• 제목/요약/키워드: public production infrastructures

검색결과 4건 처리시간 0.019초

농촌 공공기반시설 현황 조사 및 문제점 분석 (The Survey and Analysis of Public Infrastructures in Korean Rural Areas)

  • 허학영;남상채;최상운;오민근;안동만
    • 농촌계획
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    • 제8권1호
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    • pp.105-113
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    • 2002
  • This investigation aims to provide basic data for rural village planning and rehabilitation planning. Public infrastructures of forty selected villages have been surveyed. Provision of facilities, user satisfaction, perceived problems, and conditions of maintenance have been surveyed for three classified types of infrastructures; 1) public utility spaces such as community hall, and parking lots, 2) public production infrastructures such as warehouses, and irrigation facilities, and 3) public infrastructures for living environments such as roads, water supply, and sewage system. All twenty smaller villages (ki-cho-ma-ul) had problems of poor conditions and insufficient spaces with community halls. Most of the smaller villages suffered from lack of public production infrastructures, or had problems of insufficient spaces and poor maintenance conditions. They also lacked good access roads with adequate right of ways. Only three villages were provided with sewage systems. In the twenty larger villages (myun-bo-ma-ul), though public utility spaces were provided for most of them (as an example, sixteen villages had welfare centers), they were not large enough and they were maintained in poor condition too. On the one hand twelve of the larger villages had farm machine service centers, only a few villages were equipped with warehouses. Many more public infrastructures for living environments were found in larger villages. However, only a few villages had pollution control facilities. Multidimensional scaling revealed groups of distinctive characteristics, in terms of public infrastructures, among smaller villages. It did not show any noticeable distinctions among larger villages.

온라인 공동체 미디어(Community Media) 실천연구: 대덕밸리라디오를 중심으로 (Study on Online Community Media Practice: Focus On Daedeok-valley Radio)

  • 최순희
    • 한국콘텐츠학회논문지
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    • 제17권6호
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    • pp.39-54
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    • 2017
  • 본 연구는 그동안의 공동체 미디어 실천연구들이 전통적 방식의 지상파(전파) 방송에 국한되어 온 것에 대한 문제의식에서 출발하였다. 기존연구들에서 소홀하게 다루어진 온라인 기반 위에서 실천되고 있는 지역 공동체 미디어의 특성과 콘텐츠 제작 및 유통의 특성을 규명하고자 대덕밸리라디오의 사례를 분석하여 다음과 같은 연구결과와 시사점을 얻을 수 있었다. 첫째, 온라인 공동체 미디어 활동은 지역 공동체의 가치를 담아내는 시민미디어(civic/citizen media) 활동이다. 둘째, 미디어 콘텐츠 제작과 유통전략에 따라 퍼블릭 액세스(Public Access)를 통하지 않고도 공동체의 지역성을 실현하는 효과적인 매체 활용을 할 수 있다. 셋째, 온라인 미디어의 콘텐츠는 공동체를 연결하며 개인이 연결점(node)이 되어 온라인과 오프라인에서 상호작용한다. 따라서 본 연구를 통해 온라인 기반 공동체 미디어 실천은 시민들의 미디어 활동의 지속 가능성을 높일 수 있는 틈새(니치) 미디어로서 기능할 수 있다는 것을 밝힐 수 있었다.

u-City 구축사업의 지역경제적 파급효과에 관한 연구 (Regional Economic Impacts Induced by u-City Construction in Wha-sung and Dong-tan City)

  • 이헌영;최예술;임업
    • 한국IT서비스학회지
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    • 제11권4호
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    • pp.25-37
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    • 2012
  • In recent year, the u-City construction projects which integrate IT technology into urban infrastructures are being pushed forward by many local governments. These projects contain various purposes in an aspect of regional economy : to reinforce a competitiveness of region by increasing efficiency of urban managements and to revitalize regional economy by stimulating the regional high-tech industries that related to u-City construction. In this context, regional economic impact assessment of u-City construction projects is particularly important because, it give us information about effectiveness of u-City construction policy as a stimulus of regional high-tech industries and the policy feasibility of u-City construction projects that can be a base of public projects. However, it is challenging to assess the impact of u-City projects on regional economy properly due to a lack of understanding about industrial classification, and specific industrial inputs related to u-City construction. In this study, we suggest u-City industrial classifications, and specific-industrial inputs induced by u-City construction projects based on associated legislations, business report for a u-City construction, and results from previous studies. Using these classification and industrial input, we also investigate the regional economic impacts of a u-City construction project in Wha-sung and Dong-tan cities employing Input-output analysis. The empirical results suggests that u-City industries have relatively high in production inducement, and value added inducement compared to input of other industrial sectors. These results indicate that regional economic impact of a Wha-sung and Dong-tan u-City construction project are relatively high, but economic impacts of u-City construction projects vary according to the regional industrial structure, and the specific expense accounts of u-City construction projects.

Composition of Federal R&D Spending, and Regional Economy : The Case of the U.S.A

  • Lee, Si-Kyoung
    • 지역연구
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    • 제9권1호
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    • pp.65-78
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    • 1993
  • In this study, the significant and enduring concentration of federal R&D spending in metro-scale clusters across the nation is treated as evidence of the operation of a distinct industrial infrastructure defined by the ability of R&D performers to attract external funding and pursue the sophisticated project work demanded. It follows, then, that the agglomerative potential of these R&D concentrations -- performers and their support infrastructures -- requires a search for economic impacts guided by a different stimulative effects attributable to federal R&D spending may be that substantial subnational economic impacts are routinely obscured and diluted by research designs that seek to discover impacts either at the level of nation-scale economic aggregates or on firms or specific industries organized spatially. Therefore, this study proceeds by seeking to link the locational clustering of federal contract R&D spending to more localized economic impacts. It tests a series of models(X-IV) designed to trace federal contract R&D spending flows to economic impacts registered at the level of metro-regional economies. By shifting the focus from funding sources to recipient types and then to sector-specific impacts, the patterns of consistent results become increasingly compelling. In general, these results indicated that federal R&D spending does indeed nurture the development of an important nation-spanning advanced industrial production and R&D infrastructure anchored primarily by two dozed or so metro-regions. However, dominated as it is by a strong defense-industrial orientation, federal contract R&D spending would appear to constitute a relatively inefficient national economic development policy, at least as registered on conventional indicators. Federal contract R&D destined for the support of nondefense/civilian(Model I), nonprofit(Model II), and educational/research(Mode III) R&D agendas is associated with substantially greater regional employment and income impacts than is R&D funding disbursed by the Department of Defense. While federal R&D support from DOD(Model I) and for-profit(Model II) and industrial performer(Model III) contract R&D agendas are associated with positive regional economic impacts, they are substantially smaller than those associated with performers operating outside the defense industrial base. Moreover, evidence that the large-business sector mediates a small business sector(Model VI) justifies closer scrutiny of the relative contribution to economic growth and development made by these two sectors, as well as of the primacy typically accorded employment change as a conventional economic performance indicator. Ultimately, those regions receiving federal R&D spending have experienced measurable employment and income gains as a result. However, whether or not those gains could be improved by changing the composition -- and therefore the primary missions -- of federal R&D spending cannot be decided by merely citing evidence of its economic impacts of the kind reported here. Rather, that decision turns on a prior public choice relating to the trade-offs deemed acceptable between conventional employment and income gains, the strength of a nation's industrial base not reflected in such indicators, and the reigning conception of what constitutes national security -- military might or a competitive civilian economy.

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