2019): 1950017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s2345748119500179.

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Industrialization is a long-term process of spiral transformation and upgrading. In a broad sense, industrialization can be divided into two stages, i.e. shallow industrialization and deep industrialization. The first stage refers to a process of expansive industrialization aiming to increase the proportion of industry, while the second stage refers to a process of contractive industrialization centered on improvements in industrial quality and competitiveness, to which the shallow industrialization is transformed and upgraded. In fact, the industrialization stages divided according to traditional theories, i.e. early stage, middle stage and late stage, are only for achieving the goals of shallow industrialization, instead of ultimately completing the developmental tasks of industrial economy. The transforming and upgrading from shallow industrialization to deep industrialization is an essential stage for a major country to enhance its development quality and competitiveness of industrial economy. So far, China has not fully industrialized. In the context of unbalanced and inadequate industrial development, China has seen a rapid decline in the industrial value-added and employment proportions in recent years, prematurely showing the features of rapid excessive de-industrialization in all respects. China’s current excessive de-industrialization is not only attributed to the impulse of rushing into mass actions in industrial upgrading, but also resulting from the combined effects of multiple factors such as surging factor prices and overcapacity at the current stage, exerting serious negative impacts on China’s economic growth, productivity improvement, development of modern service industry and transfer of agricultural labor force. In a long period of time ahead, considering the need to improve the quality of industrialization and the relationship between industry and services, real economy and virtual economy, the industry dominated by advanced manufacturing industry is still China’s major impetus for driving the medium–high rate of sustained and stable economic growth. Advancing deep industrialization remains a long and arduous task. Therefore, it is required to get rid of the misunderstanding caused by traditional theories and thinking, reconsider the importance of industrialization, implement the strategy of deep industrialization and prevent excessive de-industrialization. The specific measures include: expedite the promotion of deep industrialization in the developed regions of Eastern China, build a group of advanced manufacturing bases in Central and Western China and facilitate an in-depth integrated development of advanced manufacturing industry and modern service industry.
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Fauzan, Rahman. "CONSTRUCT INDUSTRIALIZATION STRATEGIC MODEL IN ISLAMIC PERSPECTIVE." At-Taradhi: Jurnal Studi Ekonomi 8, no. 2 (February 2, 2018): 87. http://dx.doi.org/10.18592/at-taradhi.v8i1.1975.

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Abstract: Nowaday, there are two strategic perspective in the industialization, that are import subtitution strategic with structural perpective (Sosialism) and eksport promotion strategic with liberal perspective (Capitalism). Eventhough both of them have long been used by many countries, including Indonesia, but they have not been able to make them as the developed countries which have independence of industry and strong economic growth. This research aimed to get industrialization strategy with different perspectives, that is industrialization strategy model in Islamic perspective to create independently and strong economic growth. There are two stages in this research; the first stage is literature study to formulate the main concepts of the industrialization strategy in Islamic perspective. The second stage is to create a model of industrialization strategy ini Islamic perspective based on the formulation from the first stage. From this research showed that there are three goal of Islamic industrialization strategy they are independence, fulfillment of basic needs and defense. This research also can modeled two systems of industrialization strategy in Islamic perspective there are; the model of Industrial Funding Systems, and the model of Interaction between Resources, Industrial Type and Basic Necessities. Both models can describe the Islamic perspective of industrialization strategy in relation to independence, fulfillment of basic needs, and defense of a nation. Keywords: Construct, Model, Industrialization Strategy, Islamic Perspective, Independence, fulfillment of basic needs, defense.
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Ha, Jing, and Cheng Xing. "Problems and countermeasures of industrial tourism development in Liaoning Province." E3S Web of Conferences 143 (2020): 01040. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202014301040.

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As an old industrial base in the country, Liaoning Province has a solid industrial foundation. The development of industrial tourism in Liaoning Province can not only accelerate the promotion of new industrialization roads, but also contribute to the healthy and sustainable development of the tourism industry in Liaoning Province. This paper analyzes the obstacles and problems in the development of industrial tourism in Liaoning Province at the current stage, and proposes a series of countermeasures to promote the development of industrial tourism in Liaoning Province, which provides ideas for the development and revitalization of industrial tourism.
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Clark, Mary A. "Nontraditional Export Promotion in Costa Rica: Sustaining Export-Led Growth." Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 37, no. 2 (1995): 181–224. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/166274.

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In many Latin American countries during the 1980s, domestic elites joined with international development institutions to advocate structural adjustment policies as the solution to the region's “lost decade.” Proponents of such policies sought economic rejuvenation based on export-led growth (ELG) strategies. The new ELG programs were to replace importsubstituting industrialization (ISI) schemes and complement traditional primary commodity exports with new agricultural and industrial exports (nontraditionals). It was hoped that these Latin American nations would replicate the spectacular growth patterns of the East Asian “dragons” by exploiting comparative advantages to build nontraditional export industries.Whereas ELG strategies have proven to be sustainable over the long-term in East Asia, research on the evolution of such policies in Latin America is only beginning. The problem of sustainability bedevils all ELG programs, particularly in those countries which relied on external actors to design the new policies and fund supporting institutions.
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GISICH, E. "PROTECTION AND PROMOTION OF INTERESTS OF BELARUS MACHINE-BUILDING ORGANIZATIONS IN EXTERNAL MARKETS IN THE IMPLEMENTATION OF COMPLEX LONG-TERM STRATEGIES." Экономическая наука сегодня, no. 7 (June 25, 2018): 212–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.21122/2309-6667-2018-7-212-225.

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In the conditions of the new industrialization in Belarus, the problem of the development of machine-building, which creates about a quarter of the added value of industrial GDP and is the main national commodity export, is very relevant. With the aim of protecting and promoting the Belarusian machine-building enterprises in foreign markets in the implementation of complex long-term strategies, a set of recommendations at the level of the sector as a whole, as well as at the level of certain types of engineering activities was developed.
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Huh, Jang Wook. "The Student’s Hand: Industrial Education and Racialized Labor in Early Korean Protestantism." Journal of Korean Studies 25, no. 2 (October 1, 2020): 353–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/07311613-8552031.

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Abstract In the 1900s American missionaries used the industrial vision of the African American leader Booker T. Washington to instill the idea of economic progress in Koreans. Inspired by this uplift model, the Korean intellectual Yun Ch’i-ho (Yun Ch’iho) and US Southern Methodists founded the Anglo-Korean School in 1906, where students would later produce textile products called “Korea mission cloth” for global sale. This article examines the promotion of manual labor in the intersection of religious propagation and educational reform during the early twentieth century. The author argues that the idealization of industrialization by American and Korean Protestant leaders was a vehicle to both disseminate American discourses of race and institutionalize a system of capitalism in the name of modernizing Korea. This early history of Korean Protestantism has influenced the hierarchical conceptualizations of the white, black, and Asian races, which has been obscured by the benevolent achievements of missionary work.
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Wang, Xiaoqing, Qiuming Wu, Salman Majeed, and Donghao Sun. "Fujian’s Industrial Eco-Efficiency: Evaluation Based on SBM and the Empirical Analysis of lnfluencing Factors." Sustainability 10, no. 9 (September 18, 2018): 3333. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su10093333.

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The coordinated development of industrialization and its ecological environment are vital antecedents to sustainable development in China. However, along with the accelerating development of industrialization in China, the contradiction between industrial development and environment preservation has turned out to be increasingly evident and inevitable. Eco-efficiency can be seen either as an indicator of environmental performance, or as a business strategy for sustainable development. Hence, industrial eco-efficiency promotion is the key factor for green industrial development. This study selects indicators relevant to resources, economy, and the environment of industrial development, and the indicators can well reflect the characteristics of industrial eco-efficiency. The SBM (Slacks-Based Measure) model overcomes the limitations of a radial model and directly accounts for input and output slacks in the efficiency measurements, with the advantage of capturing the entire aspect of inefficiency. This study evaluates the industrial eco-efficiency of nine cities in Fujian province during the period of 2006–2016, based on undesired output SBM (Slacks-Based Measure) model and also uses a Tobit regression model to analyze the influencing factors. The results show that there is a positive correlation among the economic development level, opening level, research and development (R&D) innovation, and industrial eco-efficiency in Fujian Province. However, a negative correlation was found between the industrial structure and industrial eco-efficiency in Fujian Province. Moreover, environmental regulation in Fujian Province was not found to significantly influence the industrial eco-efficiency. Hence, through the systematic analysis of industrial eco-efficiency and its influencing factors in Fujian, the study gives further insight on how policy-making can help achieve sustainable development, balancing between economic benefits and ecological improvements.
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Banerjee, Subrata. "India's Foreign Trade and Industrial Development." Foreign Trade Review 24, no. 1 (April 1989): 107–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0015732515890106.

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THE BASIC strategy of export promotion currently in vogue is import liberalization. The objective is to remove every possible obstacle to the production of goods for export. The logic is that the liberal import of machinery and intermediate products would make production for export less expensive, more profitable and hence easier. Whatever way we might look at it, the major beneficiary of a strategy of import-based export production and industrialization is the transnational corporation. We need a different approach to foreign trade as one of the components of industrial development. Foreign trade must become an integral part of the planning process. The basic principle of imports for industrial development and exports bas to be modified, to ensure that import liberalization meets priority needs of industry, not indigenously available or likely to be developed within a short time. Import substitution has not become irrelevant, however fashionable it might be to say so. In our drive to increase our exports of engineering goods, we should not Jose sight of our traditional exports. In the case of nontraditional goods, the need is to bear in mind comparative advantage and build up such thrust areas as are likely to have a continuing and expanding market over a reasonable time-frame. This is what demands unport substitution in certain well-identified thrust areas, in which we have comparative advantage.
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Huabai, Bu, Bu Jiaqi, and Liu Xinyao. "Study on the Path Optimizing Countermeasures of Hengyang National Innovative City Construction under the Background of Rural Revitalization." International Journal of Business and Management 15, no. 10 (September 16, 2020): 27. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ijbm.v15n10p27.

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The construction of a national-level innovative city is an accelerator for rural revitalization, and the promotion of new kinetic energy for the construction of a national-level innovative city in Hengyang is a systematic project. It is necessary to build an urban innovation ecosystem, urban innovation chain system and urban innovation driving factor system with local characteristics based on its own innovative resource conditions. At the same time, we must cherish the entrepreneurial spirit, strengthen the team of high-tech entrepreneurs, continue to adjust the industrial structure in an orderly manner, focus on promoting the technological upgrading of key industries. Hengyang must speed up the improvement of a series of high-quality city construction science and technology policies and build a complete urban science and technology innovation ecosystem, it is necessary to continuously optimize the coordination and promotion mechanism of achievement transformation and industrialization development, and comprehensively promote the construction of a national-level innovative city in Hengyang City, thereby optimizing the path choice of Hengyang national innovative city construction.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Industrial promotion Industrialization Benin"

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Florent, da Costa Marius. "Contribution industrielle au développement économique." [Benin] : Université nationale du Bénin, 1992. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/37686917.html.

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Dussel, Peters Enrique. "From export-oriented to import-oriented industrialization structural change in Mexico's manufacturing sector (1988-1994) /." 1996. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/36830171.html.

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Books on the topic "Industrial promotion Industrialization Benin"

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Michael, Hofmann. Saudi Arabia: Purchased industrialization. Berlin: German Development Institute, 1988.

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Industrialization in the United Arab Emirates. Aldershot [England]: Avebury, 1992.

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Building industrial competitiveness in developing countries. Paris, France: Development Centre of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 1990.

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Uribe-Echevarría, Francisco. Small-scale industrial development: Policy and strategic issues. The Hague, Netherlands: Publications Office, Institute of Social Studies, 1992.

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Mädge, Christoph. Industrialisierung und Wirtschaftsförderung in Lüneburg 1830-1866. Rahden/Westf: VML, Verlag Marie Leidorf GmbH, 2012.

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Abril-Ojeda, Galo. Política monetaria y desarrollo industrial en el Ecuador, 1970-1983. Quito: Banco Central del Ecuador, 1985.

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Hubert, Schmitz, Aryeetey Ernest 1955-, and Ifo-Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung. Abteilung Entwicklungsländer., eds. Grass-root industrialization in a Ghanaian town: A study. München: Weltforum Verlag, 1989.

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Voppel, Götz. Die Industrialisierung der Erde. Stuttgart: B.G. Teubner, 1990.

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Baver, Sherrie L. The political economy of colonialism: The state and industrialization in Puerto Rico. Westport, Conn: Praeger, 1993.

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Tahara, Kenji. Industrialization and import substitution for producers' durable equipment: Thailand since the 1970s. Tokyo, Japan: International Development Center of Japan, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Industrial promotion Industrialization Benin"

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Daly, Blánaid, Paul Batchelor, Elizabeth Treasure, and Richard Watt. "Principles of oral health promotion." In Essential Dental Public Health. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199679379.003.0014.

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Dental diseases affect a large number of people, cause much discomfort and pain, and are costly to treat. Their impact is therefore considerable, to both the individual and wider society (see Chapters 3 and 21 for a more detailed overview of oral health impacts). A particular concern is the pervasive nature of oral health inequalities with the burden of oral diseases now increasingly experienced amongst less educated and socially excluded groups in society. The causes of dental diseases are well known and effective preventive measures have been identified. However, treatment services still dominate oral health systems around the world. There is growing recognition within the dental profession that treatment services will never successfully treat away the causes of dental diseases (Blinkhorn 1998). In the Lancet , one of the top medical journals, an editorial on oral health highlighted the need to reorient dental services towards prevention (Lancet 2009). What type of preventive approach should be adopted to promote oral health and reduce inequalities? It is essential that preventive interventions address the underlying determinants of oral disease and inequalities to achieve sustainable improvements in population oral health. Effectiveness reviews of clinical preventive measures and health education programmes have highlighted that these approaches do not reduce oral health inequalities and only achieve short-term positive outcomes. A radically different preventive approach is therefore needed. If treatment services and traditional clinical preventive approaches are not capable of dealing effectively with dental diseases, then other options need to be considered. In recent decades, the health promotion movement has arisen, partly in response to the recognized limitations of treatment services to improve the health of the public. With escalating costs and wider acceptance that doctors and dentists are not able to cure most chronic conditions, increasing interest has focused on alternative means of dealing with health problems. The origins of health promotion date back to the work of public health pioneers in the 19th century. At that time, rapid industrialization led to the creation of poor and overcrowded working and living conditions for the majority of the working classes in the large industrial towns and cities of Europe and North America.
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Glassman, Jim. "Internationalization of the State under US Hegemony and Japanese Quasi-Hegemony: Promoting Industrialization and Disciplining Labour, 1945–2000." In Thailand at the Margins. Oxford University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199267637.003.0011.

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The fashion in which the Thai peasantry was captured has heavily conditioned the development of the industrial labour process and labour markets. Thai workers did not simply appear at the factory gates when and where they were needed and in possession of the requisite skills. Rather, new streams of marginalized peasants began to join older streams of immigrant Sino-Thai workers as the capitalist transformation of agriculture proceeded, and the ways in which these new streams entered the industrial labour force depended in part upon the ways they were removed from agriculture. Beyond this, the state did not merely passively witness the absorption of former peasants into the industrial labour force but actively abetted the process through a variety of measures, ranging from state promotion of industrial development to investment in education and training of workers. The Thai state also actively shaped the labour market through its alternating suppression and promotion of trade unions, a matter addressed in this chapter. The state functions that are integral to the industrial transformation described here were carried out by internationalized segments of the Thai state, including one—the Department of Labour—that would typically be associated with national corporatism, thus illustrating the depth and complexity of the internationalization process. The internationalization of capital and the state around industrial manufacturing development has been more complicated than the internationalization of capital and state in the capture of the peasantry both because of this depth and complexity and because of the overlapping roles played by two hegemons. Whereas the capture of the peasantry was the product of collaboration between Thai and US elites, the disciplining of the industrial labour force involves more multifaceted collaboration among Thai, US, and Japanese elites—as well as transnational statist institutions. Furthermore, there has been some historical phasing of the relative influence of the two hegemons, with US influence declining after the mid-1970s and Japanese influence increasing. Finally, whereas the US intervention in Thailand aimed directly at transforming the structures of state power along with the economy, the Japanese state has been more inclined to make use of the existing state apparatus and to transform its functions, where necessary, through sheer economic power.
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