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The role of the states in developing Chinese gateways: the case of Ningbo in the Yangtze River DeltaXu, Xu, 徐旭 January 2012 (has links)
Gateway is a common term that has appeared mainly in geographical literature in various contexts. The focus on gateway shifts our attention away from “which cities dominate” to “how cities are affected by globalization.”
This dissertation aims to (1) justify the imbalanced development between air and maritime transport within gateway cities, and the existence of a multi-port and multi-airport gateway region in coastal China; (2) initially explore an operational framework of the states in the process of gateway planning, formation, and promotion in China; and (3) conceptualize the discourses behind the intervention of the states and the competitions among them in the process of building and developing gateways. With these research objectives in mind, two hypotheses are proposed: (1) the hierarchical gateway systems and the interdependency among multiple airports and multiple ports within a region could be explained by the concept of “administrative capital,” and the development of gateway is affected by various states with different administrative capitals; and (2) the devolution reform in the port and airport sectors could be explained by path dependence, thereby revealing the reasons behind the changing role of the states in developing gateways in different periods.
A combination of research methods, actualized in two complementary phases, is used in the study. The Ningbo gateway, as well as gateways (including airports and ports) in the South Yangtze River Delta, is chosen for the case study. First, the interdependency between airports and seaports in the region is analyzed by using annual and monthly data. Second, the role of the states in building and promoting gateways is analyzed by the concept of “administrative capital” and “path dependence,” based on related policies and information obtained from three interviews conducted in Ningbo, Hangzhou, and Shanghai.
The cargo throughputs of multiple airports and multiple ports in a region are found to have fairly strong interdependence on both monthly and annual bases. Therefore, to some extent, the demand for air cargo and seaborne shipments is strongly interdependent at a regional level. With such background, inadequacies in the capacity and connectivity of Ningbo Airport in servicing Ningbo are revealed. Support from the local government is important in the development of gateways. Such development is affected by different administrative ranks of the states and the accumulation of various advantages gained by the states because of their position in the national or regional administrative ladder.
This dissertation proposes the concept of “administrative capital” to decode the discourses behind the interdependency between airports and ports in the region, as well as their unbalanced development. Thus, how administrative capital works in a government-dominated economy and leads to the formation of the geographical space of transport gateways is identified. / published_or_final_version / Geography / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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The strategies to sustain Hong Kong International Airport as the air cargo hub in the Pearl River DeltaLam, Hon-chuen., 林漢銓. January 2003 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Transport Policy and Planning / Master / Master of Arts in Transport Policy and Planning
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Les conséquences juridiques de l'implantation et de la gestion par l'Etat de l'aéroport international de Mirabel /Roy, Jean-Denis, 1956- January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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Tourists, art and airports : the Vancouver international airport as a site of cultural negotiationLeddy, Shannon C. 05 1900 (has links)
This work deals with the notion of hybridity; an ideal moment
of cultural negotiation which results, in the words of Homi
Bhabha, in the creation of a 'third space.' This theoretical
plateau is formed by two parties whose agendas, while
ostensibly conflicting, overlap enough so that each informs
the space but neither dominates it . In this case I examine a
specific site of hybridity, the "Arrivals Passengers Only"
area of the Vancouver International Airport. Here, the space
is informed by the presence of works, created by the Coast
Salish Musqueam people, in the Airport Terminal, created by
the Vancouver International Airport Authority.
While this sort of negotiation can be described using
positive and progressive terms, and the creation of a third
space represents a compelling ideal, I argue that the moment
of hybridity within the airport is ultimately undermined by
other areas of the building in which no negotiation has taken
place. The airport's role as a business necessitates
marketing strategies aimed mainly at tourists and other
business interests. Since virtually the entire building is
devoted to that market, the negotiated hybrid space becomes
hidden so that its potential impact is lost. Although
participating in the creation of a working model of culture
with the Musqueam people, the Airport ends up destabilising
that model and the space, the ‘third space,’ which contains it.
This particular example points to a site specific aspect
of contemporary North American culture by drawing on the local
community as a source for investigating that discourse. The
thesis, then, has two points of entry; the ephemeral discourse
of cultural negotiation and the locally grounded freeze-frame
view of one site in contemporary Vancouver.
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I'd rather not be in Marrickville : aerial modernities and the domestication of the sublime /Lloyd, Justine. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Western Sydney, Nepean, 2000. / Bibliography : leaves 370-387.
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Through the transit zone between here and there /Laing, Melissa. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Sydney, 2008. / Title from title screen (viewed Apr. 22, 2009) Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy to the Sydney College of the Arts. Includes bibliographical references. Also available in print form.
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Planning implications of airport related projects on Tsing Yi Island /Young, Pui-yin, Edwin. January 1992 (has links)
Thesis (M. Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 1992.
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Tourists, art and airports : the Vancouver international airport as a site of cultural negotiationLeddy, Shannon C. 05 1900 (has links)
This work deals with the notion of hybridity; an ideal moment
of cultural negotiation which results, in the words of Homi
Bhabha, in the creation of a 'third space.' This theoretical
plateau is formed by two parties whose agendas, while
ostensibly conflicting, overlap enough so that each informs
the space but neither dominates it . In this case I examine a
specific site of hybridity, the "Arrivals Passengers Only"
area of the Vancouver International Airport. Here, the space
is informed by the presence of works, created by the Coast
Salish Musqueam people, in the Airport Terminal, created by
the Vancouver International Airport Authority.
While this sort of negotiation can be described using
positive and progressive terms, and the creation of a third
space represents a compelling ideal, I argue that the moment
of hybridity within the airport is ultimately undermined by
other areas of the building in which no negotiation has taken
place. The airport's role as a business necessitates
marketing strategies aimed mainly at tourists and other
business interests. Since virtually the entire building is
devoted to that market, the negotiated hybrid space becomes
hidden so that its potential impact is lost. Although
participating in the creation of a working model of culture
with the Musqueam people, the Airport ends up destabilising
that model and the space, the ‘third space,’ which contains it.
This particular example points to a site specific aspect
of contemporary North American culture by drawing on the local
community as a source for investigating that discourse. The
thesis, then, has two points of entry; the ephemeral discourse
of cultural negotiation and the locally grounded freeze-frame
view of one site in contemporary Vancouver. / Arts, Faculty of / Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of / Graduate
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Airport and station accessibility as a determinant of mode choice /Clever, Reinhard. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D. in Civil Engineering)--University of California, Berkeley, 2006. / Cover title. "Fall 2006." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 292-300). Also available online.
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Business strategy under PADS: a case study ofstrategic exploitation of business opportunities arising from the Portand Airport Development Strategy (PADS) being planned for Hong KongYeung, Tin-cheung, Alik., 楊天祥. January 1992 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Business Administration / Master / Master of Business Administration
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