Academic literature on the topic 'Suzhou Industrial Park'

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Journal articles on the topic "Suzhou Industrial Park"

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Lin, Yongsheng, Zhe Liu, Rui Liu, Xiaoman Yu, and Liming Zhang. "Uncovering driving forces of co-benefits achieved by eco-industrial development strategies at the scale of industrial park." Energy & Environment 31, no. 2 (June 21, 2019): 275–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0958305x19857908.

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Co-benefits are used to reflect multiple important benefits that could be achieved by a single policy or measure. In recent years, researches on co-benefits have developed rapidly in various fields, but there is limited research associated with eco-industrial development. In order to investigate the driving forces of co-benefits in the field of eco-industrial development, this study established an emergy-based hybrid model for such a research objective. In order to verify this model, Suzhou industrial park in China has been selected as a case study. The results showed that co-benefits achieved in 2015 through eco-industrial development-based strategies in Suzhou industrial park were more than that were in 2010. Waste reutilization environmental efficiency effect was the most significant positive driving forces, while energy consumption efficiency effect had the least impact on generating co-benefits in Suzhou industrial park. Policy implications such as strengthening eco-industrial network and further industrial structure promotion are proposed.
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Chen, Weizhen, Songshan Li, and Wen Ma. "Balance Between Vitality and Order: Study on Suzhou Old Town and Suzhou Industrial Park." Urban Planning International 32, no. 2 (2017): 50–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.22217/upi.2017.004.

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Yuan, Ying Yu, Chun Feng Deng, and Yao Zhi Huang. "Localization Development Research of Neighborhood Center Business Model-Taking Suzhou Industrial Park as Example." Advanced Materials Research 838-841 (November 2013): 3008–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.838-841.3008.

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This article summarizes the characteristics of Neighborhood Center, such as "family", "neighborhood" and so on. Analyzing from source constitutions of resident population, consuming behavior characters, business format characteristics and transport organizations, it discusses success and shortcomings of Singapore Neighborhood Center mode during the process of localization in Suzhou and comes up with improving policies in localization development through on-the-spot investigation and questionnaire surveys of construction planning and operation performance of Suzhou Industrial Park Neighborhood Center.
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Wong, Tai-Chee, and Charles Goldblum. "The China-Singapore Suzhou Industrial Park: A Turnkey Product of Singapore?" Geographical Review 90, no. 1 (January 2000): 112. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/216177.

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Pereira, Alexius A. "Transnational state entrepreneurship? Assessing Singapore's Suzhou Industrial Park project (1994–2004)." Asia Pacific Viewpoint 48, no. 3 (December 2007): 287–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8373.2007.00348.x.

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WONG, TAI-CHEE, and CHARLES GOLDBLUM. "THE CHINA-SINGAPORE SUZHOU INDUSTRIAL PARK: A TURNKEY PRODUCT OF SINGAPORE?" Geographical Review 90, no. 1 (April 21, 2010): 112–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1931-0846.2000.tb00324.x.

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Qi, Yu Lan, and Shuang Shuang Liu. "Integrated Model of Cluster Supply Chain and Logistics Park." Applied Mechanics and Materials 697 (November 2014): 508–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.697.508.

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The organizational succession in cluster supply chain is not only a primary upgrading way of industrial cluster, but also a basis of integrating industrial cluster and Logistics Park. This paper analyzes how to integrate organizational succession in cluster supply chain and Logistics Park according to the logistics features of organizational succession in cluster supply chain, and puts forward three integrated models. Meanwhile, through the case study of IT industry in Suzhou, the logistics evolving regulation of organizational succession in cluster supply chain is explored, and some relevant conclusions and suggestions are drawn at last.
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Pereira *, Alexius A. "The Suzhou industrial park experiment: the case of China–Singapore governmental collaboration." Journal of Contemporary China 13, no. 38 (February 2004): 173–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1067056032000151391.

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Inkpen, Andrew C., and Wang Pien. "An Examination of Collaboration and Knowledge Transfer: China-Singapore Suzhou Industrial Park." Journal of Management Studies 43, no. 4 (June 2006): 779–811. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6486.2006.00611.x.

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Liu, Lingxuan, Bing Zhang, Jun Bi, Qi Wei, and Pan He. "The greenhouse gas mitigation of industrial parks in China: A case study of Suzhou Industrial Park." Energy Policy 46 (July 2012): 301–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.enpol.2012.03.064.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Suzhou Industrial Park"

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Pereira, Alexius A. "The Singapore entrepreneurial state in China : a sociological study of the Suzhou Industrial Park (1992-1999)." Thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London), 2001. http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1643/.

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This study examines the Singapore government's Suzhou Industrial Park project between 1992 and 1999. It argues that the Singapore governments' strategies can be explained as those of a 'transnational entrepreneurial state' participating in the global game of industrial production. As an interventionist government, it sought to realize financial profits in China to supplement economic growth in Singapore. The project involved two strategies designed to enhance the project's competitive advantages. Firstly, it introduced the competitive strategy to supply high quality secondary factors of production - such as industrial infrastructure and bureaucratic administration - to industrial transnational corporations seeking to locate in China. Secondly, it utilized the collaborative strategy to encourage complementary collaboration with the China government and several industrial transnational corporations. During the Construction Phase (1992-1994), both strategies were successfully implemented, enhancing the competitiveness of the Suzhou Industrial Park. During the Take-Off Phase (1994-1996), many industrial transnational corporations had responded positively to these competitive advantages and chose to locate their operations at the Suzhou Industrial Park. During the Adjustment Phase (1997-1998), the Suzhou Industrial Park lost competitiveness because of external factors such as the impact of the Asian Financial Crisis and also because of intense competition from other industrial estates in China. In the Disengagement Phase (1999), the Singapore transnational entrepreneurial state chose to withdraw from the project for economic and political reasons. This study concludes that the Singapore government differed from the archetypal interventionist state because of endogenous and exogenous factors. It became a transnational entrepreneurial state because by its resources and motivations, and its own assessment of its economic and political conditions. This study also found that the outcome of its strategies were not just dependent on how they were implemented but also on the actions of other agents, including collaborators and competitors, and the influence of the external environment.
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Chien, Shiuh-Shen. "Policy innovation, asymmetric decentralization and local economic development in post-Mao China : case studies of China-Singapore Suzhou Industrial Park and Kunshan Economic and Technological Development Zone." Thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London), 2006. http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1929/.

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The Chinese government's economic reforms over the last couple of decades have led to rapid economic growth for the country. However, many empirical studies on the post-Mao China show that the economic transition towards market economy is in large part actually propelled by active local governments, which are encouraged to make policy innovations in order to promote better local economic development. This thesis aims to offer an understanding on how, why and under what circumstances the local governments of post-Mao China - while still controlled by a one-party communist regime- are able to make policy innovations to deal with business operating under market transition conditions. Theoretically, the phenomenon of local policy innovation can be analyzed with a framework involving three dimensions. First, local policy innovation can be seen to take place in order to respond to challenges presented by the changing macro development environments. Second, local policy innovation can be understood as a consequence of changing responsibilities and competencies between central and local governments. Third, local policy innovation may be related to the dynamics of local-central strategic interactions. Empirically, with the contextual approach as its chosen methodology, this theoretical framework is applied to two successful cases of innovation in Jiangsu province within the Yangtze Delta of post-Mao China: Kunshan Economic and Technological Development Zone (KETZ); and China-Singapore Suzhou Industrial Park (CSSIP). The history of these two national development zones identifies the former as a case of a 'locally initiated project' while the latter represents an example of 'local implementation of a centrally initiated project'. In terms of types of local-central dynamic interaction, 'state- intention to tolerate', 'ex-post state endorsement', and 'ex-ante state adoption' were seen sequentially in the case of KETZ, while 'marginalizing the local', 'local obedience', and 'local flexibility' operated simultaneously in the case of CSSIP. The thesis concludes that in post-Mao China significant local policy innovations were able to take place when localities encountered structural changes, including China's reengaging with globalization, changing local-central relations, and serious territorial competition. Actions of local policy innovations were ignited by agents, across scales, whose self-interests were highly involved in local economic development in the context of asymmetric decentralization. More specifically, in the post-Mao China context of economic decentralization to the local combined with political centralization under the party, career-minded local officials utilized their decentralized 'economic resources' to strive for more development, which in turn became their 'political capital' with the upper-level government to get themselves promoted.
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Li, Yiqiong School of Organization &amp Management UNSW. "Employers' experiences of shortages of skilled process workers in Suzhou industrial park, China." 2007. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/40576.

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This thesis examines and explains multinational employers' experiences of localized shortages of skilled process workers in Suzhou Industrial Park (SIP), China. It explains three challenges facing SIP employers in accessing sufficient skilled process workers and their responses within HRM to such challenges. These three challenges are employers' experiences with vocational education and training (VET) deficiencies in students' skill development, employers' experiences of poaching of skilled process workers by other companies, and employers' experiences of provision of workplace training for skilled process workers in their own companies. In response to these challenges, SIP employers have adopted various HRM measures that include differing combination of recruitment and selection, employee retention, training and development, and employment relations management. These policies and practices represent the different ways that SIP employers have attempted to meet the challenges of localized skill shortages in the context of their own business strategies.
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Chong, Kwan-Tung, and 張坤銅. "A study on core competence and competitive advantage of industrial park in china─A case study on Suzhou New District." Thesis, 2002. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/45070970608865621561.

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碩士
淡江大學
國際貿易學系
90
The Mainland China government building a lot of science park to attract world wide Hi-tech corporation, it could accelerate the china Hi-tech industry development. Suzhou、Hefei、Beijing city、Xi-an、Yantai were selected from 53 science park to be the Apec science park. Why the Suzhou New District was the best choice of the international corporation. What is the competitive advantage and how to engender that in suzhou New District. What is the correlation between core competence and competitive advantage in the science park analysis. In this thesis were use Canonical Correlation method to determined the correlation between core competence and competitive advantage, meanwhile use the Path analysis method to explain the effect on the three variable of core competence dimension to the five variable of competitive advantage dimension. Through the Canonical Correlation method were found that, the five variable of competitive advantage dimension of Suzhou New District would exist by the five variable of core competence dimension, the correlation of that are higher. The resources variable of core competence dimension was the highest effect variable to the competitive advantage dimension, the other sequence were skill variable and technology variable. Through the Path analysis method were found that services variable、human resources variable、cost variable、customer based variable and quality variable of competitive advantage dimension have positive outstandingly correlation with resources variable of core competence dimension. Skill variable and technology variable of core competence dimension have not outstandingly correlation with competitive advantage dimension of Suzhou New District.
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Books on the topic "Suzhou Industrial Park"

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State collaboration and development strategies in China: The case of the China-Singapore Suzhou Industrial Park (1992-2002). New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2003.

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Kong jian chong zu yu she qu chong jian: Yi xiang Suzhou gong ye yuan qu shi di nong min ju ju qu de yan jiu = Restructuring of space and reconstruction of community : a case study on centralism housing landless - farmers' community in Suzhou industrial park. Beijing: Ke xue chu ban she, 2012.

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Zeng, Doug Zhihua. Building a Competitive City through Innovation and Global Knowledge: The Case of Sino-Singapore Suzhou Industrial Park. World Bank, Washington, DC, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-7570.

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Book chapters on the topic "Suzhou Industrial Park"

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Lin, Zhongjie, and José L. S. Gámez. "Suzhou Industrial Park high-speed rail station business district." In Vertical Urbanism, 249–56. New York : Routledge, 2018. | Series: China perspectives: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351206839-18.

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Liu, Wei. "A Study Report and Proposal on Logistics Finance in Suzhou Industrial Park (SIP)." In LISS 2013, 1341–45. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-40660-7_201.

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Ge, Zengguo, and Li Fan. "Social Development for Children with Autism Using Kinect Gesture Games: A Case Study in Suzhou Industrial Park Renai School." In Simulation and Serious Games for Education, 113–23. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-0861-0_8.

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"CHAPTER VII. SUZHOU INDUSTRIAL PARK." In Between Rising Powers, 168–79. ISEAS Publishing, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1355/9789812305718-011.

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LYE, Liang Fook. "Suzhou Industrial Park: More than Just a Commercial Undertaking." In Singapore–China Relations, 105–30. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789814713566_0006.

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"3. Suzhou Industrial Park: Going Beyond a Commercial Project." In Advancing Singapore-China Economic Relations, 62–93. ISEAS Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1355/9789814519359-007.

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Curien, Rémi, and Dominique Lorrain. "Chapitre 9. Suzhou Industrial Park, une opération de référence." In Villes sobres, 223–42. Presses de Sciences Po, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/scpo.lorra.2018.01.0223.

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WONG, John, and Liang Fook LYE. "Introduction Singapore-Suzhou Industrial Park 20 Years On: Development and Changes." In EAI Series on East Asia, 1–18. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789811200045_0001.

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"Multinational Development Zone: Suzhou." In Chinese Science and Technology Industrial Parks, 109–20. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315198170-14.

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Conference papers on the topic "Suzhou Industrial Park"

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Huo, Molin, Xiaodan Huang, Yushuai Xu, and Weiyang Li. "Regional energy planning — An example of Suzhou Industrial Park." In 2017 IEEE Conference on Energy Internet and Energy System Integration (EI2). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ei2.2017.8245729.

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Tao Li and Wenjing Wang. "Planning and designing of distributed PV of Suzhou Industrial Park." In 2015 IEEE 42nd Photovoltaic Specialists Conference (PVSC). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/pvsc.2015.7356266.

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Zhu, Yuefang, Lan Wei, Jiabin Wang, Liang Sun, Jiayue Xu, and Weilin Shi. "Research on the Causes and Influencing Factors of Malodor in Suzhou Industrial Park." In 2016 International Forum on Energy, Environment and Sustainable Development. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/ifeesd-16.2016.157.

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Zhou, Ke Hui, and Jin Song Jiang. "The study for microscopic location of multinational R&D institutions in China: A case study of Suzhou Industrial Park." In 2013 "Suzhou-Silicon Valley-Beijing" International Innovation Conference (SIIC). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/siic.2013.6624182.

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SUN, Rongyu, and Jiayin GUO. "The Inspiration of Large-scale Settlement of Modern Suburban Areas in the Neighborhood Center in Suzhou and Chuzhou Industrial Park." In 2016 International Conference on Architectural Engineering and Civil Engineering. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/aece-16.2017.90.

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Tate, Derrick, Xiaoyi Hu, Mengyue Li, and Ruotong Wang. "Application of Robust Design Techniques to Chinese Huqin Musical Instrument Design." In ASME 2016 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2016-59462.

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This paper presents the results of teaching robust design techniques to industrial design students in the Chinese context. Year 3 students in a Bachelor of Engineering programme at Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University in Suzhou, China studied robust design techniques over a one-semester course. As part of the course, the students worked in two groups to apply robust design techniques to traditional Chinese musical instruments: the jinghu and the erhu. The two groups took divergent approaches to the project. One group sought to follow traditional manufacturing processes (craftmaking) for the instruments, and the other applied typical simple prototyping techniques used within industrial design. Through selection of control factors, creation of orthogonal arrays, prototyping, and experimentation, the students were able to characterize the main effects of four control factors on the sound quality of the instruments, loudness or harmonics, and to explore the feasibility of robust design for instrument design.
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Wen, Xiaoy, Guoquan Zhang, and Qiuyi Jiang. "Exploration and practice of formulating strategic planning for rural revitalization in the Shanghai metropolitan area ——take the rural revitalization of Jinxi town in Kunshan as an example." In 55th ISOCARP World Planning Congress, Beyond Metropolis, Jakarta-Bogor, Indonesia. ISOCARP, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/typk9673.

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China's urban and rural development has entered a new stage of comprehensive transformation. The advent of the era of metropolitan development and the strategy of Rural Revitalization are two important national strategic backgrounds of this study. As the highest urbanization rate in Southern Jiangsu, rural and urban development needs synchronous resonance. Rural areas, as an important role in the integration of the Yangtze River Delta and the development of Shanghai Metropolitan Area, play an important role in regional cohesion and complementary functions, and are an important part in the overall construction of the metropolitan area. Jinxi Town is located in the southern end of Jiangsu Province, bordering Qingpu District of Shanghai, and between Suzhou and Shanghai. In ancient China, Jinxi was a traditional town of fish and rice and water culture. During the period of reform and opening-up, Jinxi worked closely with surrounding cities to create a brilliant chapter of "Sunan Model" and "Kunshan Model". In the new stage of development, Jinxi Town shoulders the heavy responsibility of more ecological functions and reduction of construction land indicators. It is not only more responsible for ensuring food production safety and protecting ecological functions, but also more demanding for rural revitalization. It is also more urgent to study its development path and strategy. Firstly, this paper takes Jinxi's contemporary mission as the starting point, secondly, through the analysis of Jinxi's function orientation, population, industry and space, and then puts forward the general strategic requirements of Rural Revitalization according to these four aspects. Thirdly, it demonstrates several different types of villages in Jinxi town, respectively. The cases of upgrading agriculture, industrial integration and development, demonstration of rural community and industrial retreat to build Jinxi Town to revitalize villages in the countryside. Finally, through the follow-up revision and improvement of planning formulation, to help the effective implementation of Jinxi Town's Rural Revitalization strategic planning. Through this study on the Rural Revitalization of Jinxi Town, on the one hand, it comprehensively implements the national deployment and the task of Jiangsu as a benchmark; on the other hand, it earnestly follows the law of rural selfdevelopment, and in the theoretical category of regional economy, it is based on the development of metropolitan area and the background of Rural Revitalization era, with Chinese characteristics, Shanghai. The road of Rural Revitalization in metropolitan area. At the same time, this paper expects to provide ideas and methods for the compilation of strategic planning for Rural Revitalization in metropolitan areas.
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