Knowledge and Skills for Planning Profession in the High Growth Period of Urban Transformation in India

Author(s):  
Debjani Ghosh ◽  
Ajith Kaliyath ◽  
Anil Kumar Roy
1977 ◽  
Vol 17 (86) ◽  
pp. 425 ◽  
Author(s):  
LA Edye ◽  
WT Williams ◽  
RL Burt ◽  
B Grof ◽  
SL Stillman ◽  
...  

The seasonal growth patterns of some S. guyanensis accessions were compared in three humid environments at South Johnstone (extended rainfall tropics), 'Heathlands' (seasonally dry tropics) and Cooroy (humid sub-tropics). The accessions were selected mainly for their productivity in previously described small mown sward experiments over three years at each site. Previous methods of presenting seasonal growth patterns are reviewed, and a new, simpler method of presentation is defined. Growth was highly seasonal at all sites. There was no growth during July to November at 'Heathlands' and Cooroy due to moisture and temperature limitations respectively. At South Johnstone growth was continuous but depressed in August and December with limitations due to both soil moisture and temperature: the maximum growth rate was 22 times the minimum growth rate. The accessions differed markedly in their growth patterns at each site. In general, the yield differences between accessions were greater at the beginning and end of the growing season than during the peak growth period. The highest yielding accessions at each site had high growth rates spread over a long period. The yield distribution and persistence of Q8231 and 46589C seemed superior to existing cultivars in tropical and sub-tropical environments respectively


Author(s):  
Steven K. Vogel

In the postwar era, Japan benefited from an unusually competent, public-minded, and powerful central bureaucracy that contributed to rapid economic growth, high education and health standards, domestic stability, and peaceful international relations. The regime combined democratic politics with strong administrative capacity and partial insulation from interest group pressures. Central ministry officials developed a compromise between autonomy and inclusion whereby they played a distinctively political role of arranging bargains among key interest groups. Yet the bureaucracy’s power and insulation also restricted the participation of civic groups and minority interests in the policy process, limited accountability to the broader public, and fostered collusive partnerships with politicians and favored interest groups. Bureaucratic dominance began to wane in the 1970s as politicians pushed beyond Ministry of Finance budget limits to expand the welfare state and boost public works spending for their constituents. Bureaucrats confronted even greater challenges in the 1990s, including a devastating financial crisis that abruptly ended the high-growth period, an electoral system reform that transformed political dynamics, and a gradual erosion of prestige. Meanwhile, political leaders enacted administrative reforms to strengthen their control over the bureaucracy and to centralize power in the Prime Minister’s Office and the cabinet. Nevertheless, Japan’s elite civil servants have preserved some core powers, including control over substantial elements of the policy process, the capacity to forge political bargains, and a knack for manipulating politicians to pursue their own policy preferences.


2002 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
pp. 850-851
Author(s):  
Takaaki Suzuki

The once-formidable Japanese economy has fallen upon hard times. After posting a roughly double-digit rate of real annual growth from the mid-1950s to the early 1970s, and generally outperforming the economies of other advanced industrial democracies during the 1970s and 1980s, the Japanese economy suffered a prolonged period of stagnation throughout most of the 1990s. Given this dramatic reversal, Bai Gao sets about the ambitious task not only of explaining why the Japanese economy has soured, but of providing a broad institutional framework that underscores the common factors behind the high growth period, the bubble economy of the 1980s, and the collapse of the bubble in the 1990s. To achieve this task, Gao applies what he terms “the logic of reverse reasoning”; he takes the rise and collapse of the bubble economy as the “starting point fortheoretical reasoning,” examining the institutional mechanisms that purportedly produced it. He then works backward in time to reexamine how these institutional mechanisms operated during the high-growth era, and to identify the “environmental changes” that account for the reasons these institutional mechanisms produced such varied outcomes over time (pp. 6–7).


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-22
Author(s):  
Constance I. Millar ◽  
Diane L. Delany ◽  
John C. King ◽  
Robert D. Westfall

Abstract Tree-rings representing annual dates from live and deadwood Pinus flexilis at ten sites across the central Great Basin (~38°N) yielded a cumulative record across 4002 years (1983 BC–AD 2019). Individual site chronologies ranged in length from 861–4002 years; all were continuous over their sample depths. Correlations of growth with climate were positive for water relations and mostly negative for summer temperatures. Growth was generally correlated across sites, with the central Nevada stands most distinct. Although growth was low during the Late Holocene Dry Period, variability marked this interval, suggesting that it was not pervasively dry. All sites had low growth during the first half of the Medieval Climate Anomaly, high growth during the mid-interval pluvial, and low growth subsequently. Little synchrony occurred across sites for the early Little Ice Age. After AD 1650, growth was depressed until the early twentieth century. Growth at all sites declined markedly ca. AD 1985, was similar to the lowest growth period of the full records, and indicative of recent severe droughts. A small rebound in growth occurred after ca. AD 2010. A strong signal for Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) occurred in growth response at most sites. The persistence of all stands despite climate variability indicates high resilience of this species.


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