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2,128 Essays on Industrialization Third World Development. Documents 901 - 925 (showing first 1,000 results)

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Last update: June 29, 2014
  • Religions of China; the World as a Living System

    Religions of China; the World as a Living System

    Daniel L. Overmyer’s Religions of China; the World as a Living System Long Grove, Illinois Waveland Press, Inc. Copyright 1986 125 Page Count Daniel Overmyer’s, Religions of China, discusses the historical developments of the different religions of China. It also addresses the impact religion has on the daily life of the Chinese in the past and present. Overmyer introduces the Chinese living system with his knowledge of Feng-shui, and how everything is connected by

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    Essay Length: 883 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 16, 2010 By: Tasha
  • Brave New World

    Brave New World

    Pardon the hyperbole, but I wonder if we can't trace a goodly portion of the decline of Western culture in just the drop-off from Walt Disney's Pinocchio to Steven Spielberg's A. I.: Artificial Intelligence. Despite the surface similarities between these tales of a wooden boy on the one hand and a robot boy on the other, both of whom hope to become real, and despite Mr. Spielberg's quite conscious attempt to implicate Pinocchio in his

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    Essay Length: 1,515 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: January 17, 2010 By: Max
  • Poetry Essay - the World Is Too Much with Us Vs the Lake Isle of Innisfree

    Poetry Essay - the World Is Too Much with Us Vs the Lake Isle of Innisfree

    With possessions and machinery such as iPods, GPS systems, advanced voice-recording, photo-shooting, video-taking cellular phones, one can securely say that the present world is fully consumed by materialistic goods and behavior. Society has gotten so caught up with flaunting their valuables and questing to unearth more that they have completely forgotten to slow down and simply savor nature. In his poem, “The World is Too Much With Us,” William Wordsworth displays an ignorant world in

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    Essay Length: 1,071 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: January 17, 2010 By: Kevin
  • Telecom Communications Industry Is Far Away from Recovery

    Telecom Communications Industry Is Far Away from Recovery

    The Telecommunications industry is having a hard time recovering from their recent economic downfall. Analysts are predicting that U.S. and European telecommunications revenue is going to fall from 2002 to 2003. I fact, expectations have gotten so low that a “win” will be any growth in the market whatsoever. Robert Switz, chief executive of equipment maker ADC Telecommunications Inc. says he doesn’t expect the recovery until the year 2005. In fact, one of the reasons

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    Essay Length: 305 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: January 17, 2010 By: Victor
  • Problem Solution: Usa World Bank

    Problem Solution: Usa World Bank

    Running head: PROBLEM SOLUTION: USA World Bank Managerial Decision Making Diane Rodgers University of Phoenix/Livonia Campus MBA 510 USA World Bank Problem Solution Instructor: Dr. Uju Eke Week 4 Problem Solution: USA World Bank USA World Bank (UWB) is a major bank with domestic and international presence. UWB has several banks that are located nationwide and enjoy a large consumer and small business base clientele. UBW also have been very successful in several worldwide ventures

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    Essay Length: 1,176 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: January 17, 2010 By: Mike
  • Intergrating Crises Management in Strategic Planning Process in International Travel Industry

    Intergrating Crises Management in Strategic Planning Process in International Travel Industry

    INTERGRATING CRISES MANAGEMENT IN STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS IN INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL INDUSTRY INTRODUCTION In the last six to seven years the international travel industry has seen a lot of incidents, which have affected the business a lot. “The travel industry, although not unique in its vulnerability, is nevertheless highly exposed to risks and prone to crises as the result of external events. External shocks, such as wars, hurricanes, terrorist attacks, pollution, adverse publicity and accidents, can

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    Essay Length: 385 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: January 17, 2010 By: Artur
  • How Did World War one Change American Society?

    How Did World War one Change American Society?

    Introduction In 1917 America entered World War one. By doing this America played a grave role in conquering Germany and ushering peace to Europe. However, the Great War also meant that the US would change dramatically through historical issues and changes which resulted in American society. Industries had started to realise that it was not as simple as it was before to abstract the immigrants. As the country developed and became more successful it

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    Essay Length: 1,592 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: January 17, 2010 By: Mike
  • The Weight Loss Industry: Fact or Fiction

    The Weight Loss Industry: Fact or Fiction

    The Weight Loss Industry: Fact or Fiction Through the years, we have watched and even ridden the waves that the weight loss industry has created in our lifestyles. However, as it continues to explode with growth, we are left in the wake wondering if we experienced any benefits from what it was offering in the first place. Instead of reducing obesity and improving health and fitness, the industry perpetuates the image associated with popular culture,

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    Essay Length: 1,602 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: January 17, 2010 By: Mikki
  • Management Skills in a Critical World

    Management Skills in a Critical World

    Management skills in a critical world This new job turned out to be an exciting opportunity to expand my knowledge by operating a business. This business apparently has some issues that require critical thinking skills to help resolve. We will identify and work to solve the problems through the use of the tools and techniques of decision-making. Once complete, we will have a clear picture of the problem, the associated risks and expected outcome that

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    Essay Length: 713 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 17, 2010 By: Mike
  • Worldviews and the World

    Worldviews and the World

    Before proceeding with our exploration of the fifteen aspects of the world, particularly the human world, it is necessary to gain a deeper understanding of the nature of worldviews; how they inform our interior lives, and how they help to determine the manner in which we engage the exterior world. We brought the caveman from the Stone Age To the subways of the modern world How they pack so many in Quick call the Guinness

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    Essay Length: 864 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 17, 2010 By: Fonta
  • Adolph Coors in the Brewing Industry

    Adolph Coors in the Brewing Industry

    he brewing industry in 1985 can be analyzed using Porter's five competitive forces: threat of new entrants, bargaining power of suppliers, bargaining power of buyers, substitutes and rivalry among existing competitors. All five competitive forces jointly determine the intensity of industry competition and profitability. Furthermore, the five forces narrow in on why the brewing industry became more concentrated and key features defining industry success. In the brewing industry, barriers to entry were high. Fixed costs

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    Essay Length: 680 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 17, 2010 By: Victor
  • The World Wide Web

    The World Wide Web

    The World Wide Web is the most popular part of the Internet by far. Once you spend time on the Web you will begin to feel like there is no limit to what you can discover. The Web allows rich and diverse communication by enabling you to access and interact with text, graphics, animation, photos, audio and video. So just what is this miraculous creation? On the simplest level, the Web physically consists of your

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    Essay Length: 546 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: July
  • World War 2

    World War 2

    World War II ranged from 1939 through 1945 and it involved every major world power. On one side were the Allies, including Great Britain, the United States, France and the Soviet Union. On the other side the Axis powers included Germany, Japan and Italy. This conflict resulted from the rise of totalitarian, militaristic regimes in Germany, Japan and Italy after World War I. Partly responsible were the humiliating peace treaties forced on Germany after World

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    Essay Length: 2,233 Words / 9 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: Mike
  • Industrial Revolution

    Industrial Revolution

    The Industrial Revolution was a crucial point in the history of the world, and also a very difficult time to endure, especially for the working class. In the late eighteenth century, a young poet and artist by the name of William Blake became outraged and inspired by the inhumane treatment of young boys called “chimney sweeps.” Thus he produced a protest in the form of simple poetry. Wicksteed says, “Deeper knowledge of Blake will

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    Essay Length: 1,186 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: Anna
  • Bill Gates and How the World Was Effected by His Accomplishments

    Bill Gates and How the World Was Effected by His Accomplishments

    Bill Gates How he effected the world with his accomplishments William Bill Gates III was born on October 28, 1955. He accomplished many unbelievable things, and highly influenced the people around him in many ways. In University, Bill Gates was known to be the “smart computer nerd,” who totally amazed all of his friends with his knowledge. One of the people that he had influenced the most was Steve Ballmer, current Microsoft’s Chief Executive Officer,

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    Essay Length: 1,124 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: Mike
  • World Music

    World Music

    While world music is a genre, musical exoticism can be classed as a process in which musicians freely interpret attributes of the music of non-western culture and targeting specifically at foreign audience. It is the direct perception of the western audience’s view of non-western music tradition, not non-western perception of non-western exoticism, in other words not the true perception, only a concept. As exotica is only an imitation, the authencity of the music is often

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    Essay Length: 1,414 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: Andrew
  • Art of Story Telling: Story Development

    Art of Story Telling: Story Development

    Art of Story Telling: Story Development 10 components of story telling Exposition is introducing detail of character, situation or event Foreshadow is preparing the element, situation or event to do something (to indicate or suggest something, usually something unpleasant, that is going to happen) Point of Attack is the beginning of the story with unexpected situation or extraordinary event Inciting Incident is the first complication occurred to any character whom causes the change of the

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    Essay Length: 506 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: David
  • Project Plan for Whitbread World Sailboat Race

    Project Plan for Whitbread World Sailboat Race

    University of Phoenix Terry Norris January 20, 2008 Project Plan for Whitbread World Sailboat Race This paper analyzes the Whitbread World Sailboat Race case scenario presented in chapter 9 in the Gray and Larson text, Project Management: the Managerial Process. The Whitbread World Sailboat Race is a nine month round the world race. Bjorn Ericksen has been chosen by his country to head up the project of getting a boat and a team ready for

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    Essay Length: 3,483 Words / 14 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: Janna
  • The Implementation of Tax Increment Financing as an Economic Development Policy

    The Implementation of Tax Increment Financing as an Economic Development Policy

    The Implementation of Tax Increment Financing as an Economic Development policy By: Randy L. Jacobs, J.D. ABSTRACT: With Tax Increment Financing (TIF) a municipality pays for economic development expenditures out of future increases in tax collection. The TIF method has achieved widespread popularity as a funding source to finance local infrastructure investment and improvements; however the TIF program has several shortfalls and many critisms. This paper will focus on the criticism that TIF programs are

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    Essay Length: 4,765 Words / 20 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: Anna
  • Airline Industry

    Airline Industry

    INDUSTRY BACKGROUND AND OVERVIEW Industry: Digital Cameras (Photography) The digital camera industry is, without a doubt, one of the newest industries in the world. With the first electronic camera being invented in 1981 and the first consumer digital invented in 19951, the digital camera actually traces its roots back to the photography industry. In 1888, with the development of the silver halide film slide and the portable camera by George Eastman2, capturing and recording images

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    Essay Length: 685 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: Fatih
  • Origins and Developments of Capitalist Modernity Marx and Weber

    Origins and Developments of Capitalist Modernity Marx and Weber

    Marx is considered a modernist because his views and theories fit the meaning of Modernity, which are human freedom and the right to free choice. To Marx, Capitalism is a barrier to the notion of human freedom and choice. Five aspects of his political theory which are modern, is how he views human nature, effects of Capitalism on human natures with emphasis on significance of labour, class struggles within Capitalism, the demise of Capitalism

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    Essay Length: 962 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 19, 2010 By: Andrew
  • Case Study: Health Care Industry (eli Lilly and Company)

    Case Study: Health Care Industry (eli Lilly and Company)

    CASE STUDY: HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY (ELI LILLY AND COMPANY) Introduction: Following on his experience of medicines used in the Civil War, Colonel Eli Lilly, a Union Officer and a pharmacist, started a small pharmaceutical company in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA with the aim of producing high quality prescription drugs. After Colonel Lilly's death, his son Josiah K. Lilly Sr., and eventually his two grandsons, Eli Lilly and Josiah K. Lilly Jr., each served as president of

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    Essay Length: 1,665 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: January 19, 2010 By: Anna
  • Historical Development in Nursing Research and Utilization

    Historical Development in Nursing Research and Utilization

    Collaborative Practice Paper This paper will be addressing a clinical case study from the writer's current experience that illustrates collaborative nursing practice. According to Schueller and Kimbrell (2003, p. 2), "When one refers to collaborative practice within a hospital setting, they are referring to healthcare personnel working together to care for patients and families". Collaboration is defined as "working together, especially in a joint intellectual effort to achieve a desired outcome; to cooperate" (American Heritage

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    Essay Length: 1,571 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: January 19, 2010 By: Mikki
  • Give Some Differences with a Positivist or Industrial Approach.

    Give Some Differences with a Positivist or Industrial Approach.

    Social science:- Give some differences with a positivist or industrial approach. The second half of the nineteenth century is marked by a broad new movement of thought called Positivism. This movement arose in opposition to the abstractionism and formalism of the transcendental Idealists, who had made nature a "representation" of the ego. The purpose of the new school of thought was to lay greater stress upon immediate experience, upon the positive data obtained through the

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    Essay Length: 1,588 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: January 19, 2010 By: Jon
  • Canada and the New World Economic Order

    Canada and the New World Economic Order

    Canada's economic system is a market economy, encompassing the production, sales and distribution of goods and services based upon prices set in the marketplace. The marketplace establishes an economic framework within which firms compete on the basis of a number of factors: price, quality, delivery, after-sales service etc. Competitiveness is a measure of the ability to succeed in this context. This article presents several different approaches to mcasuring competitiveness, and analyzes many of the factors

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    Essay Length: 3,839 Words / 16 Pages
    Submitted: January 19, 2010 By: regina

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