• Title/Summary/Keyword: Asia1

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New emerging viral infections in human beings that first appeared in Asia: a summary for the present decade 2001 - 2010

  • Wiwanitkit, Viroj
    • CELLMED
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.3.1-3.4
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    • 2011
  • Emerging infectious diseases are usually a public concern. The presence of new emerging infectious diseases is a topic to be reported on and discussed about in medicine. Several new emerging infectious diseases have occurred within the present decade. In this specific review, the author briefly reviews the important new emerging human viral infections that first appeared in Asia during the present decade, 2001 - 2010.

Current Status and Future Tasks of Clean Coal Technologies in the Asia Pacific Region

  • Son, Jae-Ek
    • Journal of Energy Engineering
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    • v.5 no.1
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    • pp.1-7
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    • 1996
  • Coal consumption in Asia is projected to increase by about 1.3 billion tons over the 1993-2010 period. The expansion in coal consumption for electricity generation is the dominant factor in the large increase in coal consumption. Without effective control measures, the projected increase in coal consumption will have a serious impact on environmental effects of increased coal use in Asia. Thus, the introduction of appropriate CCTs is considered essential to achieving the twin goals of expanded use of coal decreased environmental impacts.

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Heritage Soft Power in East Asia's Memory Contests: Promoting and Objecting to Dissonant Heritage in UNESCO

  • Nakano, Ryoko
    • Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia
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    • v.17 no.1
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    • pp.50-67
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    • 2018
  • Heritage has entered the center stage of public diplomacy in East Asia. Competition to claim and interpret memories of World War II in East Asia has driven campaigns to list heritage items with UNESCO. State and non-state actors aim to use heritage listings to present a particular view of the war and related history to domestic and international audiences. This paper highlights the role of heritage soft power in East Asia's "memory contests" by examining the promotion of dissonant modern heritage in UNESCO's heritage programs. It conceptualizes heritage designation as a soft power resource in East Asia and presents a conceptual framework for understanding the hegemonic competition over the "memory regime" that emerged from the structural change in East Asia's regional order. It then uses this framework to analyze the processes by which state and non-state actors promote and/or object to UNESCO recognition of their sites and documents as heritage of outstanding universal value or world significance. The elements of this process are illustrated with case studies of two very different pieces of heritage, Japan's "Sites of the Meiji Industrial Revolution" and China's "Documents of Nanjing Massacre," which were enshrined as significant world heritage in 2015. While state and non-state actors in East Asia are increasingly recognizing the utility of heritage as a soft power resource for advancing specific historical narratives to an international audience, a backlash movement from civil society groups and governments in other countries prevents a purely unilateral interpretation. As a result, the utility of heritage soft power in this context must be significantly qualified.

The Comparative Advantage of Intermediate Goods Trade in East Asia and Free Trade Agreement (동아시아 국가 간 부품무역 비교우위와 자유무역협정)

  • Kwon, Taek-Ho;Joo, Kyeong-won
    • Korea Trade Review
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    • v.41 no.1
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    • pp.159-186
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    • 2016
  • This study analyzes the degree of dependency and comparative advantage of each country for intermediate goods trade in East Asia, which predicts the comparative advantage of the intermediate goods trade and fragmentation in East Asia when the FTA arrangement in East Asia is implemented. The results are as follows. First, the share of intra-regional trade in the intermediate goods in East Asia has increased over time, implying the deepening of interdependency in intermediate goods trade within the East Asia. Second, Korea is a net exporter in intermediate goods trade for China and ASEAN, whereas it is a net importer for Japan. Japan is a high net exporter for all East Asia, while China is a net importer for Korea, Japan and ASEAN. If FTA arrangement in East Asia is implemented, Japan and Korea will be key suppliers of the intermediate goods for East Asia, while China and ASEAN will play a role of the manufacturing factory through the import of intermediate goods. Third, Korea has a comparative advantage in intermediate trade of electric and electronics and transport vehicle industry in East Asia. Japan has a comparative advantage in all of electric and electronics, transport vehicle, precision instrument, general machinery industry, whereas China has a comparative advantage only in electric and electronics intermediate trade in East Asia. The intra-industry trade of the intermediate goods in precision instrument, general machinery industry is expected to grow among Korea, Japan and China.

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Special Report - 인도에서 열린 'Asia ESCO Conference 2010' 참관기 - 13개국이 참가한 ESCO 산업 정보 교류의 장

  • Kim, Gyeong-Min
    • The Magazine for Energy Service Companies
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    • s.63
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    • pp.22-27
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    • 2010
  • 지난 1 월 14일과 15일 양일간 인도 델리에서 Asia ESCO Conference 2010이 열렸다. 국내에서는 2개 기관과 7개 기업에서 13명이 참가했다. 그 중 에너지관리공단과 ESCO 협회, 지멘스, 에너지솔루션즈에서 Asia ESCO Conference 참관기를 보내왔다. 어떤 이야기가 담겨있는지 하나하나 살펴보자.

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Analysis on Major Issues relating to Asia Pacific Summit on Information Society (정보화 사회에 관한 아ㆍ태 각료회의의 주요 동향 고찰)

  • 김영태;박종봉;박기식
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Information and Commucation Sciences Conference
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    • 2001.05a
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    • pp.567-570
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    • 2001
  • In the Asia Pacific Summit on Information Society in Tokyo, Ministers for information and communications of member countries of the APT(Asia Pacific Telecommunity) shared the view that it is necessary to take initiatives to unite efforts of all concerned and to tackle In(Information and Communication Technology)-related issues, so that a sound information-based society is established which respects the diversity of the Asia Pacific Region. At that meeting, Ministers adopted the Declaration and Action Plan for the Asia Pacific Renaissance through ICT. Thus, this paper focuses on analysis of the major issues regarding Declaration and Action Plan for the Asia Pacific Renaissance. In addition, this paper introduces the APT's following actions to implement the Declaration and Action Plan for Asia Pacific region.

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Linkages between the Korea and Asia-Pacic stock markets

  • Shin, Yang-Gyu
    • Journal of the Korean Data and Information Science Society
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    • v.21 no.6
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    • pp.1337-1341
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    • 2010
  • The paper investigates linkages between the Korea stock market and each of the major Asia-Pacific stock markets, namely those of the Japan, China, Australia, New-Zealand, We employs the Johansen technique to test for pairwise cointergration between the Korea stock market and each of the major Asia-Pacific stock markets. The major stock indices of the markets are used, from 1 September 2006 to 31 August 2010. The results from the test implies that the Korea market is not cointergrated with any of the major Asia-Pacific markets during the period. Our study implies that there are no long-run linkages between the Korea and any of the major Asia-Pacific stock markets.

Bonds that Bind Shared Historical and Sociocultural Characteristics of Southeast Asia

  • Gin, OOI Keat
    • SUVANNABHUMI
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.71-100
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    • 2019
  • The region between mainland China on the east and the Indian sub-continent on the west is referred to as Southeast Asia since the conclusion of the Pacific War (1941-1945). As a region, Southeast Asia appears as a hodgepodge of disparity and diversity, but a closer scrutiny reveals numerous common attributes and characteristics. This study attempts to identify and examine the cohesive and shared characteristics across the Southeast Asian region from a historical and sociocultural perspective. The intention is to differentiate an identity borne of the underlying commonalities of shared characteristics whether physical, experiential, emotive, and/or in terms of heritage. Subsequently, Southeast Asia has more grounds to claim itself as a distinct region, and an "area of study," besides the political expediency of ASEAN.

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"Local" vs. "Cosmopolitan" in the Study of Premodern Southeast Asia

  • Acri, Andrea
    • SUVANNABHUMI
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.7-52
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    • 2017
  • This paper analyzes the scholarly approaches to the problem of "local" vs. "cosmopolitan" in the context of the cultural transfers between South and Southeast Asia. Taking the "localization" paradigm advanced by Oliver Wolters as its pivot, it reviews the "externalist" and "autonomous" positions, and questions the hermeneutical validity of the fuzzy and self-explanatory category of "local." Having discussed the geo-environmental metaphors of "Monsoon Asia" and "Maritime Asia" as alternative paradigms to make justice to the complex dynamics of transregional interaction that shaped South and Southeast Asian societies, it briefly presents two case studies highlighting the tensions between the "local" and "cosmopolitan" approaches to the study of Old Javanese literature and Balinese Hinduism.

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