1,720,988 research outputs found
Le nouveau paysage des technologies en Chine
Sigurdson Jon, Jacquet Raphaël. Le nouveau paysage des technologies en Chine. In: Perspectives chinoises, n°71, 2002. pp. 37-54
Zhang Wei-Wei, Transforming China - Economic Reform and its Political Implications
Sigurdson Jon, Blatt Pauline. Zhang Wei-Wei, Transforming China - Economic Reform and its Political Implications. In: Perspectives chinoises, n°60, 2000. pp. 76-79
Catherine Keyser, Professionalizing Research in Post-Mao China - The System Reform Institute and Policy Making
Sigurdson Jon, Lelièvre Mathilde. Catherine Keyser, Professionalizing Research in Post-Mao China - The System Reform Institute and Policy Making. In: Perspectives chinoises, n°77, 2003. pp. 76-78
Thomas Chan, Noel Tracy et Zhu Wenhui, China's Export Miracle - Origins, Results and Prospects
Sigurdson Jon, Blatt Pauline. Thomas Chan, Noel Tracy et Zhu Wenhui, China's Export Miracle - Origins, Results and Prospects. In: Perspectives chinoises, n°60, 2000. pp. 79-81
Catherine Keyser, Professionalizing Research in Post-Mao China - The System Reform Institute and Policy Making
Sigurdson Jon, Lelièvre Mathilde. Catherine Keyser, Professionalizing Research in Post-Mao China - The System Reform Institute and Policy Making. In: Perspectives chinoises, n°77, 2003. pp. 76-78
VLSI Revisited - Revival in Japan
This paper describes the abundance of semiconductor consortia that have come into existence in Japan since the mid-1990s. They clearly reflect the ambition of the government - through its reorganized ministry METI and company initiatives - to regain some of the industrial and technological leadership that Japan has lost. The consortia landscape is very different in Japan compared with EU and the US. Outside Japan the universities play a much bigger and very important role. In Europe there has emerged close collaboration, among national government agencies, companies and the EU Commission in supporting the IT sector with considerable attention to semiconductor technologies. Another major difference, and possibly the most important one, is the fact that US and EU consortia include and mix partners from different areas of the semiconductor landscape including wafer makers, material suppliers, equipment producers and integrated device makers.semiconductors, Hitachi, Sony, Toshiba, Elpida, Renesas, Sematech, VLSI, JESSI, MEDEA, ASPLA, MIRAI, innovation system
VLSI REVISITED – REVIVAL IN JAPAN
This paper describes the abundance of semiconductor consortia that have come into existence in Japan since the mid-1990s. They clearly reflect the ambition of the government – through its reorganized ministry METI and company initiatives - to regain some of the industrial and technological leadership that Japan has lost. The consortia landscape is very different in Japan compared with EU and the US. Outside Japan the universities play a much bigger and very important role. In Europe there has emerged close collaboration, among national government agencies, companies and the EU Commission in supporting the IT sector with considerable attention to semiconductor technologies. Another major difference, and possibly the most important one, is the fact that US and EU consortia include and mix partners from different areas of the semiconductor landscape including wafer makers, material suppliers, equipment producers and integrated device makers.semiconductors; Hitachi; Sony; Toshiba; Elpida; Renesas; Sematech; VLSI; JESSI; MEDEA; ASPLA; MIRAI; innovation system
Catherine Keyser, Professionalizing Research in Post-Mao China – The System Reform Institute and Policy Making
This book provides an illuminating insight into the rise and demise of a Chinese think tank that played an important role during that part of the reform period that came to end in June 1989. The author gives us a detailed case study of the Chinese Economic System Reform Research Institute (SRI), which was formally established in early 1985 and which by 1989 had become an important advocate for continuing reform at a time when social discontent was growing. The author portrays how a group of y..
People's Republic of China's Technological Capability
This paper discusses the importance of the People's Republic of China in the global economy by exemplifying industrial sectors where it has established a strong competitive advantage. The author accounts for China's growth by looking at factors such as direct foreign investment and investment in research and development. This paper discusses several economic sectors including the textile, electronics, semiconductor, and aircraft industries as cases where China has upgraded its technological profile. The role of the university system is also discussed as a resource for China's future as a knowledge-based economy. This paper was presented at the Latin America/Caribbean and Asia/Pacific Economics and Business Association (LAEBA)'s 4th Annual Conference held in Beijing, China on December 3rd-4th, 2004.
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