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Foreign direct investment (FDI) assumed a prominent role in Central
East Europe (CEE) early on in the transition process. Foreign
investors were assigned the task of restructuring markets,
providing capital and knowledge for investment in technologically
outdated and financially ailing firms.
After more than 20 years into the transitional period, this book
sets out to analyse the conditions required for FDI to assume an
active role in the region. The book aims to discover if actors in
the local and national innovation systems are already relevant
sources for foreign invested firms to tap local knowledge, and
whether they are sufficiently developed to make profitable use of
the knowledge and technology brought in by foreign investors.
"This lively, provocative study challenges the widely held belief
that the Japanese did not intend to invade the Hawaiian Islands."
--Choice "A disquieting book, which shatters several historical
illusions that have almost come to be accepted as facts. It will
remind historians how complex and ambiguous history really is."
--American Historical Review
Foreign subsidiaries of multinational companies are suggested as
one of the main channels of technology transfer to less developed
economies. In Central East Europe their presence proved to be a
decisive factor to economic restructuring and development. This
volume is a unique guide to theory, method of research, and
empirical evidence, for technology transfer via foreign
subsidiaries of multinational companies. It combines the merits of
a core text on technology transfer via FDI with up-to-date
empirical evidence.
During the many years of its publication and subsequent revisions,
Paul Jellinek's book has been the standard work on its subject.
This new edition, translated into English for the first time, was
conceived in response to the increased interest in recent years in
perfumes and the sense of smell. This interest has come not only
from within the highly competitive perfumery industry, but also
from psychologists and market researchers. The original text has
impressively withstood the test of time and the approach of this
new book has been to supplement it with chapters that are now of
critical importance, but which were only touched upon in the
original book. A market researcher looks at why people use
perfumes; a psychologist examines the motivation of perfume choice;
another psychologist discusses odours and a perfumer looks at the
effects of odours on human experience and behaviour. In the final
chapter the editor compares the original author's views with those
of today's experts and suggests which aspects are still valid and
in what areas divergent views now prevail. This book is written
principally to provide a scientific basis to the craft of perfumery
and to enable formulators and marketeers to understand why the
smells they create and sell have the effect they do. It allows a
systematic approach to the development of these products. Others
outside the industry, including psychologists in academia, will
find the book an essential reference source.
What factors determine the success of economic transition,
development and growth? Examining the contrast between East German
shock therapy and Hungary's gradualism, this work generates a set
of generalizable conditions for economic development which imply
some degree of state intervention and strategy. A
stability-oriented incomes policy and a carefully managed
integration strategy can enable the achievement of sustainable
export surpluses, a competitive currency and macroeconomic
stability, whilst providing sufficient room for economic
restructuring, structural transformation and technological catch
up. The dangers of premature integration are also examined.
Wedged between China, Korea, Japan, and the United States, the
Russian Far East has for centuries been a meeting ground for
Eurasian and American peoples and cultures. Conventionally regarded
as a perimeter, it is in fact a collage of overlapping borderlands
with a distinct historical identity. Based on a quarter-century of
research by a leading authority on the area, this is a monumental
survey of Pacific Siberia from prehistoric times to the present.
Drawing from political, diplomatic, economic, geographical, social,
and cultural evidence, the book reveals that this vast, rugged, and
supposedly insular land has harbored vibrantly cosmopolitan
lifestyles. For over a millennium, Chinese culture found expression
in Tungus, Mongol, and Korean politics. Russian penetration in the
seventeenth century eventually turned the region into a colony
sustained by state subsidies, foreign enterprise, and a mosaic of
Ukrainian, Estonian, Finnish, German, Chinese, Korean, and Japanese
communities. Tsarist and Soviet penal policies contributed to the
diversity and volatility of Far Eastern society. Regional
aspirations articulated by Siberian intellectuals, disingenuously
institutionalized in a Far Eastern Republic (1920-22), survived
lethal bouts of economic and demographic engineering to come to
life again in the post-Soviet era. The Russian Far East today
reverberates with autonomist rhetoric, but if the region is no
longer an appanage, it is still far short of independence. For the
time being, the robust tradition of cosmopolitanism is reinventing
itself under the banner of capitalism. Reexamining
twentieth-century history through a Far Eastern prism, the book
offers fresh and often provocativeperspectives on imperial
rivalries, colonialism, revolution, civil war, and utopianism gone
awry in Northeast Asia.
Foreign direct investment (FDI) assumed a prominent role in Central
East Europe (CEE) early on in the transition process. Foreign
investors were assigned the task of restructuring markets,
providing capital and knowledge for investment in technologically
outdated and financially ailing firms.
During the many years of its publication and subsequent revisions,
Paul Jellinek's book has been the standard work on its subject.
This new edition, translated into English for the first time, was
conceived in response to the increased interest in recent years in
perfumes and the sense of smell. This interest has come not only
from within the highly competitive perfumery industry, but also
from psychologists and market researchers. The original text has
impressively withstood the test of time and the approach of this
new book has been to supplement it with chapters that are now of
critical importance, but which were only touched upon in the
original book. A market researcher looks at why people use
perfumes; a psychologist examines the motivation of perfume choice;
another psychologist discusses odours and a perfumer looks at the
effects of odours on human experience and behaviour. In the final
chapter the editor compares the original author's views with those
of today's experts and suggests which aspects are still valid and
in what areas divergent views now prevail. This book is written
principally to provide a scientific basis to the craft of perfumery
and to enable formulators and marketeers to understand why the
smells they create and sell have the effect they do. It allows a
systematic approach to the development of these products. Others
outside the industry, including psychologists in academia, will
find the book an essential reference source.
Provides information on facilities, inmates, programs and staff of
State and Federal correctional facilities throughout the Nation.
Earlier censuses were conducted in 1974, 1979, 1984, and 1990.
Information was collected from 1,390 public and 110 private
facilities, including general confinement institutions, prison boot
camps, reception/diagnosis/classification centers, prison
hospitals, and facilities for alcohol and drug treatment, work
release/prerelease, and youthful offenders. In the 5 years between
censuses, prison construction nearly kept pace with prison
population growth. Between 1990 and 1995 State and Federal
governments added 213 prisons and more than 280,000 prison beds --
representing a 41% increase in prison capacity. In 1995 State
prisons were on average operating at 4% above rated capacity and
Federal prisons at 25% above capacity. At mid-1995 about 1 in 4
State correctional facilities were under court order or consent
decree to limit population or to address specific conditions. In
1995, correctional authorities recorded more than 14,000 assaults
on prison staff, up 32% from 1990, and nearly 26,000 assaults on
inmates, up 20% from 1990. Relative to the number of inmates,
however, the annual number of assaults on other inmates dropped
from 31 per 1,000 inmates in 1990 to 27 per 1,000 in 1995, and the
number of assaults on staff remained unchanged at 15 per 1,000
inmates. Part of the Census of State and Federal Correctional
Facilities Series
The guidelines of this textbook are numerous example programs, flux
diagrams, schemes, and figures presenting the obtained results.
Step by step, the authors explain how steady state Monte Carlo
Simulation (MCS) and time resolved, so-called kinetic or dynamic
Monte Carlo Simulation (KMCS), schemes, respectively, can be set
up. Furthermore, examples of classical Molecular Dynamics
Simulations (MDS) are included. In addressing the same type of
problem by way off all these methods, the different schemes can
directly be compared. For the example programs, they have chosen
problems related to the adsorption of gas-phase species on surfaces
(i.e. mainly lattice models related to gas-surface adsorption
dynamics). Furthermore, the growth of deposits on grid surfaces has
been address including fractal growth phenomena.
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