The State and the spatial management of industrial change
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書誌事項
The State and the spatial management of industrial change
Routledge, 1991
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Papers from the fourth annual conference of the International Geographical Union's Commission on Industrial Change held in August 1988 at Rutherglen. Tasmania, Australia
Includes bibliographical references
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The last 20 years have seen a dramatic decline in world economic growth. From socialist states to developing nations, every type of government has had to deal with substantial industrial change. In this work, experts discuss ten countries from all the major regions of the world. These are: China, USSR, Japan, South Korea, Brazil, New Zealand, Australia, Sweden, UK and South Africa. Each chapter examines how every type and level of government - from local to supranational - responds to and manages these industrial changes. This is not a study restricted to traditional manufacturing industries - it includes land based economics and how they must be balanced with environmental issues. Finally, the book examines hoe indirect action by the state influences the geography of industrial change.
目次
- The state and industrial change, G.J.R.Linge and D.C.Rich
- towards a better system for managing China's industry, Li Weny-yan
- Siberian territorial production complexes and Soviet economic planning, M.K.Bandman and G.J.R.Linge
- spatial conflicts arising from the restructuring of Japanese industry, Atshuhiko Takeuchi
- government management of industrial change in the Republic of Korea, Sam Ock Park
- host governments and transnationals - experiences of Volvo do Brasil, Claes G.Alvstam and Kajsa Ellegard
- New Zealand's export meat freezing industry - political dilemmas and spatial impacts, Richard Le Heron
- governments and the environment - managing Tasmania's forest sector, John Dargavel
- managing the spatial aspects of industrial change in Sweden, Jan-Evert Nilsson
- the London Docklands - a case study of local economic regeneration, Andrew Church
- late apartheid, emergent black trade unionism and industrial change in South Africa, C.M.Rogerson.
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