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The macroeconomic development of south-eastern Europe has been
profoundly affected not only by the region's major historical
events - for example, liberation from the Ottoman Empire, the
outbreak of civil wars, and the birth of new nations - but also by
global events, such as the world-wide conflicts of the twentieth
century, and the recent transnational processes of globalisation
and European integration. The rationale of this book is to employ a
comprehensive micro-history - that is, the history of one
particular community: in this case, the village of Tsamantas, in
north-western Greece - as a means of providing a detailed picture
that will permit extrapolation to a wider context. Situated in one
of the most isolated parts of the region of Epirus, Tsamantas has a
complex history and a rich folk culture. At times, it has been a
textbook example of how decision-making within a community can
impact upon the success of the local economy. Its inhabitants have
been rational problem-solvers, with a sense of what is in their
family's best interests, rather than passive victims of
circumstance, and their choices at critical points in the village's
history have resulted either in growth or decline. The author
focuses his groundbreaking analysis on these choices, drawing upon
publications, archived materials, and illuminating oral accounts of
local events.
Over the last thirty years, the European Union has created a system
of environmental governance in Europe. With a large number of
legislative measures, the EU's environmental policy is broad in
scope, extensive in detail and often stringent in effect.
Environmental governance also extends to the ways in which decision
making on environmental policy has become institutionalized within
Europe, both at the level of the EU itself and in the practices of
the member states. This work seeks to understand this new system of
environmental governance both at the European level and at the
level of member states. It argues that the system is multi-level,
horizontally complex, evolving and incomplete. Locating
developments at the European level in theories of European
integration, it goes on to examine the extent of convergence and
divergence in environmental policy among six member states:
Germany, Spain, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, and the UK. It then
looks at the operation of the system of environmental governance
through an examination of policy case studies before examining the
wider political significance of these developments.
From acid rain to clean drinking water, from clean beaches to packaging waste, the operation of the environmental rules in the European Union affects all our lives. This book examines how rules for environmental protection are made in Europe. It identifies the forces that shape how rules are made and why they take the form they do.
This book is a major step forward in understanding the learning
behaviour of clustered technology-intensive small and medium-sized
enterprises (SMEs). Drawing upon qualitative and quantitative
research methods and sampling techniques, it identifies how
learning for innovation is stimulated or inhibited. An informative,
challenging and comprehensive empirical study and analysis, this
book will be useful to scholars and students of regional
development, European and Asian relations, development economics,
and management studies. It will also be a valuable reference to
decision-makers, policy analysts and international businessmen
seeking to understand how the process of learning and acquisition
of knowledge could improve the innovative performance, growth and
competitiveness of firms in which they are located.
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