Review of Kirkpatrick & Sussex (2012): English as an International Language in Asia: Implications for Language Education & Wee, Goh & Lim (2013): The Politics of English: South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Asia Pacific

2015 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 356-369
Author(s):  
Jonathan Newton
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 728 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samir Gandhi ◽  
Trevor Jones

Mangroves inhabit highly productive inter-tidal ecosystems in >120 countries in the tropics and subtropics providing critical goods and services to coastal communities and contributing to global climate change mitigation owing to substantial carbon stocks. Despite their importance, global mangrove distribution continues to decline primarily due to anthropogenic drivers which vary by region/country. South Asia, Southeast Asia and Asia-Pacific contain approximately 46% of the world’s mangrove ecosystems, including the most biodiverse mangrove forests. This region also exhibits the highest global rates of mangrove loss. Remotely sensed data provides timely and accurate information on mangrove distribution and dynamics critical for targeting loss hotspots and guiding intervention. This report inventories, describes and compares all known single- and multi-date remotely sensed datasets with regional coverage and provides areal mangrove extents by country. Multi-date datasets were used to estimate dynamics and identify loss hotspots (i.e., countries that exhibit greatest proportional loss). Results indicate Myanmar is the primary mangrove loss hotspot, exhibiting 35% loss from 1975–2005 and 28% between 2000–2014. Rates of loss in Myanmar were four times the global average from 2000–2012. The Philippines is additionally identified as a loss hotspot, with secondary hotspots including Malaysia, Cambodia and Indonesia. This information helps inform and guide mangrove conservation, restoration and managed-use within the region.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aurel Croissant ◽  
Lars Pelke

This chapter examines the possible causal relationship between form of rule and economic development for 20 countries in South Asia, Southeast Asia and Northeast Asia. We approach the topic in four steps. Section 2 discusses the extant literature on the development-democracy nexus. Section 3 then presents our key concepts, data and method. In Section 4, we test the relationship between income and democracy in Asia-Pacific, as well as potential impacts of rule of law and state capacity. Section 5 presents our conclusions.


2004 ◽  
Vol 12 (02) ◽  
pp. 127-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
FREDRIC WILLIAM SWIERCZEK ◽  
TRUONG QUANG

The purpose of this paper is to examine the influence of national cultures and different business policy models on the degree of entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship orientations of managers in the Asia-Pacific: East Asia, Southeast Asia and South Asia. The results indicate that an economic policy, which is open and supportive of business development, stimulates greater entrepreneurship.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tim Foster ◽  
Cindy Priadi ◽  
Krishna Kumar Kotra ◽  
Mitsunori Odagiri ◽  
Emily Christensen Rand ◽  
...  

AbstractThere is increasing awareness of household self-supply and the role it can play in securing water for domestic needs in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), but its scale across the Asia-Pacific has not previously been quantified. This study analysed 77 datasets from 26 countries to estimate the prevalence of self-supplied drinking water, and its associated trends in LMICs in South Asia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific. When factoring in temporal trends, results suggest that >760 million people—or 31% of the population—relied on self-supply for their drinking water in these regions in 2018, with the number of users increasing by >9 million each year. Reliance on self-supply for drinking water is greater in rural areas than in urban areas (37% of rural population vs 20% of urban population), though results vary considerably between countries. Groundwater sources constitute the most common form of self-supply in South Asia and Southeast Asia, while rainwater collection is dominant in the Pacific. The results confirm the significance of self-supply in the Asia-Pacific and suggest that households are a major but often overlooked source of financing within the water sector. The findings raise important questions about how policy and practice should respond to this widespread phenomenon.


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4763 (3) ◽  
pp. 439-443
Author(s):  
XINGYUE LIU

The genus Rapisma McLachlan, 1866 (montane lacewings) is a rare and little known group of the family Ithonidae (Insecta: Neuroptera). There have been 21 described species of Rapisma, and all of them are distributed from East Asia, South Asia and Southeast Asia. Here I report a new species of Rapisma from northwestern Yunnan, China, namely Rapisma weixiense sp. nov. The new species belongs to a group of Rapisma species with very short antennae. 


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