The Mechanics of Modernity in Europe and East Asia: Institutional Origins of Social Change and StagnationRoutledge, 2004年8月2日 - 256 頁 Why, from the eighteenth century onwards, did some countries embark on a path of sustained economic growth, while others stagnated? This text looks at the kind of institutions that are required in order for change to take place, and Ringmar concludes that for sustained development to be possible, change must be institutionalized. Taking a global view, Ringmar investigates the implications of his conclusion on issues facing the developing world today. |
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... Compare East Asia. Countries such as China and Japan were always at least as 'sophisticated' and 'advanced' as the countries of Europe. In the sixteenth century the first European visitors to this part of the world acknowledged as much ...
... Compare East Asia. Countries such as China and Japan were always at least as 'sophisticated' and 'advanced' as the countries of Europe. In the sixteenth century the first European visitors to this part of the world acknowledged as much ...
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... comparing developments in Europe with those in East Asia. That the two parts of the world were strikingly similar was obvious already to the first European visitors to the East.2 As Jesuit missionaries and Dutch merchants agreed, China ...
... comparing developments in Europe with those in East Asia. That the two parts of the world were strikingly similar was obvious already to the first European visitors to the East.2 As Jesuit missionaries and Dutch merchants agreed, China ...
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... Compare the latter part of the twentieth century where a strange, inverted, echo of this discussion suddenly could be heard. Again the topic concerned modernisation and discrepancies between East Asia and Europe, but now the issue was ...
... Compare the latter part of the twentieth century where a strange, inverted, echo of this discussion suddenly could be heard. Again the topic concerned modernisation and discrepancies between East Asia and Europe, but now the issue was ...
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