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Bormann, F. H. – BioScience, 1972
The solution for future ecological problems may be in how we view uninterrupted growth in relation to its hazards on natural resources, global life support systems and the human psychosphere. Attempts should be made to bring about fundamental changes in patterns of economic and technology which emphasize humanism and harmony with ecological…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Environment, Environmental Influences, Physical Environment
Yoshimura, Masatoshi – J Creative Behav, 1970
The best way for an industrial enterprise to achieve prosperity is to develop the creative talents of its employees. (CK)
Descriptors: Creativity, Economic Progress, Ethics, Motivation
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Hawke, Anne – Australian Bulletin of Labour, 1997
In 1996, employment growth in Australia stagnated at 0.8% despite a steady economic growth of 3.1%. Overall the prospects for the international economy in 1997 appear to be good. The strengthening of the recovery in Japan should improve Australia's terms of trade and allow the currency to maintain its current level. (JOW)
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries, Labor Market
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Thomas, Hywel – Educational Review, 2005
A review of the articles on modernization in Australia, England, New Zealand, Scotland and the USA demonstrates and discusses the complexity attached to the concept. This also enables a better understanding of the contention and controversy that surrounds the concept and its application to educational policy and practice. Modernization policies in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Economic Progress, Resource Allocation
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Dion, David-Pascal – European Journal of Education, 2005
This article deals with the process in the field of education and training that the European Union has put forward to tackle the main challenges it is facing: globalisation, ageing and the ICT revolution. In order to take advantage of the opportunities brought by these three forces and to counteract their potential negative impact, the European…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Human Capital, Human Resources, Economic Progress
Freeland, Richard M. – Presidency, 2004
Most Americans would quickly identify representative government, free elections, the rule of law, and a free press as essential institutions for a healthy democracy. But few would as readily include higher education system on such a list, although colleges and universities are a vital foundation of the political system. In this article, the author…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Higher Education, Democracy, Public Service
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Adrian, William – Christian Higher Education, 2005
After World War II, the American university emerged as a world leader in higher education. Economic development became a dominant value and its subsequent material success has been unrivaled. Many developing countries adopted characteristics of the model with the expectation that national economic growth would follow. Yet it has also been…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Higher Education, Freedom, Global Approach
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Carpentier, Vincent – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2006
Earlier studies of France, Germany and the UK suggest that a common framework exists to explain the relationship between public expenditure on education and economic growth in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This article shows that while a similar relationship exists in the USA, US policies were particularly committed to the educational…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economic Progress, Expenditures, Educational Finance
Washington Higher Education Coordinating Board, 2007
The Washington Higher Education Coordinating Board is charged by state statute with creating a strategic master plan for higher education once every 10 years, with updates every four years. The purpose of a statewide strategic master plan is to identify the overarching goals of the state's postsecondary education system. A limited and focused set…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Higher Education, Educational Attainment, Accountability
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Jenkins, J. Craig; Scanlan, Stephen J.; Peterson, Lindsey – Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2007
Discussions of world hunger have focused on economic growth and international food aid, assuming that food supply is the critical issue. The authors show that food access rooted in social stratification and military power is the central problem. Synthesizing the entitlement and military famine approaches to hunger, the authors examine the effects…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Conflict, Child Health, Social Stratification
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Bowen, William M. – Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 2007
Universities today are increasingly being viewed in terms of serving the purpose of economic development. This paper postulates that their chief purpose is to advance knowledge and that in doing so they effectuate regional economic growth and development through processes specified in the endogenous economic growth model. To achieve this purpose…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Systems Approach, Educational Policy, Economic Development
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Sanderson, Michael – History of Education, 2007
The disciplines of economic history and the history of education have drawn closer since the 1960s. This engagement has led to fresh thematic contributions--the role of literacy and education in the Industrial Revolution and industrialization generally, how far its neglect underlay the "decline" of Britain since 1870, the relation of…
Descriptors: Historians, Educational History, Social Mobility, Labor Market
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Altbach, Philip G. – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2009
China and India together account for almost 25% of the world's postsecondary student population. Most of the enrolment growth in the coming several decades will be in developing countries, and China and India will contribute a significant proportion of that expansion, since China currently educates only about 20% and India 10% of the age cohort.…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Global Approach
Gonzalez, Gabriella; Karoly, Lynn A.; Constant, Louay; Salem, Hanine; Goldman, Charles A. – RAND Corporation, 2008
Countries in the Arab region are faced with the challenge of developing their populations' skills and technical knowledge, or human capital, in order to compete in the 21st century global economy. The authors describe the education and labor market initiatives implemented or under way in four countries in the Arab region -- Lebanon, Oman, Qatar,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Human Capital, Labor Force Development, Labor Problems
Ferrier, Fran; Burke, Gerald; Selby Smith, Chris – National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER), 2008
In the context of aging populations, governments in Australia and in other Western nations fear that slower growth in the numbers of people of working age (15-64 years) will have a dampening effect on economic growth. They are thus considering how to encourage older workers to remain in the workforce beyond the point at which many currently…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Employment Level, Foreign Countries, Skill Development
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