875 resultados para new member countries


Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Señala algunas actividades concretas que podrían iniciar los países en desarrollo para la cooperación en el campo de las fuentes de energía nuevas y renovables. Dichas actividades consisten en una serie de programas que, según su naturaleza, se clasifican en: a) programa de planificación energética, b) programa de desarrollo científico y tecnológico, y c) programas de apoyo comunes.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Analiza las necesidades de la colaboracion regional en los procesos de integracion de las nuevas tecnologias a las estrategias de desarrollo nacional y regional en el Caribe.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Includes bibliography

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

El presente documento contiene el proyecto presentado al International Development Research Centre de Canada (IDRC), que constituye la segunda fase en el desarrollo del Sistema de Documentacion sobre Poblacion en America Latina (DOCPAL), para el periodo 1978-1979. En este periodo, la estrategia global se orienta a continuar y mejorar las actividades en desarrollo y a lograr los siguientes objetivos especificos: proporcionar asistencia tecnica y capacitacion a centros nacionales de los paises de la region, a la vez que establecer conexiones con aquellos que pueden servir como unidades de insumo-produccion del sistema; elaborar un directorio de usuarios y productores de informacion sobre poblacion en la region y colaborar con otros sistemas regionales. El documento describe las actividades programadas para el cumplimiento de los objetivos enumerados.

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

We validate, extend, and empirically and theoretically criticize the cultural dimension of humane orientation of the project GLOBE (Global Leadership and Organizational Behavior Effectiveness Research Program). Theoretically, humane orientation is not just a one-dimensionally positive concept about being caring, altruistic, and kind to others as discussed by Kabasakal and Bodur (2004), but there is also a certain ambivalence to this concept. We suggest differentiating humane orientation toward in-group members from humane orientation toward out-group members. A multicountry construct validation study used student samples from 25 countries that were either high or low in humane orientation (N = 876) and studied their relation to the traditional GLOBE scale and other cultural-level measures (agreeableness, religiosity, authoritarianism, and welfare state score). Findings revealed a strong correlation between humane orientation and agreeableness, welfare state score, and religiosity. Out-group humane orientation proved to be the more relevant subfacet of the original humane orientation construct, suggesting that future research on humane orientation should make use of this measure instead of the vague original scale. The ambivalent character of out-group humane orientation is displayed in its positive correlation to high authoritarianism. Patriotism was used as a control variable for noncritical acceptance of one’s society but did not change the correlations. Our findings are discussed as an example of how rigid expectations and a lack of tolerance for diversity may help explain the ambivalent nature of humane orientation

Relevância:

40.00% 40.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The chapter introduces a new database on political-institutional patterns of democracy used in the contributions to the book. It provides an update and extension of Lijphart’s (1999, 2012) measurement of consensus and majoritarian democracy for the countries of the second wave of the CSES during the period 1997–2006, using 11 partly improved indicators. The chapter explores patterns of democracy by the means of factor analysis, construct additive indices, and present the resulting country scores of consensus and majoritarian democracy graphically. Two variants are presented, one featuring Lijphart’s (1999) classic ‘executives–parties’ and ‘federal–unitary’ dimensions, and another incorporating direct democracy into the framework, yielding an additional ‘cabinets–direct democracy’ dimension