scholarly journals YOUTH ENTREPRENEURSHIP AS A PROGRESSIVE FORCE OF STATE DEVELOPMENT

Author(s):  
Ludmila Davidyuk ◽  
Alina Shkvarko
2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-87
Author(s):  
Muhamad Rahman ◽  
Nur Hamzah

This research is incorporated into deep motivation mediation. The researcher contacted 76 auditors in BPKP (State Development Audit Agency) Bengkulu Province to provide information about discipline, motivation and employees performance. The implications of this study are discussed, together with the advantages, disadvantages, and suggestions for further research. Keywords: discipline, motivation, and performance.


Author(s):  
Dirk Luyten

For the Netherlands and Belgium in the twentieth century, occupation is a key concept to understand the impact of the war on welfare state development. The occupation shifted the balance of power between domestic social forces: this was more decisive for welfare state development than the action of the occupier in itself. War and occupation did not result exclusively in more cooperation between social classes: some interest groups saw the war as a window of opportunity to develop strategies resulting in more social conflict. Class cooperation was often part of a political strategy to gain control over social groups or to legitimate social reforms. The world wars changed the scale of organization of social protection, from the local to the national level: after World War II social policy became a mission for the national state. For both countries, war endings had more lasting effects for welfare state development than the occupation itself.


Author(s):  
Nagla Rizk

This chapter looks at the challenges, opportunities, and tensions facing the equitable development of artificial intelligence (AI) in the MENA region in the aftermath of the Arab Spring. While diverse in their natural and human resource endowments, countries of the region share a commonality in the predominance of a youthful population amid complex political and economic contexts. Rampant unemployment—especially among a growing young population—together with informality, gender, and digital inequalities, will likely shape the impact of AI technologies, especially in the region’s labor-abundant resource-poor countries. The chapter then analyzes issues related to data, legislative environment, infrastructure, and human resources as key inputs to AI technologies which in their current state may exacerbate existing inequalities. Ultimately, the promise for AI technologies for inclusion and helping mitigate inequalities lies in harnessing grounds-up youth entrepreneurship and innovation initiatives driven by data and AI, with a few hopeful signs coming from national policies.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document