• Title/Summary/Keyword: 뭄바이

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Seminar & Report - Survey on Food Industry of India (Seminar & Report - 인도의 식품산업 동향 조사)

  • Park, Jong-Dae
    • Bulletin of Food Technology
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    • v.24 no.3
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    • pp.488-496
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    • 2011
  • 본 내용은 중국에 이은 세계 2위 쌀 생산 및 소비 국가인 인도의 식품산업 현황 및 쌀 가공 식품과 가공 기술 등을 조사하기 위하여 뭄바이에서 개최된 식품 및 음료, 호텔 박람회(TASTE 2011)에 참석하고, 뭄바이 SNDT 여자대학과 KBC(korea business center) 등을 방문 하여 한 인도 양국 간의 식품 가공산업과 쌀 가공산업 활성화에 기여하며 향후 관련 분야 교류 협력 활성화 기반 조성에 도움이 될 것으로 기대한다.

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Dharavi Redevelopment Plan through Urban Pharmaceutical Production & Research Facilities, and Residential Complex in Mumbai (도심형 제약연구&생산시설 및 주거복합 계획안을 통해 바라본 뭄바이 다라비 재개발계획)

  • Lim, Jae Heon
    • The Journal of the Convergence on Culture Technology
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    • v.6 no.3
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    • pp.145-158
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    • 2020
  • Dharavi, located in Mumbai, India, is the largest slum in the world, with over 700,000 people living in one area. The provincial government has selected a private business, and planning to promote Dharavi's redevelopment together. In addition, the Indian government announced three city development initiatives in 2015 and is promoting altogether the nationwide urban development in India, redevelopment projects in existing cities, and housing provision for slum residents. Through incorporating ongoing projects such as DMIC industrial corridor and smart city construction in India to the pharmaceutical industry that India has a comparative advantage over other industries, urban pharmaceutical research & production facility and residential complex is proposed in this paper, to be capable of supplying all occupants in the designated site, as a prototype for possible redevelopment directions.

A Study on Clothing Purchase Behaviors as Related to the Fashion Lifestyle of the New Generation of Indian Women living in Mumbai (인도 여성의 패션 라이프스타일에 따른 의복구매행동 특성 연구 - 뭄바이 거주 신세대 여성을 중심으로 -)

  • Ko, Su-Jin;Koh, Ae-Ran
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Clothing and Textiles
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    • v.33 no.10
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    • pp.1590-1600
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    • 2009
  • This study investigates the fashion lifestyles and the effect on clothing purchase behavior by female consumers living in Mumbai India. Data were collected from 129 Indian women in their teens to thirties living in Mumbai and were analyzed by factor analysis, cluster analysis, one-way ANOVA, Duncan test, ${\chi}^2$-test, frequency analysis using SPSS 12.0. The results of this study are as follows. Five factors of fashion lifestyle are identified: fashion consciousness, price orientation, advertisement/brand orientation, being aware of others, and tradition orientation. Female consumers were classified into four groups based on fashion lifestyle factors: display/brand oriented group, active profit seeking group, fashion oriented group, and a tradition oriented group. There were significant differences among the fashion lifestyle groups on five criteria (latest fashion, price, commonality with existing clothing, size, and the distance to the store) out of the 13 criteria. The display/brand oriented group showed high scores on the latest fashion and size. The active profit-seeking group generally showed high scores on all five factors. The fashion oriented group showed high scores on latest fashion and commonality with existing clothing when buying clothes. Finally, the tradition oriented group showed high scores only on the distance to the shop, while they (the tradition oriented group) showed low scores on the other criteria. The examination on the actual conditions of clothing purchase among fashion lifestyle groups showed that only the monthly expenditure for clothing is significantly different. The display/brand oriented group and active profit seeking group spent more on clothing than the other two groups.

A study on the Description of India's Textbooks on Colonial Cities in India -Focused on New Delhi, Madras, Calcutta and Bombay- (인도의 식민도시에 관한 인도 교과서 서술관점 연구 -뉴델리, 마드라스, 캘커타, 봄베이를 중심으로-)

  • Park, So-Young;Jeong, Jae-Yun
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.18 no.5
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    • pp.292-302
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    • 2018
  • This article examines how India's major colonial cities-Madras, Calcutta, Bombay (today, Chennai, Kolkata, Mumbai) and New Delhi- are described in India's history textbooks and analyzed them from the perspective of Indians. It is explained the major colonial cities as the process of making the cities and their political, social, economic and cultural changes, the separation between British and Indian, urban planning, colonial architectures built by British colonial power in Indian history textbooks. The viewpoint of its descriptions is featured by the coexistence of 'deprivation, exclusion, discrimination, resistance, challenge' and 'grant of opportunity, acceptation, absorption'. That is, this characteristic maintains a mutual confrontational and inseparable relation. And in a multi-layer, it enables to consider the inherent characteristics of a colonial city reflecting the British ruling ideology and the society within which the rulers and proprietors are forming without simplifying the cultural characteristics. It is clear that there was a resistance against the unreasonable discrimination and exclusion that had been suffered by the British colonial government as well.

A relapsed case of imported tertian malaria after a standard course of hydroxychloroquine and primaquine therapy (Hydroxych1oroquine과 primaquine 통상 용량으로 치료한 후 재발한 유입 삼일열 말라리아 1예)

  • 이경주;정문현
    • Parasites, Hosts and Diseases
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    • v.36 no.2
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    • pp.143-146
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    • 1998
  • Resistance of Plcsmodium species to antimalarial agents has become increasingly challenging to the management and prevention of malaria. We experienced an imported case of tertian malaria due to Plasmodum viuax relapsed after a seemingly successful treatment with conventional course of hydroxychloroquine and primaquine. A 35-year-old man developed fever three days after return from India and mainland China. After his illness was diagnosed as tertian malaria, he was managed with hydroxy- chloroquine and then primaquine (primaquine base 15 mg/day for 14 days). Thereafter peripheral blood smears showed no malarial parasites, and there was no relapse of symptom until the 55th post-treatment day, however, six months after the above treatment tertian malaria relapsed. He was managed with the same medications again un malaria did not relapse for 10 months.

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