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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Food demand in rural China a study of rural household models /

Yan, Wenye. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2007. / Title from first page of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 134-138).
2

Food miles: a case of sustainability consumption In Hong Kong

楊淑婷, Yang, Suk-ting, Peggy. January 2008 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Environmental Management / Master / Master of Science in Environmental Management
3

A fortune in cookies? : changing contexts of consumption and the emergence of the industrial palate in Hong Kong

MacLeod, Scott Alexander January 1988 (has links)
This paper examines the process of converging and industrializing food habits in Hong Kong. It does this by examining changes in the food system as a whole, placing consumption patterns in the context of the local food system and local social formation. In turn, local dynamics are placed in a global context. It is within the global context that the geographical homogenization of available foodstuffs is occurring. It is, however, in local place where the processes and trends are manifested. The paper begins with a discussion of the research issues and questions that surround the studies of consumption, food habits and Hong Kong. There is then a section which deals with the nature of food as an industrial commodity and the nature of the world industrial food system. The logic behind the geographical homogenization is drawn out of this discussion. The paper then turns to the geographical setting of the Hong Kong case; first describing the nature of the local social formation then moving on to consider changes in the local food system in the post Second World War period. Changes in the import/export profile, the local food production economy and the local circulatory sphere are outlined. These areas exhibit a tendency to capital intensification and internationalization. Finally changes in the actual consumption patterns of the people of Hong Kong are addressed. The conclusion of the analysis is that the Hong Kong social formation and the Hong Kong food system are undergoing a radical transformation: one where globally articulated capitalist 'patterns of regulation' are coming to shape the nature of agency in regards to food consumption in the local place that is Hong Kong. / Arts, Faculty of / Geography, Department of / Graduate
4

An analytical study of food consumption in Hong Kong, 1952-1966

Tang, Kwai-nang., 鄧桂能. January 1972 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Economics / Master / Master of Arts
5

Hong Kong's impacts from the seafood trade and its role in affecting endangered species

Kan, Wing-sze, Iris., 簡詠思. January 2005 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Environmental Management / Master / Master of Science in Environmental Management
6

Mihn baau: the localization and consumption of bread in Hong Kong.

January 2007 (has links)
Tang, Lai La. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 111-123). / Abstracts in English and Chinese ; appendix also in Chinese. / Chapter Chapter 1: --- Introduction --- p.1 / Introduction --- p.1 / Statement of Problem --- p.1 / Definition of Mihn Baau --- p.2 / Scope of Study --- p.3 / Literature Review --- p.6 / The Anthropology of Food --- p.6 / The Globalization of Foodways --- p.6 / The Localization of Food --- p.7 / Consumption --- p.9 / Class Distinction --- p.10 / Significance --- p.15 / Methodology --- p.16 / In-depth Interview --- p.17 / In-depth Interview with Consumers --- p.17 / In-depth Interview with Bakeries --- p.19 / In-depth Interview with Bakers --- p.19 / Observation --- p.20 / Structure of Thesis --- p.21 / Chapter Chapter 2: --- The Development of Mihn Baau in Hong Kong --- p.23 / Post Second World War: The Subsistence Consumption --- p.24 / The 1950s and The 1960s: The Emergence of Enriched Type --- p.25 / The 1970s: The Emergence of Substantial Type --- p.36 / The 1980s: The Emergence of Re-created Japanese Style --- p.39 / The 1990s onwards: The Diversified Development --- p.43 / Chapter Chapter 3: --- The Current Types of Mihn Baau --- p.52 / The Growing Diversification of Mihn Baau with Specialized Taste --- p.52 / Types of Bakery --- p.60 / Neighborhood Bakery --- p.60 / Bakery Chain --- p.61 / Specialty Bakery --- p.63 / Bakery H: The Neighborhood Bakery --- p.66 / Types of Mihn Baau --- p.69 / Bakery P: The Japanese Bakery Chain --- p.70 / Types of Mihn Baau --- p.75 / Chapter Chapter 4: --- The Consumption of Mihn Baau --- p.80 / The Different Consumption Patterns Observed in the Two Bakeries --- p.80 / Bakery H: The Prevalence of Necessity Consumption --- p.80 / Bakery P: The Reflection of Conspicuous Consumption --- p.82 / The Consumption Patterns from the Consumers' Perspective --- p.86 / Situational Context of Mihn Baau Consumption --- p.89 / The Preferences for Mihn Baau --- p.91 / Chapter Chapter 5: --- Conclusion --- p.103 / References --- p.111 / Appendix 1: Profile of Informants from the Consumer Group --- p.124 / Appendix 2: Questionnaire for Consumers --- p.125 / Appendix 3: Interview Questions for Consumers --- p.128 / Appendix 4: Solicitation Letter for Bakeries --- p.129 / Appendix 5: Interview Questions for Bakeries --- p.131 / Appendix 6: Interview Questions for Bakers --- p.132 / Appendix 7: Types of Mihn Baau in Bakery N --- p.133 / Appendix 8: Types of Mihn Baau in Bakery H --- p.135 / Appendix 9: Types of Mihn Baau in Bakery P --- p.136
7

The Effect of Food Safety and Quality on the Consumption and Price of Meat in Beijing, China

Shang, Xia January 2011 (has links)
China's economic success has helped it become one of the largest markets in the world. As a result, the demand for agricultural commodities in China has experienced a significant increase. Increasingly affluent Chinese people are paying increasing attention to food safety and quality instead of just quantity. Understanding how meat demands and prices are related to food safety and quality in Beijing will provide guidance for industry and policymakers interested in the Chinese meat market. The purpose of this study is to develop two models to analyze meat demand and prices associated with food safety and quality respectively. First, An Almost Ideal Demand System (AIDS) is used to investigate the effects of food safety on meat consumption. To address the potential bias of zero consumption in the estimation procedures, a simulated maximum likelihood (SML) estimation is applied in the regression. Second, we analyze the implicit price of meat with the intrinsic and extrinsic attributes using a hedonic price model. Five meat categories are regressed on several intrinsic and extrinsic attributes in the model using household survey data collected in Beijing in 2007. The key results of this research have two major outcomes. First, food safety has a significant and positive influence on meat consumption for Beijing residents. Second, the quality-related attributes or characteristics such as meat appearance, supermarket, meat brand, and processed meat as well as demographic variables such as household head's income have a significantly positive influence on the price of meat, which suggest that the consumers in Beijing are willing to pay a price premium to guarantee the quality and safety of meat.

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