Environmental Innovations in the Chemical Industry - Case Studies in a Historical Perspective

Author(s):  
Melanie Monßen
Author(s):  
Claude Markovits

This chapter deals with the question of innovation in Indian business from a historical perspective. After a brief survey of the literature, emphasizing how divided scholarly opinion was regarding the existence of forms of innovation in Indian business prior to the colonial era, the focus shifts to the British period. It is shown that Schumpeter’s definition of innovation equating it with technological innovation cannot be fruitfully applied to the Indian business scene. Two case studies are then proposed: Tata Iron & Steel, the largest Indian industrial firm, is shown to have been innovative in the specific context of India’s backward industrial scene, while the Sindwork merchants of Hyderabad are an instance of an Indian trading network which extended its range to the entire world. Concluding remarks interrogate post-Independence developments and stress the limits of the innovativeness of Indian business, prior to the recent liberal reforms.


2020 ◽  
pp. 2.2-1-2.2-9
Author(s):  
James P. Kohn

2006 ◽  
Vol 1 (10) ◽  
pp. 1934578X0600101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vijay Nair ◽  
Rajeev S. Menon ◽  
Sreekumar Vellalath

Ever since its isolation in 1820, Quinine has played a crucial role in the development of organic chemistry, the chemical industry and modern medicine. A total synthesis of quinine, widely regarded as an event of epochal importance, was claimed by Woodward and Doering in 1945. This work, however, heavily relied on unsubstantiated literature reports and it appears that Woodward's work fell short of a total synthesis of quinine. The first total synthesis of quinine was reported by Uskokovic in the 1970s. The first stereoselective total synthesis of quinine was accomplished only in 2001, by Stork, who incidentally is the originator of the concept of stereoselectivity in total synthesis. Apart from the stereoselectivity, Stork's synthesis of quinine is remarkable for its conceptual uniqueness and retrosynthetic novelty. Naturally, this work has been attested as a landmark in organic synthesis by leaders in the field. Subsequently, Jacobson and Kobayashi reported the catalytic asymmetric synthesis of quinine in 2003 and 2004, respectively. Both these synthesis have followed a similar approach. The present review has attempted to provide a concise account of the synthesis of quinine from a historical perspective.


2017 ◽  
Vol 202 ◽  
pp. 11-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce E. Dale

A sustainable chemical industry cannot exist at scale without both sustainable feedstocks and feedstock supply chains to provide the raw materials. However, most current research focus is on producing the sustainable chemicals and materials. Little attention is given to how and by whom sustainable feedstocks will be supplied. In effect, we have put the bioproducts cart before the sustainable feedstocks horse. For example, bulky, unstable, non-commodity feedstocks such as crop residues probably cannot supply a large-scale sustainable industry. Likewise, those who manage land to produce feedstocks must benefit significantly from feedstock production, otherwise they will not participate in this industry and it will never grow. However, given real markets that properly reward farmers, demand for sustainable bioproducts and bioenergy can drive the adoption of more sustainable agricultural and forestry practices, providing many societal “win–win” opportunities. Three case studies are presented to show how this “win–win” process might unfold.


Author(s):  
Luca Giuliani

Luca Giuliani evaluates Laocoon as an ‘analytical tool’ for twenty-first-century classical archaeology. In doing so, he returns to some of the same literary case studies that so engrossed Lessing 250 years ago—and none more so than Homer’s Iliad. By probing Lessing’s theories of the respective workings of art and text, and exploring them in the context of ancient depictions of the Iliad (especially seventh- and sixth-century BC vase-paintings), the chapter explores both the virtues and the problems of Lessing’s account. As Giuliani argues, this historical perspective can help us formulate the analytical importance of Lessing’s framework; at the same time, the perspective of ancient art can help us see how Lessing’s text is as much a treatise against as about the visual arts.


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