Beyond the Port City: Development and Identity in 21st Century SingaporePearson Prentice Hall, 2004 - 176 頁 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 12 筆
第 8 頁
... attract more tourists , is part of a growing consciousness that the greatest advertisement for cities is their own landscapes ( Crilley 1993 ) . This explains why the marketing of cities , where advertising determines or shapes the ...
... attract more tourists , is part of a growing consciousness that the greatest advertisement for cities is their own landscapes ( Crilley 1993 ) . This explains why the marketing of cities , where advertising determines or shapes the ...
第 62 頁
... attracting mainly female migrants , and construction , ship repair , and other heavy industrial jobs that attract male migrants . These foreign permit workers are employed on two - year contracts , subject to renewal , which might not ...
... attracting mainly female migrants , and construction , ship repair , and other heavy industrial jobs that attract male migrants . These foreign permit workers are employed on two - year contracts , subject to renewal , which might not ...
第 113 頁
... attract firms and other research facilities to Singapore . The URA has argued that a measure of the workability of such a planning strategy has been the decision by the French business school , INSEAD , to set up their first overseas ...
... attract firms and other research facilities to Singapore . The URA has argued that a measure of the workability of such a planning strategy has been the decision by the French business school , INSEAD , to set up their first overseas ...
內容
Chapter Two Raffles and the Colonial Port City | 13 |
Chapter Six Housing the Nation and Contesting | 81 |
Culture Heritage | 121 |
著作權所有 | |
2 個其他區段未顯示
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
activities advantage appears areas Asian associations attract become British building capital cent Central centre century Chapter China Chinese citizens city-state civic civil society colonial competition conservation continued countries cultural direct discussion diversity dominance East economic effort established ethnic groups Figure foreign further geographical global globalisation growth identity important increasing independence Indians industrialisation industries infrastructure Institute integration interests investment island land less Library living major Malacca Malay nature neighbourhood organisations particularly Penang planning political population port city position Press production public housing estates Raffles region relations relatively remain residential residents role ruling schools sector seen shaping Singapore Singapore's situation social Source Southeast Asia space spatial Straits subsequent success Table town trade University urban Western workers Zone