848 resultados para Clusters turísticos
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Purpose – This paper aims to marry Michael Porter’s industrial cluster theory of traded and local clusters to Richard Florida’s occupational approach of creative and routine workers to gain a better understanding of the process of economic development. Design/methodology/approach – Combining these two approaches, four major industrial-occupational categories are identified. The shares of US employment in each – creative-in-traded, creative-in-local, routine-in-traded and routine-in-local – are calculated, and a correlation analysis is used to examine the relationship of each to regional economic development indicators. Findings – Economic growth and development is positively related to employment in the creative-in-traded category. While metros with a higher share of creative-in-traded employment enjoy higher wages and incomes overall, these benefits are not experienced by all worker categories. The share of creative-in-traded employment is also positively and significantly associated with higher inequality. After accounting for higher median housing costs, routine workers in both traded and local industries are found to be relatively worse off in metros with high shares of creative-in-traded employment, on average. Social implications – This work points to the imperative for the US Government and industry to upgrade routine jobs, which make up the majority of all employment, by increasing the creative content of this work. Originality/value – The research is among the first to systematically marry the industry and occupational approaches to clusters and economic development.
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Los modelos de gestión empresarial deben estar en constante actualización según las diversas exigencias del entorno globalizador, razón por la cual, las micro y pequeñas empresas requieren de una visión estratégica y de generación de calidad y oportunidad en los productos y servicios que deben ofrecer. Para esto, requiere una capacidad de romper los paradigmas de gestión que le funcionaron en otros momentos de la historia, para poder enfrentar las exigencias del entorno actual. Dentro de éste escenario de mercado, se encuentran muchas micro y pequeñas empresas dedicadas a la actividad del turismo, y particularmente del turismo rural, sector que es uno de los más dinámico en las economías que han generado estrategias para estimularlo y conservarlo; unas de esas estrategias de organización son la conformación de clusters y los encadenamientos productivos, los cuales son empresas que se encuentran dentro de un mismo sector y en una determinada zona geográfica, con el propósito de optimizar sus recursos y brindar servicio integrado y mejor al segmento de mercado que atienden.Palabras claves: Turismo rural, clusters, encadenamientos productivos, micro y pequeñas empresas, gestión turística.Abstracts: Business management models must be under continuous updating to keep up with the different requirements from a globalizing environment. For this reason micro and small businesses need a strategic vision and the generation of quality and opportunity in the products and services they must offer. To accomplish this end, they need the capacity to break management models that worked in other times of history, to be able to meet all the challenges from the current environment. It is within this market scenario that many micro and small businesses are found, businesses that are dedicated to the activity of tourism, and particularly rural tourism, a sector which happens to be one of the most dynamic in the economies that have generated strategies to stimulate it and keep it; one of these organization strategies are the design of clusters and productive chains, that are those businesses found within one single sector and in a particular geographical region, in order to optimize its resources and be able to give an integrated and better service to the market segment they serve.Key words: Rural, tourism., clusters, productive chains, micro and small businesses., tourism management.
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A necessidade de proporcionar o acesso a serviços básicos e de lazer é uma premissa essencial para a melhoria da qualidade de vida para todos os cidadãos do mundo. O objetivo deste trabalho foi avaliar as condições estruturais dos equipamentos de lazer na cidade de Belém, Estado do Pará, Brasil. O turismo depende da prestação de serviços e equipamentos capazes de atender a sociedade em caráter satisfatório, seja portador de necessidades especiais ou não. Pesquisadores como Silva & Boia (2006) e Rua (2006), além de documentos técnicos como do Ministério do Turismo – Mtur (2006) e da Associação Brasileira de Normas Técnicas – ABNT (1994) deram suporte a presente pesquisa. A metodologia utilizada foi baseada em um estudo de caráter descritivo e exploratório para o levantamento de informações e descrição de fenômenos, efetivado por meio de observação dos fenômenos a serem analisados. Na pesquisa de campo foram analisadas se as estruturas edificadas possibilitam o acesso aos portadores de necessidades especiais. Percebeu-se que as políticas de inclusão social não atendem as necessidades básicas para que os portadores de deficiências possam usufruir dos equipamentos de lazer de forma adequada.
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O uso de recursos naturais para a composição de roteiros (eco) turísticos é uma premissa fundamental para o planejamento de áreas com apelo turístico. Na Amazônia brasileira, o uso do Sistema de Informação Geográfica como instrumento de planejamento turístico ainda é pouco utilizada. O objetivo deste trabalho foi de apresentar o uso de recursos tecnológicos na composição de roteiros (eco) turísticos na APA de Algodoal/Maiandeua, Estado do Pará, Brasil, fazendo-se uso das trilhas existentes na região, demonstrando mapas e perfis de cada trilha. Foram utilizados suportes teóricos de Bahl (2004) e Nóbrega (2007, 2008) para uma discussão conceitual sobre planejamento, roteiros e turismo. Acerca dos aspectos do SIG, teóricos como Nodari et. al.(2006) e Rocha (2002) deram suporte para o diálogo sobre o tema em questão. Acerca da metodologia, foram utilizadas pesquisas bibliográficas do tipo exploratórias, coleta de dados com o suporte GPS – Garmin eTrex Vista HCx, além do uso do Software ArcGIS 9.2 para construção dos mapas digitais com base nos dados obtidos. Percebeu-se que a elaboração de roteiros (eco) turísticos sob o uso do SIG pode ser um grande aliado para o planejamento turístico na Amazônia brasileira.
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Por meio de coleta de dados primários e secundários foi feito um inventário dos atrativos turísticos e o mapeamento georreferenciado do território do município de Colinas do Sul, localizado na região nordeste do estado de Goiás, Brasil. O mapeamento consistiu na identificação dos principais atrativos turísticos naturais, rotas, roteiros e circuitos turísticos por meio de GPS/GIS, oferecendo informações, e uma base cartográfica pioneira para a criação de um banco de dados norteadores da ocupação e transformação dos espaços para o planejamento e desenvolvimento de um turismo respaldado por preocupações sociais e ecológicas. Colinas do Sul é um dos municípios brasileiros com mais de 80% de seu território situado em uma Área de Proteção Ambiental (APA), uma Unidade de Conservação (UC) brasileira de uso sustentável, e que possui no seu entorno duas áreas de extrema relevância ambiental: o Parque da Chapada dos Veadeiros e a o Lago da Serra da Mesa. A metodologia consistiu na coleta de dados para se disponibilizar um sistema de informação turística georreferenciada de base cartográfica interpretada e documental de interesse coletivo.
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Este trabalho analisa a dinâmica geográfica e econômica instaurada no processo de apropriação de capital e domínio do espaço, efetivada por parte dos grandes empreendimentos turísticos de Florianópolis, utilizando o caso do Condomínio Residencial Costão Golf como objeto de estudo. Também é destacada a participação comunitária no caso Il Campanário Villaggio Resort e no caso Porto da Barra. São identificados os Princípios do Direito Ambiental, a Legislação Ambiental do Brasil, as fases de urbanização em Florianópolis, o surgimento dos grandes empreendimentos turísticos na capital catarinense, e suas relações com as comunidades locais onde atuam. Ao final, são analisadas as relações dos grandes empreendimentos turísticos de Florianópolis com o Poder Público, que afrontam os Princípios do Direito Ambiental e a Legislação Ambiental do Brasil, possibilitando impactos socioambientais como a contaminação do Aqüífero Ingleses com o manejo do gramado de um campo de golfe.
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2011
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Distribución y ubicación de sitios turísticos y de recreación del cantón de Poás.
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The tissue kallikreins are serine proteases encoded by highly conserved multigene families. The rodent kallikrein (KLK) families are particularly large, consisting of 13 26 genes clustered in one chromosomal locus. It has been recently recognised that the human KLK gene family is of a similar size (15 genes) with the identification of another 12 related genes (KLK4-KLK15) within and adjacent to the original human KLK locus (KLK1-3) on chromosome 19q13.4. The structural organisation and size of these new genes is similar to that of other KLK genes except for additional exons encoding 5 or 3 untranslated regions. Moreover, many of these genes have multiple mRNA transcripts, a trait not observed with rodent genes. Unlike all other kallikreins, the KLK4-KLK15 encoded proteases are less related (25–44%) and do not contain a conventional kallikrein loop. Clusters of genes exhibit high prostatic (KLK2-4, KLK15) or pancreatic (KLK6-13) expression, suggesting evolutionary conservation of elements conferring tissue specificity. These genes are also expressed, to varying degrees, in a wider range of tissues suggesting a functional involvement of these newer human kallikrein proteases in a diverse range of physiological processes.
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This paper reports on a Q-methodology study on the consumption of mobile phones and opinions on SMS-marketing, extracted from interpretive interviews and focus groups. The Metaphors Q-sort, developed within a framework of Holt's (1995) four metaphors of consumption, identifies three experiential value clusters in the consumption of mobile phones: the Mobile Pragmatists, the Mobile Connectors and the Mobile Revelers. The SMS-marketing Q-sort identifies two key clusters of subjective opinions on various aspects of SMS-based mobile-marketing. By integrating the findings from these two Q-sorts, we demonstrate that while all three value clusters express positive opinions towards ‘location specific’ and ‘customer initiated contact’ SMS-marketing, there are noticeable differences in how marketers should develop their strategies to maximize the consumers’ perceived experiential value derived from the consumption of their mobile phones. Keywords: mobile phones; experiential consumption: SMS-marketing; Q-methodology
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The effectiveness of higher-order spectral (HOS) phase features in speaker recognition is investigated by comparison with Mel Cepstral features on the same speech data. HOS phase features retain phase information from the Fourier spectrum unlikeMel–frequency Cepstral coefficients (MFCC). Gaussian mixture models are constructed from Mel– Cepstral features and HOS features, respectively, for the same data from various speakers in the Switchboard telephone Speech Corpus. Feature clusters, model parameters and classification performance are analyzed. HOS phase features on their own provide a correct identification rate of about 97% on the chosen subset of the corpus. This is the same level of accuracy as provided by MFCCs. Cluster plots and model parameters are compared to show that HOS phase features can provide complementary information to better discriminate between speakers.
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Although marketers have a strong interest in finding ways to engage with consumers through mobile phones, the everyday experiential, or affective consumption practices surrounding this technology have received limited attention in the literature. To address this limitation, we used appraisal theory, which specifies it is the way individuals appraise situations or events that elicit emotions. We conducted an experience sampling method study to explore the emotions that individuals experience during their interactions with and through their mobile phones and what situations or events elicit these emotions. The preliminary findings show a number of significant relationships between emotions and specfic clusters of situations and events. Additionally, age and gender were also important indicators. The research contributes to a deeper understanding of the experiential nature of mobile information technologies through consumers’ everyday-consumption-related emotions and the situations and events that elicit them.
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A month-long intensive measurement campaign was conducted in March/April 2007 at Agnes Water, a remote coastal site just south of the Great Barrier Reef on the east coast of Australia. Particle and ion size distributions were continuously measured during the campaign. Coastal nucleation events were observed in clean, marine air masses coming from the south-east on 65% of the days. The events usually began at ~10:00 local time and lasted for 1-4 hrs. They were characterised by the appearance of a nucleation mode with a peak diameter of ~10 nm. The freshly nucleated particles grew within 1-4 hrs up to sizes of 20-50 nm. The events occurred when solar intensity was high (~1000 W m-2) and RH was low (~60%). Interestingly, the events were not related to tide height. The volatile and hygroscopic properties of freshly nucleated particles (17-22.5 nm), simultaneously measured with a volatility-hygroscopicity-tandem differential mobility analyser (VH-TDMA), were used to infer chemical composition. The majority of the volume of these particles was attributed to internally mixed sulphate and organic components. After ruling out coagulation as a source of significant particle growth, we conclude that the condensation of sulphate and/or organic vapours was most likely responsible for driving particle growth during the nucleation events. We cannot make any direct conclusions regarding the chemical species that participated in the initial particle nucleation. However, we suggest that nucleation may have resulted from the photo-oxidation products of unknown sulphur or organic vapours emitted from the waters of Hervey Bay, or from the formation of DMS-derived sulphate clusters over the open ocean that were activated to observable particles by condensable vapours emitted from the nutrient rich waters around Fraser Island or Hervey Bay. Furthermore, a unique and particularly strong nucleation event was observed during northerly wind. The event began early one morning (08:00) and lasted almost the entire day resulting in the production of a large number of ~80 nm particles (average modal concentration during the event was 3200 cm-3). The Great Barrier Reef was the most likely source of precursor vapours responsible for this event.
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In the rapidly growing knowledge economy, the talent and creativity of those around us will be increasingly decisive in shaping economic opportunity. Creativity can be described as the ability to produce new and original ideas and things. In other words, it is any act, idea, or product that changes an existing domain or transforms an existing domain into a new one. From an economic perspective, creativity can be considered as the generation of new ideas that is the major source of innovation and new economic activities. As urban regions have become the localities of key knowledge precincts and knowledge clusters across the globe, the link between a range of new technologies and the development of ‘creative urban regions’ (CURs) has come to the fore. In this sense, creativity has become a buzz concept in knowledge-economy research and policy circles. It has spawned ‘creative milieus,’ ‘creative industries,’ ‘creative cities,’ ‘creative class,’ and ‘creative capital.’ Hence, creativity has become a key concept on the agenda of city managers, development agents, and planners as they search for new forms of urban and economic development. CURs provide vast opportunities for knowledge production and spillover, which lead to the formation of knowledge cities. Urban information and communication technology (ICT) developments support the transformation of cities into knowledge cities. This book, which is a companion volume to Knowledge-Based Urban Development: Planning and Applications in the Information Era (also published by IGI Global) focuses on some of these developments. The Forward and Afterword are written by senior respected academic researchers Robert Stimson of the University of Queensland, Australia, and Zorica Nedovic-Budic of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA. The book is divided into four sections, each one dealing with selected aspects of information and communication technologies and creative urban regions.