Books on the topic 'SME in Thailand'

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1

Sevilla, Ramon C. SME policy in Thailand: Vision and challenges. Nakhon Pathom, Thailand: Institute for Population and Social Research, Mahidol University, 2000.

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2

Anthony, Sattin, and Fodor's Travel Publications Inc, eds. Fodor's Bangkok's 25 best: [what to see, where to go, what to do]. 4th ed. New York: Fodor's Travel Publications, 2007.

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3

Mahāwitthayālai Chīang Mai. Sathaban Wichai læ Phatthanā Witthayāsāt læ Thēknōlōyī. Value chain analysis for Thai home textiles cotton sub-sector: EU-Thailand small projects facility "the case of Thai home textiles: buiding export competence of a SME dominated value chain" : a project co-financed by the European Union. Chiang Mai, Thailand: Institute for Science and Technology Research and Development (IST), Chiang Mai University, 2007.

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4

Chulāsai, Lư̄chai. SMEs competitive strategy: Lessons learned in northern Thailand. Bangkok, Thailand: Chulalongkorn University Print. House, 2003.

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5

Storrs, Adrian. Discovering trees and shrubs in Thailand & S.E. Asia. [Bangkok]: Tecpress Books, 1994.

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6

Toms and dees: Transgender identity and female same-sex relationships in Thailand. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2004.

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7

Too bright to hear too loud to see. New York: Soho Press, 2012.

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8

Allyn, Eric. Tree s in the same forest: Thailand's culture and gay subculture. San Francisco, U.S.A: Bua Luang Pub. Co., 1991.

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9

Hua, Xu, Li Jian, Xu Lili, and Zhuang Guotu, eds. Taiguo Hua ren she hui: Li shi de fen xi = Chinese society in Thailand : an analytical history. Xiamen: Xiamen da xue chu ban she, 2010.

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10

Meeting of OIC Task Force & Seminar on SMEs (4th 2005 Bangkok, Thailand). Proceedings of the 4th Meeting of the OIC Task Force on SMEs: Bangkok, Kingdom of Thailand January 24-26, 2005. Karachi: jointly organized by Islamic Chamber of Commerce & Industry, 2007.

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11

Sunthō̜nsamai, Wuthichāt. Kānbūranākān khō̜mūn ngān wičhai kīeokap kānčhatkān phalittaphan nưng tambon nưng phalittaphan læ kānčhatkān wisāhakit khanāt klāng læ khanāt yō̜m nai Prathēt Thai =: The integration of the research on One Tambon One Product (OTOP) and small and medium enterprises (SMEs) management in Thailand. Chon Buri, Thailand]: Khana Manutsayasāt læ Sangkhommasāt, Mahāwitthayālai Būraphā, 2007.

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12

Ji, Huirong. Taiwan wai ji pei ou ji da lu pei ou she hui fu li zi yuan shou ce: Feilübin, Taiguo, Yinni, Miandian deng guo ji pei ou shi yong : Taiwan's foreign and Mainland China's spouses' social welfare resources booklet. For Philippine, Thailand, Indonesia, Burma, etc. married to R.O.C. citizens. Taibei Shi: Nei zheng bu, 2003.

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13

Mallet, Ninki. See Thailand and Eat. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2012.

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14

Travellers, Worldwide. Thailand: Where To Go, What To See - A Thailand Travel Guide. Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, 2017.

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15

Fodor's. Fodor's See It Thailand, 1st Edition (Fodor's See It). Fodor's, 2006.

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16

Fodor's See It Thailand, 2nd Edition (Fodor's See It). 2nd ed. Fodor's, 2008.

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17

Gäthke, Markus. Leben in Thailand: Wie Sie in Thailand ein Stressfreies und Zufriedenes Leben Führen. Independently Published, 2017.

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18

Kamler, Erin M. Rewriting the Victim. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190840099.001.0001.

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This book unites feminist international research with the writing, composing, and production of a musical designed to critique the discourse about the trafficking of women in Thailand. Through writing and producing “Land of Smiles,” a two-act, fifteen-song musical inspired by field research that includes over fifty interviews with female migrant laborers, sex workers, community-based women’s rights activists, non-governmental organization (NGO) employees, and other development actors in Thailand’s anti-trafficking movement, playwright, composer and feminist scholar Erin Kamler presents one of the dominant stories about human trafficking and shows that the voices of the people, most often women, can illuminate the problems and highlight the difficulties in finding solutions. This project was designed to serve as a platform for dialogue among stakeholders in Thailand’s anti-trafficking movement through a three-phase process of uncovering, recovering and articulating the lived experience of the “subject”—the trafficking “victim”—who the movement seeks to rescue, as well as the NGO employees who are embedded in the social catastrophe that underscores this movement. Through researching, writing and performing the musical for the communities on whom its story is based, Kamler shows the importance of lived experience as a framework for understanding social catastrophe, and the power of musical theater in conveying that understanding through a feminist, liberatory praxis. She calls this praxis Dramatization as Research, or DAR.
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19

Helden, Thailand Reise. Thailand Reisetagebuch: Zum Selberschreiben - Mit Packliste, Hotelbewertung Für Den Urlaub - Reiseplan Für Thailand - Schreiben Sie Erinnerungen & Erlebnisse in Dieses Reisebuch. Independently Published, 2019.

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20

Helden, Thailand Reise. Thailand Reisetagebuch: Zum Selberschreiben - Mit Packliste, Hotelbewertung Für Den Urlaub - Reiseplan Für Thailand - Schreiben Sie Erinnerungen & Erlebnisse in Dieses Reisebuch. Independently Published, 2019.

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21

Martens, Sophie. Thailand Reisetagebuch: Zum Selberschreiben | Mit Packliste, Hotelbewertung für den Urlaub | Reiseplan für Thailand | Schreiben Sie Erinnerungen & Erlebnisse in dieses Reisebuch. Independently published, 2020.

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22

Heroes, Thailand Travel. Thailand Reisetagebuch: Zum Selberschreiben - Mit Packliste, Hotelbewertung Für Den Urlaub - Reiseplan Für Thailand - Schreiben Sie Erinnerungen & Erlebnisse in Dieses Reisebuch. Independently Published, 2019.

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23

Sinnott, Megan J. Toms and Dees: Transgender Identity and Female Same-Sex Relationships in Thailand (Southeast Asia: Politics, Meaning, Memory.). University of Hawaii Press, 2004.

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24

J, Sinnott Megan. Toms and Dees: Transgender Identity and Female Same-Sex Relationships in Thailand. University of Hawaii Press, 2004.

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25

Allyn, E. G. Trees in the Same Forest: Thailand's Gay Subculture. Bua Luang Books, 2002.

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26

Heroes, Thailand Travel. Thailand Reisetagebuch: Zum Selberschreiben - Mit Packliste, Hotelbewertung Für Den Urlaub - Reiseplan Für Thailand - Schreiben Sie Die Schönesten Erinnerungen & Erlebnisse in Dieses Reisebuch. Independently Published, 2019.

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27

Helden, Thailand Reise. Thailand Reisetagebuch: Zum Selberschreiben und Selbst Gestalten - Mit Packliste, Hotelbewertung Für Den Urlaub - Reiseplan Für Thailand - Schreiben Sie Erinnerungen & Erlebnisse in Dieses Reisebuch. Independently Published, 2019.

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28

Helden, Thailand Reise. Thailand Reisetagebuch: Als Abschiedsgeschenk Für Freunde & Familie - Mit Packliste, Hotelbewertung Für Den Urlaub - Reiseplan Für Thailand - Schreiben Sie Erinnerungen & Erlebnisse in Dieses Reisebuch. Independently Published, 2019.

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29

Martenstein, Lance. Thailand Reisetagebuch: Zum Selberschreiben - Mit Packliste, Hotelbewertung F�r Den Urlaub - Reiseplan F�r Thailand - Schreiben Sie Erinnerungen & Erlebnisse in Dieses Reisebuch. Independently Published, 2020.

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30

Helden, Thailand Reise. Thailand Reisetagebuch: Zum Selberschreiben - Mit Packliste, Hotelbewertung Für Den Urlaub - Reiseerinnerung Für Thailand - Schreiben Sie Erinnerungen & Erlebnisse in Dieses Reisebuch - Für Den Nächsten Trip Ins Ausland. Independently Published, 2019.

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31

Garey, Juliann. Too Bright to Hear Too Loud to See. Soho Press, Incorporated, 2012.

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32

Too Bright to Hear Too Loud to See. Soho Press, Incorporated, 2013.

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33

Garey, Juliann. Too Bright to Hear Too Loud to See. Soho Press, Incorporated, 2012.

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34

Aikman, Anthony. Broken Guts (Tong Sia!): A 'Rough' Medical Guide for Foreign Travellers in Thailand and S.E. Asia. BookSurge Publishing, 2007.

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35

Bajpai, Kanti. Global Competitiveness, Privatization, Dignified Spaces, and Curricular Reform in Indian Higher Education. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199480654.003.0008.

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Every ranking system rates Indian universities poorly against their Asian counterparts in China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, and South Korea, and in some cases, even universities in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand. The question then is why, given that in 1947 it could fairly be said that at least a dozen Indian universities were leaders in Asia and were of international repute, Indian universities are in an egregious condition. This chapter essays some answers. It also argues for curricular reform, in particular for the introduction of public policy studies at the major Indian universities.
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36

Takeda, Wakako, Cathy Banwell, Kelebogile T. Setiloane, and Melissa K. Melby. Intersections of Food and Culture. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190626686.003.0011.

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This chapter examines how culture influences what people eat, and how food practices function to enculturate the next generation. We examine four case studies of two food items (sugars and animal proteins) in countries ranging from developing to developed economies, and Western, Eastern, and African cultures. The first three case studies focus on sugar (Australia, Japan, and Thailand) with Australia providing a case study from a Western developed country, Japan providing an example from an Eastern developed country, and Thailand providing an example from a new industrialized country. These three countries have seen changes in sugar consumption paralleling increases in non-communicable diseases. Although global concern for malnutrition is increasingly focused on overconsumption and obesity, it is important to remember that much of the world’s population still struggles with undernutrition. The fourth case study of the Yoruba in southern Nigeria serves to remind us of the importance of cross-cultural comparisons and diversity, as we see that many Yoruba children experience stunting and hunger. For them overconsumption of processed food and sugars is not the primary problem; rather, it is underconsumption of protein, particularly given their infectious disease load. Around the world, culture influences food preferences, and at the same time foods often are used to convey cultural values—such as convenience and modernity, urban lifestyle, hospitality, socialization, and moral education for children. Together these factors have implications for public health interventions and policies, yet collectively require a locally nuanced understanding of culture.
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37

Garey, Juliann. Too Bright to Hear Too Loud to See: Library Edition. Sound Library, 2012.

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38

J, Sinnott Megan. Toms and Dees: Transgender Identity and Female Same-Sex Relationships in Thailand (Southeast Asia: Politics, Meaning, Memory.). University of Hawaii Press, 2004.

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39

Doner, Richard F., Gregory W. Noble, and John Ravenhill. The Political Economy of Automotive Industrialization in East Asia. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197520253.001.0001.

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This book offers a political economy explanation for the striking cross-national differences in strategies and performance among East Asia’s automotive industries. Some countries—China, South Korea, and Taiwan—have successfully pursued “intensive” growth strategies by increasing local value added based on domestic inputs and technological competencies. Malaysia has attempted but failed to pursue this path. In contrast, Thailand has become a champion of “extensive” growth, relying on foreign assemblers and their suppliers to achieve an impressive expansion of production, assembly, and exports. Latecomer Indonesia has followed Thailand with some success, whereas the Philippines has remained an automotive backwater. Through cross-case and within-case analyses of the seven countries, the book argues that variation is a function of the institutional and political contexts in which firms operate. Different strategies require different institutions and institutional capacities. Intensive development is especially institutionally demanding. Effective institutions emerge when political leaders face severe claims on resources (security threats and domestic pressures for welfare improvement) in the absence of easily accessible revenues to satisfy such needs. Brief comparisons with Brazil, Mexico, and other developing countries confirm the utility of the analytic framework. This explanation is superior to neoclassical accounts. It is consistent with but provides more insight than other prominent approaches to development: national innovation systems, global value chains, and developmental states. New challenges facing auto assemblers and suppliers, such as the transition to electric and autonomous vehicles, will call heavily upon the institutional capacities highlighted in this book.
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40

Male Homosexuality in 21st-Century Thailand: A Longitudinal Study of Young, Rural, Same-Sex-Attracted Men Coming of Age. Anthem Press, 2021.

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41

Jan W. de Lind van Wijngaarden. Male Homosexuality in 21st-Century Thailand: A Longitudinal Study of Young, Rural, Same-Sex-Attracted Men Coming of Age. Anthem Press, 2021.

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42

Jan W. de Lind van Wijngaarden. Male Homosexuality in 21st-Century Thailand: A Longitudinal Study of Young, Rural, Same-Sex-Attracted Men Coming of Age. Anthem Press, 2021.

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43

OECD Studies on SMEs and Entrepreneurship Entrepreneurship in Regional Innovation Clusters Case Study of Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai, Thailand. Organization for Economic Cooperation & Development, 2021.

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44

Stewart, Frances, Gustav Ranis, and Emma Samman. Successful Transition Towards a Virtuous Cycle of Human Development and Economic Growth. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198794455.003.0005.

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This chapter provides studies of politics and policies in some of the good transition countries. Countries selected include Bangladesh, Nepal, Thailand, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Bolivia, and Peru. There was no single recipe for success in economic conditions or political structures. Government determination to advance the well-being of the population appeared to be a necessary condition, but this can be motivated in different ways: through left-wing ideology, identification with particular deprived groups, a desire to advance conflict-prevention, or the need to secure popular support for re-election. Some countries relied on the state to promote human development, but others depended on various social institutions. The chapter also provides a brief review of some negative transitions—countries which fell back from the virtuous category to a vicious one. A variety of circumstances accounted for this, including debt and stabilization, and political developments, such as invasion in the case of Iraq.
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45

Pascoe, Daniel. Last Chance for Life: Clemency in Southeast Asian Death Penalty Cases. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198809715.001.0001.

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All five contemporary practitioners of the death penalty in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)—Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, and Vietnam—have performed executions on a regular basis over the past few decades. Amnesty International currently classifies each of these nations as death penalty ‘retentionists’. However, notwithstanding a common willingness to execute, the number of death sentences passed by courts that are reduced to a term of imprisonment, or where the prisoner is released from custody altogether, through grants of clemency by the executive branch of government varies remarkably among these neighbouring political allies. This book uncovers the patterns which explain why some countries in the region award commutations and pardons far more often than do others in death penalty cases. Over the period under analysis, from 1991 to 2016, the regional outliers were Thailand (with more than 95 per cent of condemned prisoners receiving clemency after exhausting judicial appeals) and Singapore (with less than 1 per cent of condemned prisoners receiving clemency). Malaysia, Indonesia, and Vietnam fall at various points in between these two extremes. This is the first academic study anywhere in the world to compare executive clemency across national borders using empirical methodology, the latter being a systematic collection of clemency data in multiple jurisdictions using archival and ‘elite’ interview sources. Last Chance for Life: Clemency in Southeast Asian Death Penalty Cases will prove an authoritative resource for legal practitioners, criminal justice policymakers, scholars, and activists throughout the ASEAN region and around the world.
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46

Essen, Juliana. Buddhist Ethics in South and Southeast Asia. Edited by Daniel Cozort and James Mark Shields. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198746140.013.9.

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The anthropological literature dealing with Buddhist ethics in the Theravāda countries of South and Southeast Asia may be divided into five categories, whereby ethics is defined as guidelines for right action oriented toward a particular goal: (1) ethics of statehood or political ethics; (2) ethics of salvation or monastic ethics; (3) ethics of engagement, including both social and environmental ethics; (4) karmic ethics for the laity; and (5) ethics of worldly benefit, as emphasized by some modern urban Buddhist movements. These categories highlight debates that have historically occupied anthropological scholarship, countering claims that Buddhism is an apolitical, purely individualistic or asocial, world-renouncing religion that is divisible into ‘big’ and ‘little’ traditions. This review, covering both theory and rich ethnographic evidence from Thailand, demonstrates the plurality and complexity of ethical Buddhist practice in the region.
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47

McGuire, James W. The Politics of Development in Latin America and East Asia. Edited by Carol Lancaster and Nicolas van de Walle. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199845156.013.23.

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This article examines the politics of development in Latin America and East Asia, focusing on eight countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, South Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia, and Thailand. It begins by analyzing levels and changes of GDP per capita and income inequality in these countries from 1960 to 2010, showing that the capitalist economies of Latin America grew more slowly and had higher income inequality than their East Asian counterparts. It considers the reasons for this development divergence, including government policies in such areas as land tenure, education, promotion of manufactured exports, and macroeconomic management. The article also looks at historical legacies and social-structural factors that help explain these cross-regional (as well as some intra-regional) policy differences, including colonial heritage, the geopolitical situation after World War II, natural resources, and class structure.
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48

Moran, John. Tropical Dairy Farming. CSIRO Publishing, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9780643093133.

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Tropical Dairy Farming is a manual designed for use by dairy production advisors working in tropical areas, especially in South-East Asia. It aims to increase the productivity of small holder dairy farmers in the humid tropics by improving the feeding management of their livestock. It shows how to provide dairy cows with cost-effective feeds that match small holder farming systems and discusses the major obstacles to improving feeding management in the humid tropics. The author shows the benefits and drawbacks of various feed components and the calculation of balanced diets based mainly on forages combined with some supplementary feeding. Diseases and problems associated with unbalanced diets are also covered, as well as important information on growing and conserving quality forages as silage. The book draws on examples from a variety of countries including Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, China, East Timor and the Philippines.
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49

Myerson, Atalanta. East Asia. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199574797.003.0022.

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The East Asian region encompassed OUP operations in Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, China, and Japan, and each country presented distinct challenges for the Press. Asian markets were complicated by changing attitudes to the status of English—its commercial utility as well as its political implications—and to the tolerance of foreign-owned companies. The chapter considers the political and economic situations in East Asia as they affected OUP and assesses the different policies governing publishing in English and, more importantly, vernacular languages. Educational publishing remained a strength in Malaysia, while Japan emerged as a successful academic and English Language Teaching market. The region required a flexible approach and each branch operated with some independence in order to best address the local market conditions. The chapter considers the different approaches adopted by each branch, describes their relations with Oxford, and assesses branch leadership and sales figures.
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50

Chan, Emily Ying Yang. Public health in rural Asia I. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198807179.003.0004.

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The rural health situation in Asia varies from country to country. In Asia, about half (47.5%) of the population were urban dwellers in 2014 and the rate of urbanization is expected to be the fastest compared to all other continents, of which approximately 65% live in urban settings. Projected between 2014 and 2050, seven of the ten countries with the largest declines in rural population are from Asia, with the top five coming from China, India, Indonesia, Thailand, and Bangladesh. The top five most populous urban agglomerations in 2030 will all be located in Asia, namely Tokyo (37.2 million), Delhi (36.1 million), Shanghai (30.8 million), Mumbai (27.8 million), and Beijing (27.7 million). This chapter summarizes the public health status quo in some of these Asia–Pacific countries, highlighting the challenges encountered and providing empirical background for organizing health and emergency and disaster risk reduction programmes.
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