Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Taiwan'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the top 50 dissertations / theses for your research on the topic 'Taiwan.'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Browse dissertations / theses on a wide variety of disciplines and organise your bibliography correctly.
Lindfield, Peter D. Carleton University Dissertation Political Science. "Centrality and contingency : the paradigmaticism of economic growth." Ottawa, 1990.
Find full textPazderic, Nickola Lee. "Success and failure in post-miracle Taiwan /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/6469.
Full textPetzold, Claudius. "Die völkerrechtliche Stellung Taiwans /." Baden-Baden : Nomos, 2007. http://www.gbv.de/dms/spk/sbb/recht/toc/518963098.pdf.
Full textTseng, Hui Te Li. "The Effects of Family Cultural Capital on Reading Motivation and Reading Behavior in Elementary School Students with New Immigrant Background: A Structural Equation Model." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2018. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1248472/.
Full textBrown, Melissa J. "We savages didn't bind feet : the implications of cultural contact and change in southwestern Taiwan for an evolutionary anthropology /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/6570.
Full textTang, Chih-Chieh. "Ein anderer Weg zur funktionalen Differenzierung eine auf das politische System und das Religionssystem fokussierende Betrachtung der Entwicklung funktionaler Differenzierung vom traditionellen China bis zum modernen Taiwan /." [S.l. : s.n.], 2002. http://deposit.ddb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?idn=965776484.
Full textWu, Chieh-Hsiang. "Kulturpolitik und Kulturökonomie in Deutschland und in Taiwan eine Analyse der staatlichen Kompetenzen /." [S.l. : s.n.], 2004. http://deposit.ddb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?idn=972146601.
Full textZhou, Chengqi. "Zhan hou Taiwan jing ji zeng zhang si xiang yan jiu /." Beijing Shi : Jiu zhou chu ban she, 2007. http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy10pdf01/2008434549.html.
Full textChen, Hsinchih. "The development of Taiwanese folk religion, 1683-1945 /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/8853.
Full textLu, Hsin-yi. "The politics of locality : making a nation of communities in Taiwan /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/6494.
Full textHsu, Ching-wen. "Consuming Taiwan /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/6534.
Full textMorier-Genoud, Damien. "L' élaboration d’une historiographie native à Taiwan à l’ère contemporaine." Paris, INALCO, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011INAL0006.
Full textThis study seeks to analyse a collective and heterogeneous effort, over the past forty years, by which some of the opponents and scholars of the Chinese nationalist regime in Taiwan tried to break with a Chinese historiographical tradition, imposed on the island in 1945 bythe Kuomintang, in order to rethink the intrinsic reality and the historical past of Taiwan's island society. Whereas the Kuomintang had imposed in the post-war period an all-encompassing historical narrative extraneous to the inhabitants of the island, from the end of the 1970s, some of the political activists and scholars of Taiwan undertook to re-evaluate their past and to redefine their own history in a new Taiwan-centred perspective. Breaking with the Chinese nationalist doxa and marked by a nativist inspiration, this narrative has emerged in the wake of the liberalisation of the island's regime and the rise of a Taiwanese nationalism, while it has also served as a catalyst to them. This work will analyse, from narrative and discursive angle, the discrepancies that underlie Taiwanese history and its modalities of writing from the contemporary era onwards. To which types of intellectual constructions have the re-reading and re-writing of Taiwan's past been submitted for the last four decades ? What kinds of narrative and historical perspectives emerge from the making of a new history of Taiwan freed from the Chinese nationalist fiction inherent to Kuomintang's authoritarian rule ? What exactly is this new history of Taiwan concerned with ? What tools and frames of knowledge are we potentially armed with to grasp its own process ?
Hsu, Shu-Kun. "Collision active à Taiwan : apports géophysique et tectonique." Brest, 1995. http://www.theses.fr/1995BRES2013.
Full textLin, Syaru Shirley. "National identity, economic interest and Taiwan's cross-strait economic policy 1994-2009." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 2010. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B43761896.
Full textLee, John Chienping. "China's commodity trade across the Taiwan Strait, 1984-1993." online access from Digital dissertation consortium, 1996. http://libweb.cityu.edu.hk/cgi-bin/er/db/ddcdiss.pl?9636462.
Full textMalet, Christian. "Structures médicales traditionnelles à Taïwan : approche anthropologique." Bordeaux 2, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000BOR21009.
Full textTraditional medicine in Taiwan today accurately reflects the divergent cultural currents which have influenced the island over the years. Primitively inhabited by an Austronesian population, it was to become 98% Chinese due to a period of Han immigration that began in the XIth century AD. Chinese medicine replaced aboriginal practices, but was rejected in favor of western medicine during the Japanese occupation (1895-1945). It then became legal again after Taiwan regained its independence, but has since had to face socioeconomic developments and advanced biomedical progress. As early as 1974, we posed the following question : what could the future hold for such practices, efficacious as they were, but empirical in the eyes of science ? We began by examining traditional medicine as a cultural language drawing on the sources of Chinese thought, focussing on pharmacopoeia as the link between practitioner and patient. Research was carried out on 1275 drugs comprising 820 plants, 365 animals, 90 minerals and 374 medicinal preparations. We the proceeded to observe how and in which social strata these drugs were used. This led to two conclusions : 1/ an unrelenting decline of peddler medicine in three test cities : Taipei, the modern capital to the north, Tainan, the historical capital to the southwest and Hualien on the eastern coast. Flourishing in 1974, this peddler medicine suddenly became illegal under a law passed in 1975 ; 2/ the persistence of a scholarly Chinese medicine appearing to be more of an auxiliary to biomedicine rather than a full-fledged partner. In effect, there has been a clear decrease in the proportion of Chinese medicine practitioners as compared to modern medicine physicians, falling from -1/5 to +1/11 in 22 years. Further, an analysis of western culture yielded the conclusion that western scientific fundamentalism impeded a harmonious development of the two systems. Indeed, epistemology teaches us that the metaphysical revolution that completely transformed physics at the end of th XIXth century proceeded along a non-Aristotelian logic, the only means of answering hitherto insolvable problems : will tomorrow bring forth an intelligent merging of the two thoughts ?
Hsü-Maisonneuve, Anne-Lise. "Le déclin de la fécondité à Taiwan : ses rapports avec la modernité individuelle des femmes : une enquête de socio-démographie." Nancy 2, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988NAN21002.
Full textThe decline of fertility in taiwan has been a constant phenomenon since twenty years. The main "exterior factor" of this decline has been the modernization of the island. As a consequence, women joined massively the labor forces in the factories. As they were more busy; receptive to the influence of family planning campaigns; and in the seventies, they were numerous to join the prefessional schools and universities; women gradually adopted modern western values. Among these new values: a great change of behaviour towards the education of children and their number and place in the family. This study tries to show, through a sociologic enquiry in a university, that individual modernity of women -as a "psychologic factor"- has now a determinant influence upon the decline of fertility. Women have become concious of their roles inside the family and in the society. They have their own personal motives to work and reduce the size of their family. But the concious adoption of modern values is often in clonflict with traditional chinese values
Hung, Hweihwa. "Statut des personnes âgées au sein de la famille chinoise : point de vue des gens âgés eux-même et des jeunes à Tai͏̈wan." Paris, EHESS, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992EHES0065.
Full textLe, Pesant Tanguy. "Taiwan et la question nationale : la communauté politique taiwanaise au défi de l’émergence de la Chine populaire." Paris 8, 2006. http://octaviana.fr/document/122059204#?c=0&m=0&s=0&cv=0.
Full textChina’s rise, Taiwan’s democratisation and the close relationship between the two sides of the Strait have brought forward new parameters in the national question in Taiwan, namely, in the definition of the political community imagined on the island, and in the determination of its future. This work demonstrates that the ability of the state actors to define Taiwan’s future is indeed weakened by their entanglement into an increasingly dense net of interdependencies. However, there is no status quo. The Taiwanese political community is moving forward on a non-linear trajectory, which results from the coming back of diverging conceptions of the nation, identity and the Taiwan-China relationship. Our analysis, based on a questionnaire we distributed in twelve universities, concerning student political perceptions and behaviours, shows that the strengthening of a Taiwanese national consciousness does not imply nationalist tensing and that, for this generation, the political horizon remains unblocked
Tsai, Hsiao-Ying. "La construction socio-médiatique d'une identité taiwanaise." Paris 8, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002PA082223.
Full textThis study will present the building process of Taiwanese identity in society and in the press through the analysis of the case of one newspaper : The Liberty Times. Firstly, the general socio-historic setting of the country will be presented. In short, Taiwan is a region long dominated by archaic States, then by a nationalist dictatorship, with civil societies in the grips of sporadic and deep social movements. Secondly, the relationship between the political field and the media field will be examined according to three historic periods : the hardline authoritarian regime, the tolerant authoritarian regime, and the democratic transition. This process is a slow evolution towards democracy, with an emancipation of the media world. Thirdly, the organisation of the journalistic world into three concentric circles will be examined : the State-run newspapers, the hybrid state-private national newspapers, and the marginal private newspapers. Within each circle, internal competition will be discussed. But the historic reversal of this structure (with the disappearnce of the State-run papers and the victory of the private press) will propell the low-visibility Liberty Times to the front row of the big national papers by virtue of its tone of Taiwanese identity. Fourthly, the method by which this newspaper constructs an identity discourse (which is its unique selling point in the political field) will be analysed. This construction of identity depends upon the judgements and connotations embedded in the vocabulary, and upon the categorisation of opponents according to ideological standards. This discourse has three critical moments : the political struggles of 1990, the Taipei mayoral elections of 1994, the Chinese missiles of 1996. Each period adds an additional degree of intensity to the aggressive affirmation of identity-related discourse. In a last part, the interviews conducted with the newspaper staff will be studied. These teams include the political desk, as well as journalists from other newspapers and politicians of various horizons. A typology of the opinions of the journalists at The Liberty Times (believers, followers, deviants) through three lines of questioning (submissiveness of the employees, whealing and dealing of the boss, the belief in Taiwanese identity), is drawn up. The result of this is an authoritarian identity-related discourse that deforms, manipulates and applies censorship tactics. The conclusion points out that the Taiwanese identity discourse is not based on anthropological grounds, but on classical mechanisms of journalistic writing
Corcuff, Stéphane. "Une identification nationale plurielle : les Waishengren et la transition identitaire à Taiwan, 1988-1997." Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000IEPP0036.
Full textSulauze, François de. "Les usages linguistiques des aborigènes 'amis de Taiwan vivant en milieu urbain." Aix-Marseille 1, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010AIX10057.
Full textLee, Tieh-Shang. "Crisis in the Taiwan Strait an assessment of the conflict crisis between China and Taiwan /." online access from Digital Dissertation Consortium, 2007. http://libweb.cityu.edu.hk/cgi-bin/er/db/ddcdiss.pl?3259950.
Full textSečka, Lukáš. "Zvláštnosti podnikatelského prostředí Taiwanu a obchodní spolupráce s ČR." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2012. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-162199.
Full textLin, Chung Hua. "Xie Xuehong (1901-1970), une révolutionnaire taïwanaise en quête de vérité." Paris 7, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011PA070021.
Full textIn the 1990s, the publication of the Critical biography of Xie Xuehong, the rehabilitation of Xie by the Chinese Communist Party and the corne back of Xie Xuehong in Taiwanese collective memory are the signs of the new echo given to the first Taiwan female revolutionary. The dissertation analyses the life of Xie Xuehong in Taiwan under Japanese colonial rule and then the Kuomintang government, and finally in China in exile. The focus is both on her revolutionan' action — her efforts to promote the emancipation of women, her role during the February 28 1947 events, her participation in the creation of the Democratic Alliance for the autonomy of Taiwan —and on her intellectual developments — her awareness of class relations, her defense of a Taiwanese national identity
Lee, Teh-Quei. "Evolution tectonique et géodynamique Néogène et Quaternaire de la chaîne côtière de Tai͏̈wan : apport du paléomagnétisme." Paris 6, 1989. http://www.theses.fr/1989PA066301.
Full textTian, Qunjian. "Sweet deals and sour tastes the political economy of economic interactions across the Taiwan Strait /." online access from Digital dissertation consortium access full-text online access from ProQuest databases, 2000. http://libweb.cityu.edu.hk/cgi-bin/er/db/pqdiss.pl?9977444.
Full textWardenier, Rita. "Are part-time and full-time small farms detrimental to agriculture : evidence from Taiwan, 1972-1980." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/25986.
Full textArts, Faculty of
Vancouver School of Economics
Graduate
Zhou, Fang. "Once were Japanese a study of the elder native Taiwanese /." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 2008. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B40987930.
Full textYan, Hongxiao. ""Indirect" investment across the Taiwan strait : determinants, characteristics and trends /." Hong Kong : University of Hong Kong, 1998. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record.jsp?B19853476.
Full textChen, Yu-Jen 1957. "A Critical Analysis of Newspaper Development in Taiwan Since the Lifting of Martial Law." Thesis, University of North Texas, 1993. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc500886/.
Full textPeng, Ying-Li. "Urbanisme souterrain : étude de la rue commerciale souterraine à Tapei, Taïwan." Paris 4, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004PA040212.
Full textThe ideas of revolution in the field of construction take as a starting point of the installation in underground space, especially the one that is carried out downtown for a public use. The idea of urban planning for creation in underground is for objective of the durable urban development. The culture is a reference mark to understand the perception of the underground on human being. It is a component of human civilization which is constituted through the origins of the myths and cognitions and making it possible at an organization to acquire the consciousness and motive from his environment. In the research, it is a study on the consequences provoked by the creation of the underground shopping arcade (underground shopping streets +underground pedestrian) in Taipei that are dependent and associated several significant urban developments, either by zone, or by districts to improve anarchistic urban spaces. Thus they concern also urban equipment and urban landscape. It is useful to seek to understand the historical context, the joint development of the social economy, urban space and the socio-policy on the island of Taiwan and their influences on the way of Taiwanese life today. That, we can know well a new transformation and modernization in urban spaces and the Taiwanese society brought by the creation of underground shopping streets in Taipei
Hsu, Chen-kuo. "The political base of changing strategy toward private enterprise in Taiwan, 1945-1955." The Ohio State University, 1987. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/18694101.html.
Full textChiu, Fang-Hsuan. "L'évolution du Gezai-xi à Taiwan : l'institutionnalisation de la tradition." Paris 8, 2013. http://octaviana.fr/document/182124533#?c=0&m=0&s=0&cv=0.
Full textGezai-xi is a form of live performance art, sung and dramatised, which was born on the island of Taiwan. It is not an art of lettered folk; rather it issues from a rural practice which has flourished in Taiwan since the 19th century: that of Gezai, little songs in the minnan language, sung during agricultural labour by rural Taiwanese populations who emigrated from the Fujian province of China. Gezai-xi has long been considered a minor artform, as its principal raison d'être is to entertain the audience. This image of a popular, even vulgar, entertainment persists in current Taiwanese society. The aim of this thesis is to describe and analyse the process by which a Taiwanese performance art with rural origins has been transformed into a national emblem, in the context of the nationalist government's cultural policy known as indigenisation, and its project of constructing a national identity. This development has tended to institutionalise and immobilise a little-codified practice, at the risk of profoundly modifying its originality and usage. Founded on historical inquiry and the collection of testimony from performers and audiences, the thesis retraces the development of the artform, which accompanied the construction of Taiwanese society throughout the 20th century, up to its institutionalization in the Fu-Hsing Dramatic Arts Academy, the prestigious national public institution which has raised it to the status of a national-identity performance art
Shen, Ling-Long. "Le marché financier de Taiwan : de l'isolement à l'ouverture." Paris 1, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005PA010020.
Full textTzeng, Chien-Chun. "The political economy of NPOs promoting "active ageing" programs for the elderly in Taiwan." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2016. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:100e9681-c4f5-4fd2-b329-39c99e3da986.
Full textHung, Christine Yu-Ting School of Modern Language Studies UNSW. "A Nation of Sadness? Reading history, culture, and gender in Hou Hsiao-hsien???s A City of Sadness." Awarded by:University of New South Wales. School of Modern Language Studies, 2006. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/24263.
Full textLiu, Pi-chen. "Les Mtiu femmes chamanes : genre, parenté, chamanisme et pouvoir des femmes chez les Kavalan de Taiwan (1895-2000)." Paris, EHESS, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004EHES0210.
Full textThis thesis deals with kinship and shamanism among the Kavalan, an Austronesian speaking society on the East coast of Taiwan, which has been, until the 1940s, matrilineal and matrilocal, having practiced diachronic polyandry. I attempt to analyse the source of different powers held by women and to show how, in Kavalan culture, social gender constitutes both the agent and recipient of these powers. Finally, I devote my attention to the transformations engendered in Kavalan society by successive regimes of Japanese and Han Chinese colonization until the present. During these periods, the Kavalan have had to confront the politics of sinisation, the penetration of Christianity, their integration within the modern state and lastly their inclusion within the global market economy
Ogawa, Masashi. "Revival of cultural tradition amongst two ethnic minorities Ainu in Japan and aborigines in Taiwan /." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 1995. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B31950851.
Full textCai, Yang. "High tension without war [electronic resource] : interpreting Taiwan Strait relations from 1990 to 2005 /." unrestricted, 2005. http://etd.gsu.edu/theses/available/etd-11182005-221708/.
Full textTitle from title screen. Henry F. Carey, committee chair; Kim Reimann, William Downs, committee members Electronic text (84 p.) : digital, PDF file. Description based on contents viewed Apr. 30, 2007. Includes bibliographical references (p. 73-82).
Chang, Wen-Chi. "Lee Teng-hui and the rise of pro-independence forces in Taiwan." online access from Digital Dissertation Consortium, 2007. http://libweb.cityu.edu.hk/cgi-bin/er/db/ddcdiss.pl?1449193.
Full textPi, Hsien-hui Sunny, and 皮賢慧. "The Taiwan press and secrecy laws: a search for standards." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2002. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31972688.
Full textSaillard, Claire. "Contact des langues à Tai͏̈wan : interactions et choix de langues en situations de travail." Paris 7, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA070062.
Full textThe study starts with a sociolinguistic description of Taiwan at the present time, i. E. A definition of the status of the languages spoken in Taiwan, and of the characteristics of their speakers. Main languages concerned are chinese languages (mandarin, minnan, hakka) as well as formosan austronesian languages. Further on, questions related to multilingualism and language choice in the work environment are explored, especially in relation to Taiwan aborigines. Theories representative of language choice research fields, at the macro- and micro-sociolinguistic levels, are reviewed and discussed, so as to define a methodology for the analysis of the data collected in the east of Taiwan. The two fields of research (a hospital in hualian city and a primary care unit in hualian district) are introduced. Subjects to both surveys are aborigines, and native speakers of the amis, taroko and atayal formosan austronesian languages. Data analysis is performed at both levels of global and interactional (face-to-face) language choice, revealing such mechanisms as code switching, code mixing, and borrowings, and their value as speech strategies. Data analysis is then related to speakers' mental representations of their languages. In a dynamic perspective of language choice, the link between linguistic mental representations and minority language maintenance and shift is evidenced
Or, Tsz-ming, and 柯子明. "Civil society and democratization: actions and discourses of the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan 1970-87." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2005. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31356199.
Full textKwok, Ka-ho, and 郭家豪. "Politics, social change and education reform in Taiwan, 1994-2008." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2010. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B45455831.
Full textTang, Jih-Chuan. "Modélisation numérique de l'initiation de la collision arc-continent : application à Taiwan." Nice, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000NICE5427.
Full textSigwalt, Pierre. "Les consequences humaines des typhons a taiwan." Paris, INALCO, 1986. http://www.theses.fr/1986INAL0045.
Full textThis study has three major objectives: 1) to propound a regional distribution of major typhoon induced hazards in taiwan, according to mean meteorological data and case studies on the most destructive typhoons cited by the chinese scientific litterature. 2) to conduct a questionnaire survey in chinese on the impact of typhoons on every-day life (perception of hazards, health hazards, migrations and so on) and on the changes of the agrarian structure due to typhoons in 29 localities of the northern region, including the mapping of typhoon induced salt-water encroachments' scope. 3) to compare the agricultural damages by county and the agricultural damages (1954-81) and the damages to houses and the human losses (1897-1983), according to each major track. This detailed study incorporates 87 maps and figures, 18 tables, 17 photographs and numerous statistical appendixes
Lee, Schu-Chi. "Die Musik in Daoistischen Zeremonien auf Taiwan /." Frankfurt am Main ; Bern ; Paris : P. Lang, 1992. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb36660376j.
Full textYen, Yaotsung. "Parents' beliefs about developmentally appropriate practice in early childhood programs in Taiwan." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2008. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc9008/.
Full textGuillot, Gilles. "Identités et mondialisation dans la création contemporaine à Taiwan." Lyon 3, 2010. https://scd-resnum.univ-lyon3.fr/in/theses/2010_in_guillot_g.pdf.
Full textFollowing the successive waves of foreign influences, through colonization or globalization, its unique economic and political development, its separation for more than a century from mainland China and its insularity, Taiwan does not cease to claim its singularity on the world stage. However, due to strong pressure from the People's Republic of China in its reunification project ever abandoned, the Republic of China suffers from diplomatic isolation and struggles in making its voice heard as an independant State. The objective of this thesis is to provide an analysis of the complex geopolitical, cultural and social realities of Taiwan. We chose to examine this complexity through the study of identity and globalization issues expressed in contemporary art creation. By defining art as a space for reflection and critical questioning of the world order, we want to show how certain works (selected in the visual arts, architecture and dance) offer a relevant interpretation of the transformations occured in Taiwan society, and the challenges the island has to face