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Beyond Special and Differential Treatment: Regional Integration as a Means to Growth in East AsiaChan, Su Jin 15 December 2010 (has links)
Special and differential treatment (SDT) provisions in GATT were created to assist developing countries achieve economic progress while assimilating into the multilateral trading system. Despite these intentions, global trade imbalances still persist. Within this context, I focus on the region of East Asia which has experienced astounding growth in just several decades, propelling it far beyond other developing country regions. Although international trade continues to be the crucial factor driving growth in the region, reliance on SDT has in certain circumstances hindered development. As such, East Asia should seek alternatives to SDT. In that vein, I argue that sustainable growth and trade liberalization can be achieved by enhancing integration through a regional trade agreement. I further discuss various proposals for an East Asian trade agreement such as ASEAN+3, FTAAP, and EARTA. Finally, I highlight the importance of governance and identify several institutions essential for a successful regional arrangement.
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Beyond Special and Differential Treatment: Regional Integration as a Means to Growth in East AsiaChan, Su Jin 15 December 2010 (has links)
Special and differential treatment (SDT) provisions in GATT were created to assist developing countries achieve economic progress while assimilating into the multilateral trading system. Despite these intentions, global trade imbalances still persist. Within this context, I focus on the region of East Asia which has experienced astounding growth in just several decades, propelling it far beyond other developing country regions. Although international trade continues to be the crucial factor driving growth in the region, reliance on SDT has in certain circumstances hindered development. As such, East Asia should seek alternatives to SDT. In that vein, I argue that sustainable growth and trade liberalization can be achieved by enhancing integration through a regional trade agreement. I further discuss various proposals for an East Asian trade agreement such as ASEAN+3, FTAAP, and EARTA. Finally, I highlight the importance of governance and identify several institutions essential for a successful regional arrangement.
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From Rivers to Gardens: The Ambivalent Role of Nature in My Ántonia, O Pioneers!, and Death Comes to the ArchbishopKirkland, Graham 15 May 2010 (has links)
Though her early writing owes much to nineteenth-century American Realism, Willa Cather experiments with male and female literary traditions while finding her own modern literary voice. In the process Cather gives nature an ambivalent role in My Ántonia, O Pioneers!, and Death Comes to the Archbishop. She produces a tension between rivers and gardens, places where nature and culture converge. Like Mary Austin and Sarah Orne Jewett, Willa Cather confronts the boundaries between humans and nature.
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Free trade and regional integration in a globalized world : the case of Southern Africa Development Community and its impact in Mozambique / Case of Southern Africa Development Community and its impact in MozambiqueMachava, Almeida Zacarias January 2008 (has links)
University of Macau / Faculty of Law
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Promoting Socio-Economic Development through Regional Integration - The Politics of Regional Economic Communities in AfricaNyirabikali, Gaudence January 2005 (has links)
Regional integration has gained momentum since the 1980s and throughout the world. The new regionalism process prevailing since differs from the old one by its multidimensionality covering economic, political, social, and cultural issues within a regional setting. While the old regionalism focused on market protection using a range of tariff and non tariff barriers, the New Regionalism is reinforced by the globalisation effects and strives for efficiency in production, and market access. Using the New Regionalisms Approach, the aim of this thesis is to appreciate the actual levels of regional integration in Africa and explore plausible ways of deepening the integration process with the view that regional integration can promote socio-economic development, provided a pro-development approach is privileged in the conception and implementation of the regional integration process. Focusing on SADC as a representative regional economic community, a qualitative content analysis is used for data collection while policy analysis is carried out using the Institutional Analysis and Development framework. The results of this study reveal discrepancies between policy formulation and policy implementation when it comes to enhancing the pro-developmental aspects in the unfolding regional integration process. In spite that shortcomings in past experiences triggered dramatic structural reforms ranging from the reorganisation of the Organisation of African Unity into the African Union, the creation of NEPAD, to structural reforms within regional economic communities with the example of the 2001 restructuring of SADC, empirical evidence shows that little change has occurred at the operational level. Moreover, even policy formulation at the collective-action level still lacks concrete strategies and plans for harmonisation and implementation of regional initiatives. Some of the strategies for deepening the regional integration process would include prioritising regional commitments to external ones and improving policy formulation as well as establishing linkages between different regional policies and strategies.
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Public attitudes towards European integration in Germany and Britain, 1973-1995 /Shields, Alexander Gordon. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Eberhard-Karls-Universität zu Tübingen, 2001. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 170-174).
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Looking forward together : three studies of artistic practice in the South, 1920-1940 / Three studies of artistic practice in the South, 1920-1940Lindenberger, Laura Augusta 29 January 2013 (has links)
In this dissertation, I provide three studies of artistic practice in the era of the Great Depression. In each chapter, I write about a different set of artists working in the southeastern United States: I write about Walker Evans and the artistic and literary community located in the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana (1926-1941); Edwin and Elise Harleston and their portrait studio in Charleston, South Carolina (1922-1931); and Bill Traylor and the artists who founded the New South Gallery and Art School in Montgomery, Alabama (1939-1940). Drawing from public and private archival collections, I consider how these artists made works that represented the South while they also made connections with artists and visual communities elsewhere; these connections placed them in dialogue with artists of the Harlem Renaissance, of American Regionalism, and of the Mexican Mural Movement. Although the artists in each chapter were from different Southern cities, they shared similar interests in the importance of developing and participating in artistic community.
I situate each study in this dissertation in relation to a type of artistic practice. These types of artistic practice—documentary, portraiture, and exhibition—served as loci for Southern artists’ ideas about time and place. Southern studies have been haunted by the idea that the South always looks backward, to the past. In these three studies, I consider how Southern artists and their contemporaries in other places took different approaches to referencing the past and imagining a future for the South. The works made by these Southern artists—which are linked by their complicated relationships to race, history, and place—are largely absent from histories of American and 20th century art. Their absence tells us much about the stakes behind history writing. By bringing these studies into dialogue with other, existing, art historical contexts and communities, I trace how historical absence is constructed and why such absences are important to consider. The works in this dissertation are also linked by their difference from a kind of Modernism; in their multiple and discrepant modernisms, the artists in this dissertation made work which was both modern and not-modern, which looked backward while pushing forward. / text
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China's strategy towards East Asian regional cooperation since the Asian financial crisisLiu, Qianqian January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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The institutionalisation of the SADC protocol on education and training: a comparative study of higher education in two South African countriesWatson, Pamela January 2010 (has links)
<p>Regional integration is being proposed as a means to development in Southern Africa. As a part of the formal agreements regarding this cooperation, a Protocol on Education in the Southern African Development Community region has been signed. This research set out to compare the higher education systems of two Southern African countries and to examine the extent to which this Protocol has had an impact on national policies and practices. The research sought to investigate this by means of exploring the extent to which the Protocol has provided an institutional frame which is guiding the development of higher education policy in each of the two countries. The findings of the study indicate that the Protocol, rather than providing leadership in the area of education policy, is to a large extent a symbolic document, reflective of norms already existent in national policy in the two countries studied.  /   /   /   /   /   / </p>
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Regional Variations in Political Ideology in CanadaHéroux-Legault, Maxime 04 1900 (has links)
Il est reconnu que les résultats électoraux au Canada varient grandement selon la région. Afin de
trouver des explications à ce phénomène, il convient d’étudier comment les grandes régions du
Canada se distinguent les unes des autres sur le plan politique. La présente recherche amorce
cette étude sous l’angle de l’idéologie. Elle tente de déterminer en quoi l’idéologie politique
diffère d’une région à l’autre du pays.
Elle s’appuie sur les données des études électorales canadiennes de 2008. On a recours à des
questions évaluant les préférences des répondants par rapport à plusieurs enjeux politiques
pour répondre à la question de recherche. On conduit en premier lieu une analyse factorielle,
qui identifie six facteurs qui ont structuré l’opinion publique lors de l’élection de 2008. Ensuite,
des tests T sont conduits pour vérifier si les moyennes de ces facteurs idéologiques sont
statistiquement différentes d’une région à l’autre.
Les résultats montrent que les différences régionales sont souvent significatives et suivent les
hypothèses. Toutefois, les résultats touchant à la privatisation de la santé ainsi qu’au Manitoba
et à la Saskatchewan vont à l’encontre des attentes. / It is widely known that electoral results in Canada vary greatly from one region to the next. To
explain this phenomenon, it is only appropriate to study how Canadian regions differ from each
other politically. The current research is especially interested in regional variations in political
ideology.
The research relies on data from the 2008 Canadian Electoral Studies. It uses opinion statements
to assess respondents’ political preferences to answer the research question. A factor analysis is
conducted from these variables to highlight six ideological dimensions. Furthermore, t-tests are
used to verify if regional differences on these ideological dimensions are statistically significant.
Results show that differences across regions are very often significant and follow hypotheses.
However, results regarding the privatization of healthcare and the Midwest run counter to
expectations.
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