scholarly journals Højhuse i Danmark 1950-2010

Kulturstudier ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 76
Author(s):  
Rasmus Braad Christensen

Med udgangspunkt i det moderne h&oslash;jhus' f&oslash;dsel i det 19. &aring;rhundredes USA samt f&aelig;nomenets internationale historie, belyser artiklen h&oslash;jhusets historie og udbredelse i Danmark. Fra velf&aelig;rdsstatens funktionalistiske boligkolosser i midten af det tyvende &aring;rhundrede, over 1970'erne og 80'ernes modreaktion og 'sm&aring;t er godt'-mentalitet til de seneste &aring;rtiers individuelle og amerikansk inspirerede<br />prestige-projekter med vartegnsambitioner, s&aelig;ttes den danske udvikling ind i en europ&aelig;isk kontekst og prioriteret bevidsthedshistorisk forklaringsramme. Siden midten af det tyvende &aring;rhundrede har erhvervsh&oslash;jhuse i bycenteret h&oslash;rt til de mest karakteristiske tr&aelig;k ved storbyers udvikling verden over, men i Danmark er den slags h&oslash;jhuse endnu relativt sj&aelig;ldne. Ogs&aring; i danske byer peger udviklingen i de seneste &aring;r dog i retning af flere h&oslash;je, markante byggerier i eller n&aelig;r bymidten.<br /><br />Abstract:<br />In recent decades, the distinctive urban setup, with a nucleus dominated by clusters of office towers, has spread to most parts of the world. Economic growth and structural conditions are obviously of fundamental importance for this development, but as the present article shows, the limited construction of such centrally located high-rise buildings in Danish (and European) cities may also be put into a framework of history of consciousness. The first modern skyscrapers were erected in American cities in the late 19th Century, but it was not until the middle of the 20th Century that a related, but dissimilar development gained momentum in Europe and Denmark. In Copenhagen, as well as in other European cities, office towers fitted badly into the the maze of streets in the city centres, and they also conflicted with the laws that restricted building heights. Because of the post-war shortage of housing and the rapid economic growth of the 1950s and -60s, the first high-rise buildings in Denmark were built in the mid-1950s in the form of suburban residential towers. Since then, these pre-fabricated concrete towers have affected the Danish townscape for better and perhaps especially for worse; and this may be one of the reasons why high-rise buildings fell into disrepute in Denmark. At any rate, the first generation of high-rise buildings in this country was mostly suburban, and a child of European modernism and functionalism. Due to a fear of Americanization and the ruining of Copenhagen"s "unique" low skyline, only a few "American" highrise buildings were allowed to be built in Copenhagen"s inner city in this period. From the early 1970s until 1990, practically no high-rise buildings were constructed in Denmark. The building activity was affected by low economic growth; and in addition, the bad experience from the 1950s and -60s influenced the new catchword of the building industry: dense, low. Since the last decade of the 20th Century, however, high-rise buildings have once again become fashionable in Denmark. Not all types of high-rise buildings, though, but characteristic and unique "American" commercial high-rise buildings in or near city centres. This development may be seen not only in Copenhagen, but also in several of the larger provincial towns. Public opposition to these towers is still significant, but as a consequence of increased globalization and the race for attracting multinational companies and the favour of the professions, municipal councils in Denmark are bending over backwards to signal progressiveness and an attractive business environment - for instance by stimulating the<br />construction of office towers.<br />

Author(s):  
Erhan İşcan

Excessive use of goods and services and industrialization progress of 20th century depleted resources and emerged the sustainable development as the main target of the policymakers, but past experiences and consequences of rapid economic growth of 20th century showed that there must be a change in the policies. Alleviating of poverty with inequalities and hunger in a degraded environment is needing sustainable cities and communities that have decent work for economic growth. In this context, perhaps, there must be a change in the economic paradigm beyond a policy change. Collaborative consumption is this new economic paradigm that has changed the understanding of the economic system. This new economic paradigm is depending on the sharing of idle resources with or without a fee that changed the importance of asset ownership. The main aim of this chapter is to present the impact of collaborative consumption on the 10 Sustainable Development Goals of the UN.


2020 ◽  
pp. 137-192
Author(s):  
Michele Monserrati

Chapter 3 fast forwards to the post-war years and the period of reconstruction, which featured rapid economic growth in both Italy and Japan. The chapter considers the writings of Fosco Maraini, Goffredo Parise, Alberto Moravia and Italo Calvino through the ideological framework of continuity and change that was widely debated in Japan at the time of its rapid modernization. The chapter main argument is that the perceived Japanese model of societal evolution, based on a relation of continuity with the country’s past and tradition, played a central role in the writing of Italians traveling to Japan in this period by virtue of generating a contrast with the Italian model of evolution, which was predicated upon rupture and displacement. The conclusion of the chapter advances the hypothesis of a neo-exotic wave of interest toward Japan, predicated upon post-Marxist intellectuals’ quest for areas of the world that (unlike Europe) had not yet fallen under the ideological and cultural dominion of the Cold War’s bipolar order.


2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-36
Author(s):  
Ansar Waseem

Women are untapped resources for economic growth. Female entrepreneurs, like their male counterparts, can boast the economic growth of a country. Women owned business creates jobs which results in poverty alleviation and eradication of unemployment. Similarly, women entrepreneurs add diversity to the entrepreneurial mix of a country. Female entrepreneurs intensify competition through creativity and innovation. However, the institutional profile and overall business environment of any country have significant role in women business start-ups. This study attempts to provide a plausible account on how women entrepreneurs increase economic development of a country. It is proposed that women entrepreneurs enhance the national competitiveness level which leads to rapid economic growth. Moreover, the relationship between female entrepreneurship and national competiveness level is moderated by overall business environment of the country. To test this framework, data was collected from different sources. The results of regression analysis support the research hypotheses.


Subject Tanzania's economic prospects. Significance President John Magufuli’s ad hoc anti-corruption crackdown is directly impinging on economic growth, with effects reverberating through both the private and public sectors. However, Magufuli’s populist proclivities may be tempered by the need to maintain rapid economic growth to achieve the government’s industrialisation objectives. Recent overtures to improve the business environment could signal increasing government tolerance towards the private sector, but will be watched closely amid lingering concerns over erratic policy shifts. Impacts The government may have to rethink its export restrictions on metals as rising oil prices increase import costs. Falling food prices will continue to underpin low inflation despite successive fuel price hikes. The fiscal year 2018/19 (April 2018-March 2019) budget points to continued over-optimistic revenue projections.


Author(s):  
Н.А. Чиканова

Цель статьи — реконструировать образ Н. М. Ядринцева на страницах периодической печати 1950–1980-х годов. Актуальность исследования заключается в изучении формирования коллективной идентичности через обращение к историческим личностям, их биографиям и образам. На основе коммеморации значимых для сообщества исторических личностей формируется чувство общности, которое способствует сплочению его членов. Предметом исследования стало изучение мемориализации Н. М. Ядринцева на страницах советской периодической печати. Автор приходит к выводам об устойчивости образа Н. М. Ядринцева на страницах прессы, о появлении новых характеристик образа лидера сибирского областничества, возникших в результате цензурных ограничений и потребностей социальных групп советского общества второй половины ХХ века. The aim of the article is to reconstruct the image of N. M. Yadrintsev on the pages of the periodical press in the 1950s–1980s. The relevance of the research is accounted for by the fact that it investigates the development of collective identity through the study of prominent historical figures, their biographies and images. By commemorating socially significant historical figures, a nation increases its national awareness and integrity. The object of the research is the investigation of N. M. Yadrintsev’s image as represented on the pages of the Soviet printed media. The author underlines the continuous appearance of N. M. Yadrintsev’s image on the pages of the Soviet printed media. The author states that in the second half of the 20th century, due to constraints imposed by censorship and the needs of different social groups there appeared new characteristics of an image of a Soviet leader in Siberia.


1999 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-51
Author(s):  
Jan Richard Heier

Accounting has always been utilitarian in nature. It adapts to the changes in the business environment by meeting the need for new types of information. The change in waterborne transportation in the U.S. during the 19th century provides an example of such an environmental change that led to a need for accounting adaptation. With the advent of the steamboat, old accounting methods were modified and new ones created to meet the changes in the business environment. In the process, a standardized ships-accounting model was developed. The model can be seen in the accounting records of three ships that sailed at the beginning of the 20th century.


Author(s):  
John Myles

Three challenges are highlighted in this chapter to the realization of the social investment strategy in our twenty-first-century world. The first such challenge—intertemporal politics—lies in the term ‘investment’, a willingness to forego some measure of current consumption in order to realize often uncertain gains in the future that would not occur otherwise, such as better schooling, employment, and wage outcomes for the next generation. Second, the conditions that enabled our post-war predecessors to invest heavily in future-oriented public goods—a sustained period of economic growth and historically exceptional tolerance for high levels of taxation—no longer obtain. Third, the millennial cohorts who will bear the costs of a new, post-industrial, investment strategy are more economically divided than earlier cohorts and face multiple demands raised by issues such as population aging and global warming, among others.


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