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Gender, Technology, and the Potential for Social Marginalization : Kuala Lumpur and Singapore
Helen JOHNSON Ewha Womans University Press 2003 Asian Journal of Women's Studies(AJWS) Vol.9 No.1
My paper describes a study that links gender with gechnology use in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur. It argues that technology use is a significant 21st century social phenomenon due to the rise of consumption-based economics and government plans for technologically-led recoveries in the Aisa-Pacific. It describes how gender interacts with other cultural differences to shape the social use and effects of technology.
History in China's Urban Post-Modern
Helen F. Siu 고려대학교 민족문화연구원 2011 Cross-Currents Vol.- No.1
Building upon decades of global market flows, population migrations, digital technology, and accelerated inter-connectedness, the twenty-first century is facing remarkable urban transformations (Harvey 1990, 2005; Sassen 2001; Holston 1999; Brenner 2004). In 1800, 3 percent of the world’s population lived in cities. In 2008, that figure reached over 50 percent (PRB 2011). Such processes are most evident in the emerging nodes of an inter-referencing urban Asian renaissance (Roy and Ong 2011). Eight of the world’s ten megacities (those with populations over ten million) are in Asia. In postreform China, which is conscious of its rising power and eager to catch up with worldly pursuits, city building has reached the scale, intensity, and audacity of a revolution (Campanella 2008; Ren 2011). What characterizes this dramatic urban transformation in China? Who are its major players and winners, and who is marginalized or excluded? What cultural meanings and lifestyles are visibly forged? How are these processes intertwined with nationalistic aspirations, social divisions, and political contestations? What analytical insights and theoretical reflections can we gain at this historical juncture from an urban postmodern linking China, Asia, and the rest of the globe? These are some of the issues in the minds of Asian scholars across the disciplines. I hope this review will provide an opening for us to engage in multiple conversations, hence my citing the works of many colleagues.
On Compositionality and Bidirectional Optimization
Helen De Hoop,Petra Hendriks,Reinhard Blunter 서울대학교 인지과학연구소 2007 Journal of Cognitive Science Vol.8 No.2
In this paper we revisit the semantic principle of compositionality and argue that compositionality is bidirectional optimization. Underspecification approaches to natural language interpretation generally start with an underspecified or weak meaning, which is strengthened by contextual information. By contrast, the bidirectional optimization approach we advocate proceeds from the strongest possible meaning. This meaning can be changed or weakened by contextual information. Under this approach, the meaning of an utterance is composed in a functional rather than a concatenative way, while contextual sources of information play a major role. Yet, because the context of any utterance is in principle the same for the speaker and the hearer, composition and decomposition proceed hand in hand. Hence, bidirectional optimization ultimately guarantees (functional) compositionality.
GENERIC MEDICINE BELIEFS AMONG GENERATION Y SOUTH AFRICANS
Helen Inseng Duh,Chuma Diniso 글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 2016 Global Marketing Conference Vol.2016 No.7
This study was conducted to investigate Generation Y (Gen Y) South Africans’ beliefs about generic medicines. The results indicate that Gen Y believe in the important attributes of generic medicines. Younger, black and ungraduated Gen Y have less belief in the efficacy of generic medicine than older, non-blacks and postgraduates.
The Use of Basic Skills of Administration for Church Growth
( Helen Ishola Esan. ) 삼육대학교 선교와사회문제연구소 2014 Asia-Africa Journal of Mission and Ministry(AAMM) Vol.10 No.-
The Church exists for the work of mission, and for this to be accomplished, effective church administration is required. This will help in bringing into light the mission of the church. The growth and achievement of divine purpose and usefulness of a local church in the African society depends on the quality of leadership through effective and adequate use of administrative skills: Pastors as leaders are expected to lead the church of God effectively in order to produce growth. Hence, this paper examines some basic administrative skills and how such skills can be used to enhance church growth.