Results for 'Economic Growth and Technology'

968 found
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  1. New Perspectives on Economic Growth and Technological Innovation.S. Dibooglu - 1999 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 12 (2):84-88.
  2. Technology and the Pursuit of Economic Growth.David C. Mowery & Nathan Rosenberg - 1991 - Cambridge University Press.
    Technology's contribution to economic growth and competitiveness has been the subject of vigorous debate in recent years. This book demonstrates the importance of a historical perspective in understanding the role of technological innovation in the economy. The authors examine key episodes and institutions in the development of the U.S. research system and in the development of the research systems of other industrial economies. They argue that the large potential contributions of economics to the understanding of technology (...)
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  3. Science, Technology and Economic Growth.C. Rangarajan - 1993 - In Syed Zahoor Qasim (ed.), Science and quality of life. New Delhi, India: Offsetters. pp. 143.
     
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  4.  11
    Energy and Economic Growth in the United States.Edward Allen - 1979 - MIT Press.
    Instead of relying on the usual price elasticity technique, this book combines economic and engineering analysis to study economic growth and energy demands to the year 2000. It asserts that future energy demand will be determined by two basic factors--the gross national product and the efficiency with which energy is used to produce this output in the household, commercial, industrial, and transport sectors of the economy.Labor hours multiplied by a productivity factor results in the GNP. This study (...)
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  5.  13
    Legal Environment, Technological Innovation, and Sustainable Economic Growth.Yidan Zhao - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The productivity gains generated by innovation are the root cause of long-term economic growth. In this paper, two empirical hypotheses are proposed to clarify our view: the trade turnover of technology market and intellectual property protection are important factors to stimulate innovation; The main channel of communication is through the increase of research staff and R&D funds. The empirical research result show that: The greater the technology trade volume, the greater the incentive to regional innovation activities, (...)
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  6.  10
    Research on the Impact of Technological Finance on Financial Stability: Based on the Perspective of High-Quality Economic Growth.Lu Shen, Guohua He & Huan Yan - 2022 - Complexity 2022:1-15.
    This paper investigates the relationship between technological finance, high-quality economic growth, and financial stability. Based on data of 30 provinces collected between 2004 and 2017, this paper adopts the method of factor analysis to construct comprehensive indexes of technological finance and financial stability before calculating green total factor productivity as the index of high-quality development, using the CRS Multiplicative Model. Then it constructs the spatial SAC model and PVAR model for analyses of the just-mentioned relationship based on the (...)
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  7.  20
    Economic Transformations: General Purpose Technologies and Long Term Economic Growth.Richard G. Lipsey, Kenneth I. Carlaw & Clifford T. Bekar - 2005 - Oxford University Press UK.
    This book examines the long term economic growth that has raised the West's material living standards to levels undreamed of by counterparts in any previous time or place. The authors argue that this growth has been driven by technological revolutions that have periodically transformed the West's economic, social and political landscape over the last 10,000 years and allowed the West to become, until recently, the world's only dominant technological force. Unique in the diversity of the analytical (...)
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  8.  9
    Is War Necessary for Economic Growth?: Military Procurement and Technology Development.Vernon W. Ruttan - 2006 - Oxford University Press USA.
    Military and defense-related procurement has been an important source of technology development across a broad spectrum of industries that account for an important share of United States industrial production. In this book, the author focuses on six general-purpose technologies: interchangeable parts and mass production; military and commercial aircraft; nuclear energy and electric power; computers and semiconductors; the INTERNET; and the space industries. In each of these industries, technology development would have occurred more slowly, and in some case much (...)
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  9.  22
    Time, Capital, and Technological Progress in the Austrian School of Economics.Robert W. Ciborowski, Aneta Kargol-Wasiluk & Marian Zalesko - 2019 - Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric 57 (1):123-144.
    The article investigates the significance of time, the nature of capital, and the role of technological progress in economic processes. The presented analysis of the three economic categories makes use of the theoretical achievements of notable representatives of the Austrian School of Economics, for whom a creative entrepreneur was the main protagonist of the interactions taking place in the economy. The above-mentioned economic categories, taken together, are for him the foundation of human activity. The time factor is (...)
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  10.  22
    Examining the effects of information and communications technology on green growth and environmental performance, socio-economic and environmental cost of technology generation: A pathway toward environment sustainability.Shaoming Chen, Muhammad Tayyab Sohail & Minghui Yang - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Human capital and ICT have a significant role in determining human development. The impacts of ICT and human capital on green growth and environmental sustainability should be explored for sustainable economic development. This research contributes to the literature on the role of ICTs and human capital in the determination of green growth and environmental performance. Based on time-series data 1990–2019, the study intends to investigate the impact of ICTs and human capital on environmental and green growth (...)
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  11.  7
    Structural Dynamics and Economic Growth.Richard Arena & Pier Luigi Porta (eds.) - 2012 - Cambridge University Press.
    Ever since Adam Smith, economists have been preoccupied with the puzzle of economic growth. The standard mainstream models of economic growth were and often still are based either on assumptions of diminishing returns on capital with technological innovation or on endogenous dynamics combined with a corresponding technological and institutional setting. An alternative model of economic growth emerged from the Cambridge School of Keynesian economists in the 1950s and 1960s. This model - developed mainly by (...)
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  12.  24
    The rate of economic growth, technology and the Ph.D.Ernest Rudd - 1968 - Minerva 6 (3):366-387.
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  13.  16
    Emotion Recognition Algorithm Application Financial Development and Economic Growth Status and Development Trend.Dahai Wang, Bing Li & Xuebo Yan - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Financial market and economic growth and development trends can be regarded as an extremely complex system, and the in-depth study and prediction of this complex system has always been the focus of attention of economists and other scholars. Emotion recognition algorithm is a pattern recognition technology that integrates a number of emerging science and technology, and has good non-linear system fitting capabilities. However, using emotion recognition algorithm models to analyze and predict financial market and economic (...)
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  14.  17
    Rethinking Economics and Education: Exponential Growth and Post‐Growth Strategies.Ruth Irwin - 2017 - Educational Theory 67 (4):379-398.
    Education is increasingly vocational and structured to serve the ongoing exponential increase in economic growth. Climate change is an outcome of these same economic values and praxes. Attempts to shift these values and our approach to technology are continually absorbed and overcome by the pressing motif of economic growth. In this article, Ruth Irwin uses Martin Heidegger's concept of the technological enframing of modernity to view economic growth. John Maynard Keynes's notion of (...)
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  15.  34
    Science and Technology, Ideology and Politics in the Usa: (Toward an Analysis of the Evolution of Complex Scientific-Technological Projects in the USA).G. S. Khozin - 1973 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 12 (3):50-70.
    In the complex diversity of processes and phenomena associated with the revolution in science and technology and characteristic of the functioning of capitalism in the 1960s, a new and at the same time highly characteristic phenomenon is to be seen. This is the complex scientific-technological project, which made its appearance at the leading edge of scientific and engineering progress. Maximum national technical, economic, and scientific potential is concentrated on its implementation, as are the latest achievements in management and (...)
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  16.  15
    Relationship Between Human Capital and Technological Innovation Growth of Regional Economy and Psychology of New Entrepreneurs in Northeast China.Xingyang Yu & Mingji Liu - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The economic restructuring and rapid rise of the economy in Northeast China have resulted in a proliferation of new ventures. Studying the psychology of new entrepreneurs is conducive to understanding the relationship between human capital and economic growth. The work reported here aims to explore the impact of human capital on economic growth in Northeast China and the influencing factors of psychological capital of new entrepreneurs in the entrepreneurial process. Based on Cobb–Douglas production function, the (...)
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  17.  36
    RETRACTED: An empirical analysis of the impact of higher education on economic growth: The case of China.Arshad di QiAli, Tao Li, Yuan-Chun Chen & Jiachao Tan - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:959026.
    China's domestic labor market has limited demand for tertiary graduates due to an unbalanced industrial structure, with a weak contribution to economic performance over the past decade. This study estimates the asymmetric effects of higher education progress (highly educated employed workforce), higher education utilization (highly educated unemployed workforce), and the separate effects of higher education utilization interactions with high-tech industries on economic growth in China from 1980 to 2020. Using a Nonlinear Autoregressive Distributed Lag (NARDL) model, this (...)
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  18.  18
    Science and Society Science, Technology, and Economic Growth in the Eighteenth Century. Ed. A. E. Musson. London: Methuen, 1972. Pp. x + 211. £2.25. [REVIEW]J. D. Marshall - 1973 - British Journal for the History of Science 6 (4):437-438.
  19.  48
    Homage to malthus, Ricardo, and boserup: Toward a general theory of population, economic growth, environmental deterioration, wealth, and poverty.Peter Richerson - manuscript
    The debates over the future of human population and the earth’s environment, and similar large issues, usually take place without reference to explicit models. Debate would be clarified if such models were employed. We propose that the logistic equation and its extensions like the generalized logistic and the Lotka-Volterra equations, so familiar to ecologists, can easily be modified to model the important "macro" questions that motivated the three thinkers of our title. The long term rate of population growth must (...)
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  20.  40
    R&D and economic growth.Kevin Sylwester - 2001 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 13 (4):71-84.
  21.  8
    Understanding the care.data conundrum: New information flows for economic growth.Stephen Timmons & Paraskevas Vezyridis - 2017 - Big Data and Society 4 (1).
    The analysis of data from electronic health records aspires to facilitate healthcare efficiencies and biomedical innovation. There are also ethical, legal and social implications from the handling of sensitive patient information. The paper explores the concerns, expectations and implications of the National Health Service England care.data programme: a national data sharing initiative of linked electronic health records for healthcare and other research purposes. Using Nissenbaum’s contextual integrity of privacy framework through a critical Science and Technology Studies lens, it examines (...)
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  22.  16
    An Analysis of Important Sectors in Economic Growth. Case Study for Kosova.Agon Zogjani, Fife Kovaci-Uruci & Jeton Zogjani - 2023 - Seeu Review 18 (1):107-130.
    Education, innovation, the labour force, and new businesses are considered the key important sectors (factors) for developed and emerging economies. The paper analyses are performed by using the Cobb Douglas production function for analysing the impact and correlation of these factors (variables) on the economic growth of Kosova during the period 2013 - 2021. The variables of public expenditures on education as a percentage of GDP and the labour force have shown a negative impact on growth and (...)
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  23.  17
    Intellectual property and industrialization: legalizing hope in economic growth.Laura R. Ford - 2017 - Theory and Society 46 (1):57-93.
    This article draws on theoretical resources from economic sociology and sociology of law to intervene in economic debates about the relationship between intellectual property and industrialization. Utilizing historical evidence from the earliest period of American intellectual property law and from a formative company in the New England textile industry, I propose a social process of influence that connects intellectual property law to industrialization. I argue that, consistent with the findings of New Economic Sociology, social relationship structures and (...)
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  24.  25
    Compulsive Growth and the Dynamics of “Perverted Progress”.Jekaterina Markow - 2019 - Yearbook for Eastern and Western Philosophy 4 (1):329-346.
    This text offers a critique of a certain development in political discourses on progress, namely the “decoupling” of notions of moral from notions of technological progress. This decoupling yields fatal social, economic and ecologic consequences in practice that ultimately amount to a virtual perversion of progress. The second part of the paper reflects upon the psychosocial drivers of this dynamic. I venture that the only motive that may explain why we reproduce this dynamic even as we increasingly suffer from (...)
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  25. Integration of the Social System: an Approach To the Study of Economic Growth.John Friedmann - 1961 - Diogenes 9 (33):75-97.
    The usual practice in contemporary literature is to treat of economic growth by way of an analysis of the several factors whose joint operation is thought to issue in an expansion of the productive powers of society. There are, for instance, the factors of saving and investment; investment leads to an increase in the social product and, if sufficiently large, to a rise in per capita income. Around this central mechanism of growth, many authors group a variety (...)
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  26.  47
    Analysis over factors of innovation in China’s fast economic growth since its beginning of reform and opening up.Chun Ding & Junyang Li - 2014 - AI and Society 29 (3):377-386.
    The technological progress makes great contribution to the rapid economic growth of China during its past three decades of reform and opening up. An empirical analysis conducted over China’s total factor productivity certifies this conclusion but it also reveals that China’s TFP growth rate is not very high. We further explore the various stages of change of China’s total factor productivity and the causes of these changes and finally take an analytical calculation over the present flaws of (...)
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  27.  1
    Enhancing Cultural Heritage Tourism through Market Innovation and Technology Integration.Cao Shuran, F. A. Anor Salim & Xu Ying - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:122-131.
    Integrating the preservation of cultural heritage with the development of tourism is essential for fostering sustainable economic growth and honoring historical and cultural values. This abstract outlines the pivotal findings from an action research project in an urban setting within the Yangtze River Delta region, emphasizing the role of market innovation and the strategic use of emerging technologies to align cultural heritage conservation with tourism economic growth. The project was approached through a multifaceted methodology, including a (...)
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  28.  29
    Economic language and economy change: with implications for cyber-physical systems.Alan Cottey - 2018 - AI and Society 33 (3):323-333.
    The implementation of cyber-physical and similar systems depends on prevailing social and economic conditions. It is here argued that, if the effect of these technologies is to be benign, the current neo-liberal economy must change to a radically more cooperative model. In this paper, economy change means a thorough change to a qualitatively different kind of economy. It is contrasted with economic change, which is the kind of minor change usually considered in mainstream discourse. The importance of language (...)
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  29.  73
    Is a singularity just around the corner? What it takes to get explosive economic growth.Robin Hanson - 1998 - Journal of Evolution and Technology 2 (1).
    Economic growth is determined by the supply and demand of investment capital; technology determines the demand for capital; while human nature determines the supply. The supply curve has two distinct parts; giving the world economy two distinct modes. In the familiar slow growth mode; rates of return are limited by human discount rates. In the fast growth mode; investment is limited by the world's wealth. Historical trends suggest that we may transition to the fast mode (...)
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  30.  14
    Global economics for growth and survival: The need for fundamental shifts in economic, social and political systems.Richard Margrave - 2010 - Synesis: A Journal of Science, Technology, Ethics, and Policy 1 (1):T47 - T54.
  31.  11
    Political institutions and economic growth.Jenny Minier - 2001 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 13 (4):85-93.
  32. New Technology: Risks and Gains.Magdalena Klimczuk-Kochańska & Andrzej Klimczuk - 2015 - In Mehmet Odekon (ed.), The Sage Encyclopedia of World Poverty, 2nd Edition. Sage Publications. pp. 1144--1147.
    New technologies are often radical innovations that change current activities across different areas of social and economic life. At the beginning of the 21st century, some of these technologies are information and communications technology, nanotechnology, biotechnology, robotics, and artificial intelligence. These innovations stimulate new opportunities for the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services, and thus can help solve social problems. But they also cause new social risks and inequalities.
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  33.  34
    The Electronic Sweatshop: How Computers Are Transforming the Office of the Future into the Factory of the Past. Barbara GarsonScience, Technology, and Social Progress. Steven L. GoldmanTechnology and the Pursuit of Economic Growth. David C. Mowery, Nathan Rosenberg. [REVIEW]Dominick Pisano - 1992 - Isis 83 (1):168-170.
  34. Inside the Black Box: Technology and Economics.Nathan Rosenberg - 1983 - Cambridge University Press.
    Economists have long treated technological phenomena as events transpiring inside a black box and, on the whole, have adhered rather strictly to a self-imposed ordinance not to inquire too seriously into what transpires inside that box. The purpose of Professor Rosenberg's work is to break open and examine the contents of the black box. In so doing, a number of important economic problems be powerfully illuminated. The author clearly shows how specific features of individual technologies have shaped a number (...)
     
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  35.  23
    Natural resources, sustaining capacity and technologic development.Janos I. Töth - 1999 - Global Bioethics 12 (1-4):99-105.
    Modem economics relied on the false presupposition that natural resources are free goods. It gave rise to exaggerated expectations on the side of economists concerning the possibilities of economic growth. I try to interpret the terms of natural resources, sustaining capacity, production from a human-ecological platform. The quantity of natural resources may vary within a large spectrum between absolute abundance and total exhaustion. The support capacity can be raised in different ways. Extensive growth is wrong while technological (...)
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  36.  14
    The Cognitive Mechanics of Economic Development and Institutional Change.Bertin Martens - 2004 - Routledge.
    This book seeks to explain long-term economic development and institutional change in terms of the cognitive features of human learning and communication processes. Martens links individual cognitive processes to macroeconomic growth theories, including economies of scale and scope, and to theories of institutional development based on asymmetric information in production processes and economies of scale in enforcement technology. With considerable flair, Bertin Martens has applied the hot new area of psychological and behavioural economics to notions of (...) and development and has created a unique and impressive volume. (shrink)
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  37.  23
    The Dynamics of science and technology: social values, technical norms, and scientific criteria in the development of knowledge.Wolfgang Krohn, Edwin T. Layton & Peter Weingart (eds.) - 1978 - Boston: D. Reidel Pub. Co..
    The interrelations of science and technology as an object of study seem to have drawn the attention of a number of disciplines: the history of both science and technology, sociology, economics and economic history, and even the philosophy of science. The question that comes to mind is whether the phenomenon itself is new or if advances in the disciplines involved account for this novel interest, or, in fact, if both are intercon nected. When the editors set out (...)
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  38. Technological Unemployment.Magdalena Klimczuk-Kochańska & Andrzej Klimczuk - 2015 - In Mehmet Odekon (ed.), The Sage Encyclopedia of World Poverty, 2nd Edition. Sage Publications. pp. 1510--1511.
    Technological unemployment is a situation when people are without work and seeking work because of innovative production processes and labor-saving organizational solutions.
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  39.  43
    Interdisciplinarity and innovation dynamics. On convergence of research, technology, economy, and society.Klaus Mainzer - 2011 - Poiesis and Praxis 7 (4):275-289.
    In the age of globalization, economic growth and the welfare of nations decisively depend on basic innovations. Therefore, education and knowledge is an important advantage of competition in highly developed countries with high standards of salaries, but raw material shortage. In the twenty-first century, innovations will arise from problem-oriented research, crossing over traditional faculties and disciplines. Therefore, we need platforms of interdisciplinary dialogue to choose transdisciplinary problems and to cluster new portfolios of technologies. The clusters of research during (...)
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  40.  4
    Neoliberal growth vs food system democratization: narrative analysis of Canadian federal and civil society agri-food policy.Naomi Robert, Tammara Soma & Kent Mullinix - forthcoming - Agriculture and Human Values:1-21.
    Narratives inform policymaking by building consensus, stabilizing our shared beliefs, and legitimizing our assumptions (Roe 1992, 1994). This research applies narrative policy analysis to identify and compare the dominant agriculture and food (agri-food) narratives of Canadian federal government and civil society policy over time. It aims to understand and compare what narratives are driving the agri-food policy priorities of each group, with particular attention to how policy narratives address social and environmental goals. This analysis documents and confirms a Neoliberal Techno-optimist (...)
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  41.  38
    Technology and Economic Power.Pierre Hessler - 2014 - Philosophy and Technology 27 (2):279-283.
    IntroductionLarge corporations—from Apple to Volkswagen—are powerful; whereas their customers are much less powerful. But many observers believe that information and communication technologies are giving consumers weapons to level the playing field. Is this really true?From Theory to the Reality of Economic PowerTechnology and economic power share one characteristic: economic theory has long ignored them.Starting with the industrial revolution, technology has been the first driver of economic growth. But it is only a couple of centuries (...)
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  42.  14
    Technology and Society: The Influence of Machines in the United States.S. Mckee Rosen - 1941 - Macmillan.
    National policy and technology. Manufacture. Transportation and communication. Agriculture. Construction. Science in the professions. The industriakist. Labor. The farmes. Economic motives for resistance. Machines and the worker: a case study of the cigar industry. The development of urban communities and social disorgaization. The family. The comforts of life. Public resistance. Thechnology and human welfare: a case of the doctor and the hospital. The growth services of municipal government. The changing federal systems: the States. The changing federal systems: (...)
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  43.  60
    Beyond Malthusianism: Demography and Technology in John Stuart Mill's Stationary State*: Robert Kurfirst.Robert Kurfirst - 1991 - Utilitas 3 (1):53-67.
    In his evaluation of the major social reform movements of his era, Mill chastised well-meaning reformers for their reluctance to elevate Malthusianism to a position of prominence in their efforts. He was convinced that the key to the material, mental, and moral improvement of the poor and the workers lay in a reduction of their physical numbers and in the behavioural modifications entailed by such a diminution, whereas most other reformers looked elsewhere for solutions. A favourite assumption about the proper (...)
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  44. New Directions in the Economic Theory of the Environment.Carlo Carraro & Domenico Siniscalco (eds.) - 1997 - Cambridge University Press.
    First published in 1997, this volume addressed the growing preoccupation of scientists at the time had in environmental phenomena, such as global warming, ozone layer depletion, acid rains, fresh water and ocean pollution, desertification, deforestation and the loss of bio-diversity. The crucial and pressing nature of these issues spawned says the author a new wave of research in environmental economics. The volume provides broad surveys of the developments in the economics of the environment and reports on the developing set of (...)
     
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  45.  48
    Molecular materials and its technology: disruptive impact on industrial and socio-economic areas. [REVIEW]Shantesh Hede - 2007 - AI and Society 21 (3):303-313.
    This paper discusses the economic, health and social potential of nanotechnology. This involves the development of techniques for the manipulation of matter at the atomic and molecular levels. These new materials can perform multiple functions and be economically produced in large quantities, and hence have the potential for replacing existing technologies and materials in socially and economically disruptive ways. The paper raises some ethical, social and moral concerns arising from the capabilities of such materials, and discusses possible ways to (...)
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  46.  45
    Introduction: International Business Firms, Economic Development, and Ethics.Frederick Bird, Joseph Smucker & Manuel Velasquez - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 89 (S2):81 - 84.
    In 1978, 16 months after Mao Zedong’s death, China’s new leader, Deng Xiaoping, introduced market reforms and an “opening” to the West that allowed the US company Hewlett-Packard to enter China in 1981. Shortly thereafter, HP began a partnership with the Chinese company Legend Computer, through which HP transferred its technology in four main areas: product technology, business model, management practices, and strategic planning processes. This technology transfer seems to be a “just exchange” in that HP received (...)
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  47.  15
    Analysis of the Coupling Coordination and Spatiotemporal Evolution of High-Tech Industrial Technological Innovation and Regional Economic Development.Xu-Mei Yuan, Fu-Li Wei, Hui Li & Ying An - 2022 - Complexity 2022:1-14.
    Improving the coordination between technological innovation in high-tech industries and regional economic development is an important measure for all provinces to implement the innovation-driven development strategy. Based on the analysis of the mechanism of high-tech industrial technological innovation and regional economic development, this paper constructs the measurement index system of high-tech industrial technological innovation and regional economic development, and the chain network DEA model, entropy weight method, coupling coordination model, and exploratory spatial data analysis technology are (...)
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  48.  15
    Moral Crisis, Professionals and Ethical Education.Geoffrey Hunt - 1997 - Nursing Ethics 4 (1):29-38.
    Western civilization has probably reached an impasse, expressed as a crisis on all fronts: economic, technological, environmental and political. This is experienced on the cultural level as a moral crisis or an ethical deficit. Somehow, the means we have always assumed as being adequate to the task of achieving human welfare, health and peace, are failing us. Have we lost sight of the primacy of human ends? Governments still push for economic growth and technological advances, but many (...)
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  49.  24
    Limits of global growth, stagnation, creativity and international stability.V. Tsyganov - 2014 - AI and Society 29 (2):259-266.
    Arising restrictions of global economic growth due to limited natural resources and capacity of the biosphere adversely affect on people level of life and future expectation. That leads to mass depression and social instability. To consider this problem, psycho-physiological model of onward hedonist in consumer society is developed and investigated. This model is based on the fact that human nature generates a growing desire, needs to progress. After reaching the limits of growth, member of consumer society feel (...)
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  50.  16
    Fixing Technology with Society: The Coproduction of Democratic Deficits and Responsible Innovation at the OECD and the European Commission.Sebastian Pfotenhauer, Tess Doezema & Nina Frahm - 2022 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 47 (1):174-216.
    Long presented as a universal policy-recipe for social prosperity and economic growth, the promise of innovation seems to be increasingly in question, giving way to a new vision of progress in which society is advanced as a central enabler of technoeconomic development. Frameworks such as “Responsible” or “Mission-oriented” Innovation, for example, have become commonplace parlance and practice in the governance of the innovation–society nexus. In this paper, we study the dynamics by which this “social fix” to technoscience has (...)
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