scholarly journals CHARACTERISTICS OF DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHINESE INNOVATION SYSTEM

Author(s):  
М.А. Абдулкадырова ◽  
Х.А. Кудозова

В данной статье рассматривается азиатская модель инновационной системы на примере Китайской Народной Республики. Хотя любое азиатское государство, в котором в той или иной степени применяется эффективная инновационная система, имеет свои особенности, Китайская инновационная система является одной из наиболее заметных и быстроразвивающихся. Особый упор в данной статье делается на крупные инновационные компании Китая. This article discusses the Asian model of an innovation system using the example of the Peoples Republic of China. Although any Asian state in which an effective innovation system is applied to one degree or another has its own characteristics, the Chinese innovation system is one of the most visible and rapidly developing. Particular emphasis in this article is placed on large innovative companies in China.

2007 ◽  
pp. 123-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Dezhina ◽  
V. Kiseleva

The article analyzes modern theory that explains the specificity of relationships among government, science and business in innovation systems - the "triple helix" concept. Factors that determine the appearance of new theory are systematized. The peculiarities of formation of "triple helix" in Russia are described, including the development of science, business and the system of government regulation in innovation sphere. The conclusion is made that currently in Russia only double linkages are formed.


Author(s):  
Mariane C. Ferme

Out of War is an ethnographic engagement with the nature of intercommunal violence and the material returns of history during and after the 1991–2002 Sierra Leone civil war. The questions raised concern the nature and reckoning of time and reality, fact and fiction; the experience of violence and trauma; the reversibility of perpetrator and victim, friend and enemy; and past, present, and future in the colony and postcolony. The book is a reflection on West African epistemologies and ontologies that contribute to questions in counterpoint with those of international humanitarianism, struggling with the possibilities of truth and quandaries of justice. In the context of massive population displacements and humanitarian interventions, the ethnography traces strategies of psychological, political, and cultural survival and material dwelling in liminal spaces in the midst of the destruction of the social fabric engendered by war. It also examines the juridical creation of new figures of crimes against humanity at the Special Court for Sierra Leone. The Sierra Leone scene, in the aftermath of war, is visualized as a landscape of chronotopes, neologisms that summon the uncertainty of war: the sobel (“soldier by day, rebel by night”), pointing to the instability of distinctions between enemy and friend, or of opposing parties in the war (the rebels of the Revolutionary United Front [RUF] and soldiers in the national army), and the rebel cross, pointing to the possibility that the purported neutrality of the Red Cross masked partisan interests alongside the RUF. Chronotopes also testify to the difficulty of discerning between facts and rumors in war, and they freeze in time collective anxieties about wartime events. Finally, beyond the traumas of war, the book explores the returns of material traces in counterpoint to the more “monumental” presence of Chinese investments in Africa today, and it explores the forgotten sensory history of another China (Taiwan versus the People’s Republic of China) and another Africa inscribed in ordinary agrarian practices on rural landscapes, and in the fabric of domestic life, particularly since the non-aligned movement emerged from the Bandung conference in 1955.


2006 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 118-126
Author(s):  
I. S. Kuznecova ◽  

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