دور البنوك في حل معوقات تمويل المشاريع الصناعية الصغيرة بالسودان = The Role of Banks in Resolving the Obstacles to the Financing of Small Industrial Projects in Sudan

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-100
Author(s):  
Ayman Abdullah Mohammed Abu-Bakr
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 089692052199419
Author(s):  
Eswarappa Kasi ◽  
Atrayee Saha

Lack of awareness, lack of availability of non-farm activities, lack of nutritional facilities, inadequate health infrastructure, restricted movement to forest areas, and reliance on herbal medicines are some of the worst conditions that the indigenous population had to face worldwide, during the pandemic. Around 10.45 crore (10.45 million) indigenous population that resides in India are at stake because of economic inequality and social stigma. Lack of developmental measures in India has always led the tribal population to dwell at the margins without proper resources of economic sustenance. The announcements of lockdown and proposals for industrial projects approved during the lockdown period further aggravated their conditions. With the help of secondary data, news reports, and international agency reports, the article tries to critically review the conditions of the tribal population in India, the measures taken by the government, and the role of local organizations in helping tribal people to sustain the pandemic.


2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 178-188
Author(s):  
Raad Abdulameer Oleiwi

This study discusses the phenomenon of money laundering and its impact on the financial sector in general and the Iraqi banking sector. The research methodology describes money laundering in detail and the three basic stages of money laundering, placement, layering, and integration. How and where money laundering is a key reason to address this problem and what is the role of governments? It also deals with the impact of money laundering on the Iraqi economy, which is the theft of banks, the suspension of industrial projects, terrorism and corruption. The most important recommendations that limit this phenomenon is international cooperation and legal assistance in money laundering investigations. The use of programming and electronic systems to enter the information of owners of real estate and businesses to detect suspicious activities. To reduce this problem requires the establishment of specialized units in the Central Bank and the Ministry of Finance, Justice and the security services to apply all laws against money laundering. As for the Iraqi banking sector, it is necessary to verify the identity of the owners of the funds deposited in banks. Inform the competent authorities by the bank's management of any suspicious activity. In addition to confirming the documents proving the legality of the funds deposited.


2015 ◽  
pp. 109-123 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Korneychuk

The foreign participation in USSR industrialization is considered to be a factor of institutional development of Soviet society. The paper considers the intellectual contribution of foreign specialists in the creation of important industrial projects. Foreign businessmen and specialists had considerable difficulties in their activity under influence of hostile institutional environment. Nevertheless, their professional success demonstrated the advantages of capitalism and conduced to dangerous spread of capitalist values into working class consciousness. Using repressions and propaganda, communist leaders institutionalized isolationism, i.e. watchful attitude to Western countries and belief in ability to solve any economic problem relying upon internal resources.


2018 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 325-351
Author(s):  
Madeleine Zelin

By the turn of the twentieth century the absence of codified law governing private economic transactions was a key target of foreign and Chinese critiques of the imperial legal system. Expectations ran high that China's first legal transplant, the 1904 Company Law, would lead to unprecedented public investment in large-scale industrial projects. Their disappointment, and the continued dominance of small business in the Chinese marketplace, has been attributed to factors ranging from Chinese cultural aversion to impersonal investment to shortcomings in the law itself. This study shifts our attention to the indigenous practices that company law was meant to supplant, examining the diverse sources of Chinese shareholding practices and the rich menu of options they provided investors. Most importantly, it argues that by the late imperial period shares were well-established as abstract income producing assets that could be bought and sold, creating the possibility of partnership relationships that could be both impersonal and long-lived despite the absence in China of a formal company law. That this tradition did not lead to the emergence of an analogue to the corporation in the West raises new questions about the demand for such entities and the role of transplantation in suppressing indigenous solutions to business problems.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 32-49
Author(s):  
Said AMRANI

The aim of this research is to assess the effectiveness of community empowerment tools in changing the thinking and work of the community through participation of members of the local environment and the provision of fair public services to meet their needs. To determine this, we conducted a field study of the industrial zone of Palma in the province of Constantine. The study revealed several results, including: the importance of collective networks in providing information to industrial projects, poor public services that affect the activity of projects, as well as poor communication between projects and the Industrial Zone Management Authority


2018 ◽  
Vol 219 (2) ◽  
pp. 17-32
Author(s):  
Assist.Prof. lmran Bondar Murad

       Industrial is one of dispersion patterns on regional geographical distribution of industrial enterprises which are approved in the process of industrial development especially in poor areas and this is what appeared in this study , Of a lot of industrial enterprises distributed geographically in the center and southern regions of Iraq through periods of time since the founding of the council of reconstruction in 1950 and until the last five – year plan comprehensive economic carried out"  1981-1986 and Iraq that have not been implemented to the completion of the Iran-Iraq war in 1980 which affected the 8 years that ended in august 8 , 1988. Economic five-year plans successive of economic development where and expanding industrial activity in order to provide job opportunities for thousands of the workforce has been able to is evident from the study of the province of quinsy as amodel , which was dependent on agricultural as an economic resouree , which led the emigration of most of the manpower into Iraq and outside Iraq possible for those responsible in following the policies of previous governments development plans and implantation of dozens of industrial projects in the five-year plan 1970-1974 and the subsequent establishment of many Almausat undustrial big and geographically distributed among the cities of the province , including the industries plant of rubber (tires diwaniya) and plant of textile and dairy plant in the city of diwaniya aswell as two plats for bricks in each of dagharah and shamiya and in addition to the role of the private sector in the development of industrial province .


JAMA ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 195 (12) ◽  
pp. 1005-1009 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Fernbach
Keyword(s):  

JAMA ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 195 (3) ◽  
pp. 167-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. E. Van Metre

2018 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Winnifred R. Louis ◽  
Craig McGarty ◽  
Emma F. Thomas ◽  
Catherine E. Amiot ◽  
Fathali M. Moghaddam

AbstractWhitehouse adapts insights from evolutionary anthropology to interpret extreme self-sacrifice through the concept of identity fusion. The model neglects the role of normative systems in shaping behaviors, especially in relation to violent extremism. In peaceful groups, increasing fusion will actually decrease extremism. Groups collectively appraise threats and opportunities, actively debate action options, and rarely choose violence toward self or others.


2018 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Arceneaux

AbstractIntuitions guide decision-making, and looking to the evolutionary history of humans illuminates why some behavioral responses are more intuitive than others. Yet a place remains for cognitive processes to second-guess intuitive responses – that is, to be reflective – and individual differences abound in automatic, intuitive processing as well.


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