• Title/Summary/Keyword: China-India

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Chinese Influence and Southeast Asian Response: An Interactive Approach (중국의 영향과 동남아의 대응: 상호적 접근시각)

  • Park, Sa-Myung
    • The Southeast Asian review
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    • v.21 no.2
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    • pp.217-261
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    • 2011
  • This study is an attempt to construct a basic framework of analysis about China's political and economic influence on Southeast Asia through traditional Sinocentrism, anti-colonial nationalism, Cold War socialism and post-Cold War capitalism. As to the historical status of Southeast Asia vis-a-vis external forces such as India, China and the West, the colonial discourse tends to put excessive emphasis upon its dependence, and the posy-colonial discourse upon its autonomy. However, this study elucidates the political and economic interactions between China and Southeast Asia in a dynamic perspective, focusing on their reciprocal interactions beyond the essentially static dichotomy of autonomy and dependence. Chinese influence on Southeast asia can be divided into active and reactive one, with the former referring to direct and intended consequences and the latter to indirect and unintended consequences. In the historical process of active and reactive influence, both China and Southeast Asia were fundamentally proactive actors. Thus, the autonomy or dependence of Southeast Asia is just a question of relative one, with its actual extent and degree varying with specific spatial and temporal conditions.

Ferrying to the Other Shore: Silla Seafarers and Avalokiteśvara Faith in the East Asian Maritime World

  • Erika Erzsebet VOROS
    • Acta Via Serica
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    • v.8 no.2
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    • pp.125-154
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    • 2023
  • Historically, commerce was a significant factor in the proliferation and development of Buddhism, which is especially manifest in the cult of the bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara. Iconographic and textual evidence testifies that maritime trade on the Indian Ocean played a fundamental role in the formation of Avalokiteśvara worship. The sea was also a major conduit through which elements of the Avalokiteśvara faith were transmitted from India through China to Korea and Japan, the easternmost ends of the Silk Road. These elements include Avalokiteśvara's role as a maritime savior, oceanic symbolism, and the concept of the bodhisattva's worldly abode, Potalaka. Cultic sites dedicated to maritime safety were established at important transport hubs in East Asia. Due to China's strategic location on the Silk Road, as well as its cultural influence, the most important cultic sites were founded in China, first on the Shandong Peninsula, then in the southern Jiangnan region, in present-day Zhejiang Province. Especially notable is the role that Korean seafarers played in this process by assisting monks in search of the Dharma, establishing temples, and transmitting religious beliefs across the ocean. The present study focuses on the role that maritime figures played in the cultural exchanges between Korea, China, and Japan examined through Avalokiteśvara faith. By this, it aims to demonstrate how Korean seafarers inherited and continued the traditional relationship between commerce and Buddhism, while extending the Maritime Silk Road to the "East Asian Mediterranean."

경영정보 - BRICs(브릭스)? 이제는 CIVETS(시베츠) 국가를 주목하라!

  • 한국전기제품안전협회
    • Product Safety
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    • s.214
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    • pp.54-55
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    • 2011
  • 지난 2001년 골드만삭스는 선진국 이후 세계 경제를 이끌어갈 새로운 성장동력으로 자리잡을 국가로 BRICs를 제시했다. IBRICs란 Brazil, Russia, India, China와 같은 신흥개발도상국을 뜻한다. 이후, 유망시장을 의미하는 신조어들이 많이 나왔었는데, HSBC은행이 작년에 제시한 CIVETS(시베츠) 국가가 최근에 각광을 받고 있다. CIVETS 국가는 Columbia(콜롬비아), Indonesia(인도네시아), Vietnam(베트남), Ezypt(이집트), Turkey(터키), South africa(남아프리카 공화국) 등 6개국을 뜻한다. 아직은 BRICs 국가들에 비해서 경제규모는 작지만 풍부한 젊은 인구, 빠른 경제성장을 바탕으로 BRICs 이후로 유망 국가로 부상하고 있는 국가들이다. 그럼 각 나라별로 어떤 특징을 갖고 있는지 살펴보기로 하자!

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GLOBAL LESSON-성공적인 BRICs 시장 진출전략

  • Korea Venture Business Association
    • Venture DIGEST
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    • s.55
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    • pp.22-23
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    • 2004
  • 브릭스(BRICs)는 브라질(Brazil), 러시아(Russia), 인도(India), 중국(China)의 머리글자를 따온 것이다. 이 신조어를 선보이며 미국의 투자은행 골드만삭스는 브릭스 4개국을 향후 세계경제 성장을 주도할 중심축으로 제시하였다. ‘각 대륙의 최대 인구국가’라는 공통점을 가진 브릭스 4개국의 움직임은 그간‘중국’에만 눈과 귀를 집중하고 있던 우리에게 더 크게 눈을 뜨고 세계를 바라볼 것을 주문하고 있다. ‘지구촌 경제의 다크호스’로 부상한 브릭스 4개국의 시장동향과 진출전략 등에 대해 알아보자.

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한국산 큰새똥거미(Cyrtarachne inaequealis Thorell, 1895)의 생활사에 관한 연구

  • Jeong Seong Yeol;Kim Ju Pil
    • Proceedings of the Korea Society of Environmental Biology Conference
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    • 2002.11a
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    • pp.132-134
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    • 2002
  • The authors observed thee life history of Cyrtarachne inaequalis Thorell, 1895, during from September 21th, 2001 to April 17th, 2002. Cyrtarachne inaequalis Thorell, 1895 are distributed in oriental region including Korea, China, Japan, India, and Taiwan. The eggs were hatched out from March 31th, 2002 to April 1st, 2002. Cyrtarachne inaequalis Thorell, 1895 usually began to move after sunset. The structure of web was irregular. This study shoos the ecological Life of Cyrtarachne inaequalis Thorell, 1895.

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Apple's Semiconductor Internalization Strategy (애플의 반도체 내재화 전략)

  • H.S. Chun;S.M. Kim
    • Electronics and Telecommunications Trends
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    • v.38 no.3
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    • pp.86-97
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    • 2023
  • The outbreak of the novel coronavirus disease in 2020 caused a global semiconductor supply shortage and disruption in the production of devices such as iPhones owing to China's quarantine lockdown. Thus, Apple is diversifying its production bases from China to countries like India and Vietnam. The company is also accelerating semiconductor development to guarantee a stable supply, reduce design costs, and customize semiconductors with high quality and outstanding specifications for their products to outperform devices that use general-purpose semiconductors. Following the mobile application processor, Apple is releasing world-class semiconductors, such as the M1 and M2 chips that play the role of central processing units.

The Making of Southeast Asian Culture and Society (동남아시아 문화와 사회의 형성)

  • Cho, Hung-guk
    • SUVANNABHUMI
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.1-25
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    • 2009
  • The diversity of Southeast Asian culture and society has been made by two factors: geopolitical environment and colonialism. The geopolitical position of the region between China Seas and Indian Ocean has made it possible that diverse cultures from Northeast Asia especially China and India, Middle East and Europe have flowed into the region. The fact that Southeast Asia was colonized by various European nations has provided additional diversity. The diversity manifests itself most clearly in the culture of Southeast Asia which has various layers: On the bottom lay the indigenous one, and above it Chinese and Indian and Islamic cultures and finally European one.

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Land Cover Change: A Regional Context, Asia, 1983~1994 (토지피복 변화: 1983~1994 아시아 지역의 특징)

  • Seong, Jeong-Chang
    • Journal of the Korean Association of Geographic Information Studies
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    • v.3 no.2
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    • pp.73-86
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    • 2000
  • Using monthly AVHRR-NDVI composite images, global vector data and statistical information, land cover change patterns in Asia during the major growing season (June, July and August) were analyzed for each country. Specifically, explanations on NDVI changes were developed at a regional scale emphasizing human impacts on ground vegetation. The annual mean change in each country showed NDVI-gain trends in high latitude areas and some parts of eastern China and northern/western India. On the contrary, NDVI-loss trends were distinctive in Japan, Korea, some parts of southeastern China, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar and some parts in southwestern/eastern India. These patterns largely coincided with socio-economic information reflected by human behavior. The NDVI change trends showed significant correlation with forest area changes. Also, a multiple regression model showed that the NDVI change patterns were significantly dependent on the changes in forest area and total population.

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The Scientific Name of Aquilariae Lignum based on distribution of Aquilaria spp. (Aquilaria 속 식물 분포도에 근거한 심향(沈香)의 학명)

  • Kim, In-Rak
    • The Korea Journal of Herbology
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    • v.28 no.5
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    • pp.13-19
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    • 2013
  • Objectives : The purpose of this study is correct the scientific name of Aquilariae Lignum in Korean Herbal Pharmacoepia. Methods : The production areas of Aquilariae Lignum and its trading status with China in Chinese history, Sanscrit-Chinese Translation Sutra, Naming year and the discovered district in main Aquilaria spp., Several nation's Pharmacoepia, The Plant List(TPL), Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild fauna and flora(CITES) and The International Union for Conservation of Nature(IUCN) were cross-checked. Results : The records in the Jiaozhouyiwuzhi written in the early 2nd century said that Aquilariae Lignum was produced in Vietnam. NanfangCaomuZhuang written in 304 said that Agarwood in Vietnam had white flowers. Vietnam had led production and trading of Aquilariae Lignum until Qing Dynasty. Aquilariae Lignum from Malaysia and Indonesia was not traded with China. In Sanscrit-Chinese Translation Sutra, India Aquilariae Lignum was translated as Vietnam Aquilariae Lignum. Aquilaria malaccensis was discovered from Malay-Peninsular in 1783, and has green or dirty yellow flowers. A. agallocha from North-Eastern India in 1814, white flowers. A. crasssna from Vietnam in 1914, white flowers. A. crassna is different from A. malaccensis in several ways, such as flower, fruit, seed and disribution. In several Nation's Pharmacoepia, A. crassna was a synonym of A. agallocha. But in TPL, CITES and IUCN, A. malaccensis was an accepted name, and A. agallocha was a synonym of A. malaccensis. Conclusions : These results show that the original species of Aquilariae Lignum in Korea Herbal Pharmacoepia should be reversed from A. agallocha to A. crassna Pierre ex Lacomte.

Univariate and Multivariate Analysis of Phenotypic Traits in Mung Beans Reveals Diversity Among Korean, Indian, and Chinese Accessions

  • Kebede Taye Desta;Young-ah Jeon;Myoung-Jae Shin;Yu-Mi Choi;Jungyoon Yi;Hyemyeong Yoon
    • Korean Journal of Plant Resources
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    • v.37 no.3
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    • pp.270-306
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    • 2024
  • This study investigated the diversity of 323 mung bean accessions from Korea, China, and India, along with six cultivars, using 22 agronomical traits. The standardized Shannon-Weaver index (H') for the qualitative traits ranged from 0.11 (terminal leaflet shape) to 0.98 (pubescence density of pod). Likewise, the coefficient of variation for the quantitative traits ranged from 8.76% (days to maturity (DM)) to 79.91% (lodging rate (LR)), indicating a wide genetic variance. Hypocotyl color, pod color, seed shape, and seed coat surface lust showed different distributions among Korean, Indian, and Chinese accessions. Chinese accessions had the highest average germination rate, DM, days from flowering to maturity, and one-hundred seeds weight, followed by Korean and Indian accessions, while the number of seeds per pod (SPP) displayed the opposite trend, with all except SPP showing significant variation (p < 0.05). Similarly, plant height, days to flowering, and number of pods per plant increased in the order of India > Korea > China, with LR showing the opposite trend (p < 0.05). The mung bean accessions were grouped into four major clusters using hierarchical cluster analysis supported by principal component analyses, and all of the quantitative traits showed significant variations between the clusters (p < 0.05). Generally, the mung bean accessions investigated in this study exhibited wide phenotypic trait variations, which could be beneficial for future genomics studies. Moreover, this study identified 77 accessions that outperformed the controls. Consequently, these superior accessions could provide a wide spectrum of options during the development of improved mung bean varieties.