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Applications of regional planning strategies to South Korean rural developmentShin, Dong-Ho January 1990 (has links)
The thesis analyzes South Korean rural development programmes implemented from 1968 to 1986. It examines the respective planning goals, implementation methods, and outcomes of two Korean development programmes: the Rural Non-Farm Employment Programme and Saemaul Undong. The theoretical framework for this analysis is based on a comparison of the Functional Integration Approach (FIA) and the Territorial Development Approach (TDA).
FIA theory has been developed mainly by consultants from the United States Agency for International Development (e.g., Dennis A. Rondinelli). These theorists assume that rural underdevelopment stems from the lack of urban technology and information. Accordingly, they see that transfer of urban technology is the key to rural economic development. The theory prescribes the promotion of rural trade centres and networks bridging urban and rural areas.
TDA theory has been modelled by John Friedmann and his colleagues. It is a bottom-up, people-oriented approach. Advocates of this approach emphasize even distribution of economic power, while those of FIA focuses on economic growth. The TDA theory proposes that planners involve intended beneficiaries in decision-making processes, and help poor people directly. TDA attempts to close the urban/rural linkages selectively, since it is thought that some urban influences are harmful to rural development. TDA has been criticized as unfeasible since in most countries it requires significant reforms of the existing power structure.
The Korean Rural Non-Farm Employment reflects some aspects of FIA theories, and Saemaul Undong some aspects of TDA. The non-farm employment programme has been planned by professional planners in national planning agencies. The planners have attempted to promote manufacturing industries in selected rural
centres. However, the programme has not been successful in creating more rural employment for poor people. A major reason for this appears to be that the programme promotes employment opportunities which are inappropriate to the skills of the rural poor.
Saemaul Undong was initiated by the late president Chung-Hee Park. The programme was implemented by central politicians, local administrators, and rural people. Goals of development were not purely economic. Rather, they included social development and the programme focused on areas regardless of economic potential. It has improved the quality of rural infrastructure, technology, and people's confidence, combinations of which may be a basis for long-term development. It has also improved rural gross income, though the growth has necessitated increased expenses.
From the analysis of the two Korean rural planning programmes, the thesis concludes that TDA, as exemplified by Saemaul Undong, is a promising regional planning strategy. Specifically the thesis concludes that planning for rural development in countries like Korea should include the following TDA approaches: 1) involve beneficiaries in the decision-making process, 2) employ appropriate local inputs and knowledge, 3) facilitate linkages among rural institutions, as well as between rural people and government agencies, and 4) assist innovation from within rural areas. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of / Graduate
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The (Post)Development of Rwandan Rice-Growers' CooperativesRatcliffe, Joel January 2014 (has links)
The Rwandan countryside is currently undergoing a process of rapid reform under ambitious government programs to modernize agriculture for participation in national and international markets. While the government asserts that it is pursuing pro-poor growth, many critics present significant evidence to the contrary. This thesis examines the use of farmers cooperatives within the ongoing government campaign of agricultural modernization, and it asks whether the co-ops themselves are sources of personal empowerment and material gain for the small producers. Adopting the “sceptical” post-development position advanced by Aram Ziai, the present research attempts to take a pragmatic look at the ways in which the co-ops meet or fail to meet the material and non-material needs of their members while appreciating that cultural preferences are heterogeneous and dynamic. While the use of farmers cooperatives appears appropriate for the Rwandan marshland, the co-ops examined very much fall short of the post-development social movement model.
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The basic needs approach to development : a case study of rural water supply in KenyaBowler, Stephen James January 1987 (has links)
The meeting of the basic needs of people, particularly the poor, has come to be an important focus of rural development efforts in the Third World. This is largely due to the realization that the benefits of previous development efforts have not reached the poor. The basic needs concept of development places the focus on the ends of development. This means a direct attack on poverty through meeting the basic human requirements of the neediest segment of society, the poor.
There are two approaches that can be taken when one adopts the basic needs concept as the theoretical framework for a project. The first is a top down effort concerned with satisfying basic needs as quickly as possible and is referred to in this thesis as a technocratic approach to meeting basic needs. The second is concerned with developing a sustainable project based on the community so that it can continue to meet its basic needs and is referred to in this thesis as a community development approach to meeting basic needs.
The purpose of this thesis is to identify those elements in the planning process that contribute to the success of efforts to meet basic needs in developing countries. Success is defined as the meeting of immediate and long term water needs leading to improvements in health, economic and social conditions of communities.
To accomplish this objective a literature review of efforts to meet the basic need of water is undertaken. The focus is on identifying elements found in the literature, dominated by advocates of the community development approach to meeting basic needs, which contributed to the success of rural water supply projects in providing an adequate supply of water to the poor. These success elements can be grouped in the following five categories: appropriate knowledge; appropriate technology; appropriate institutions; appropriate support; and community participation. The assumption articulated by most writers is that each of these five elements is an essential part of a community development approach to meeting basic needs. There is very little in the literature on the technocratic approach, yet it is used in practice.
A case study of a rural water supply project in Kenya, East Africa, which used a technocratic approach, was undertaken with the expectation that it would show a lack of success because of its failure to include the five elements of the community development approach. In fact, the project was found to be a success. However, the study did reveal that the planners involved in the project now believe that, for the long run sustainability of the project, it is vital to make the five elements of the community development approach an essential part of the project.
The main conclusion of the thesis is that a project using a technocratic approach to meeting basic needs can succeed in the short run but that for this project to continue to be successful there comes a point where the elements assumed to be part of the community development approach to meeting basic needs must be included. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of / Graduate
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Constructing globalization in the Philippines : labour, land and identity on Manila’s industrializing peripheryKelly, Philip Francis 11 1900 (has links)
'Globalization' has become a powerful icon in academic, policy and business circles.
This thesis seeks to trace some of the consequences of both the process and the idea of
globalization in the Philippines.
The thesis starts by arguing that theories of globalization - economic, technological,
political and cultural - have invested in the process an aura of inevitability and necessity. These
'logics' of globalization, widely promulgated by both the political left and right, imply a
particular construction of scale that privileges the global above all other levels of analysis. This
construction has been used as a discursive legitimation of neoliberal policy prescriptions for
development. In seeking to destabilize this construction of the global scale, the rest of the thesis
demonstrates the ways in which global flows (particularly of capital and cultural meanings) are in
fact embedded, mediated and activated in local social relations in the Philippines.
This empirically-based argument starts with a brief historical account of Philippine
relations with 'global space' from pre-colonial times to the present, demonstrating that the
relationship has been contingent and politically contested over time and has owed as much to
national level power relations as to global forces. In the last few decades, in particular,
'globalization' has been both a key material process in the Philippine economy, and an important
part of the Ramos administration's legitimation of its development strategies. These have
included deregulation, decentralization, trade liberalization, and encouraging foreign direct
investment in export manufacturing. This investment has exhibited a spatial concentration in the
core region around Manila, and particularly in the province of Cavite. Through multiple scales
of analysis - provincial, municipal, village, household and individual -I explore the ways in
which experiences of 'globalized' development in Cavite and two of its villages are embedded in
'local' social, economic, environmental, political and cultural processes. These experiences
come principally in the form of: changing local labour markets, land conversion from agricultural
to urban-industrial uses, and the reworking of cultural identities.
One central argument is proposed throughout: that viewing globalization as an inevitable
and unavoidable context for development is inappropriate; instead, the processes of globalization
must be seen as embedded in social processes and power relations operating in particular places.
This argument embodies two further points. First, that the 'places' in which globalization is
embedded are at multiple scales which must be seen as interlinked and overlapping rather than
distinct and hierarchical. Secondly, while globalization, and its embeddedness in places,
operates as a material process, it is also a social construction and political discourse which, by
locating the 'driving force' of social change at the global scale, serves to legitimize certain
practices and construct a particular relationship between the 'local' and the 'global'. / Arts, Faculty of / Geography, Department of / Graduate
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Resource communities in transition : planning for rural community survival: Zeballos, British ColumbiaGrinnell, Deana F. 11 1900 (has links)
Exploring planning methodology for BC's resource-based communities, this paper
investigates rural community transition and proposes a planning framework based on
enhancing the survival capacity of communities facing the pressures and challenges of
economic and social change. Utilizing both primary and secondary research methods
(including a review of relevant literature, government publications, and a pilot of the
proposed method in Zeballos, British Columbia), this analysis is intended to contribute to
the practicing planner's tools for working with rural communities in economic and social
transition. The study first examines the context of British Columbia's forestry-dependent
communities. It explores the literature around successful community development efforts
and also around stable and resilient communities and identifies Fourteen Characteristics
of Surviving Rural Communities. It then proposes a planning method that is responsive
to these characteristics, with a goal to both build awareness of the community's inherent
survival capacity and to foster it through a 'learning-by-doing' process. It also examines
the role of the planner in working with these communities. Working with the community
of Zeballos, the pilot process revealed several insights about planning with transitioning
communities. These communities are not alike, they are shaped by a range of factors
and face diverse influences. Yet all require a willingness to accept and embrace change
and they require support in managing change. Best efforts to plan for an achievable
transition strategy requires considerable forethought in preparing a planning
methodology that serves the community's needs and enables the community to shape
goals toward achievable outcomes. For communities in transition, enhancing local
capacity to survive and manage change may be as important as selecting any specific
transition outcome, for it has been shown that it is in the way that communities
determine and implement their transition strategy that determines success in the effort. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of / Graduate
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Forecasting patronage on demand response transportation systems: Economic feasibility and environmental impactsJohnson, John 01 January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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我國農村工業的回顧與前瞻WANG, Wenzhi 01 January 1947 (has links)
No description available.
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我國農民心理之分析及農村建設運動之新方向LUO, Bingren 01 January 1947 (has links)
No description available.
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Local organizations and efficiency of state extraction in rural China: a case study of a county in Guangdong Province, 1949-1956 /Chen Zetao.Chen, Zetao 08 June 2016 (has links)
The present study focuses on the local organizations and state extraction in rural China from 1949 to 1956. But in order to provide an understanding of context and processes the thesis at the same time examines the secular changes in local organizations and the historical experience of state extraction in rural China during a relatively long period from the fourteenth century to 1956. Specifically, the present study focuses on the relationships between local organizations and the efficiency (transaction costs) of state extraction in rural China from the fourteenth century to 1956, and finds that the actions and interactions of the state (or rulers), state agents (recorders in lijia organization and lineage leaders before the twentieth century, local bosses during the first half of the twentieth century, and heads and recorders in the collectives after 1949), and constituents (the common peasants) led to the changes of institutions in state extraction (forms of taxation, forms of contract between the state and state agents, structures of local organizations) and institutions in broader social context (informal institutions), and the changes in the efficiency (transaction costs) of state extraction, by using the historical experience of state extraction from villages in A County (a County in southeast China) from the fourteenth century to 1956 as a case study. The thesis therefore revises key aspects of the new institutionalism model (Williamson 1975; North 1981, 1991; Kiser 1994; Levi 1988), and develops a new model for understanding organizations, what might be called the process institutionalism model. In contrast to the new institutionalism model which emphasizes the efficiency properties of alternative forms of organization, and their centrality to the actions and interactions of organization participants and the other actors in broader social context, the process institutionalism model focuses on the processes whereby the organizational participants and the other actors in broader social context, having different interests and valuing various inducements, take actions and interact with each other, and emphasizes that the processes of the actions and interactions of organization participants and the other actors in broader social context are fundamentally important to the changes in organization structures and the other institutions in broader social context, and the changes in the efficiency of institutional patterns. Secondly, the present study follows the research approach opened by Schumpeter (1991) and develops a relatively complete framework to understand the changes in state institutions, and the efficiency of state extraction, not only in China, but also in the other countries after the fourteenth century (including the development of a relatively strong central representative institution in England in the seventeenth century and the establishment of bureaucratic monarchy in the major European continental countries in the eighteenth century).
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Entrepreneurial decision for rural development under social network effect / 社会的ネットワークを考慮した過疎地域振興のための起業家行動に関する研究Jin, Yuze 24 September 2019 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(工学) / 甲第22053号 / 工博第4634号 / 新制||工||1723(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院工学研究科都市社会工学専攻 / (主査)教授 川﨑 雅史, 教授 CRUZ Ana Maria , 准教授 松島 格也 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Philosophy (Engineering) / Kyoto University / DFAM
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