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Ebel, Karl-H. – International Labour Review, 1991
Aspects of developing countries that may make computer-integrated manufacturing inappropriate include (1) inadequate infrastructure; (2) lack of capital; (3) policies regarding use of local products; (4) many small and medium-sized businesses; and (5) management practices. Higher productivity depends more on skilled management and workers and more…
Descriptors: Appropriate Technology, Developing Nations, Economic Factors, Foreign Countries
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Gaude, J.; And Others – International Labour Review, 1987
Examines case studies of special public works programs in five countries (Burkina Faso, Burundi, Rwanda, Nepal, and United Republic of Tanzania) that included afforestation projects, anti-erosion works, and the building of reservoirs. Discusses program design, implementation, and impact. (CH)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Community Development, Community Programs, Cost Effectiveness
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Castley, Robert; Alfthan, Torkel – International Labour Review, 1986
States that, in countries where industrialization is underway, governments must identify occupations for which skill training is required, monitor the relevance of training, and provide incentives to attract and retain people in important occupations. Discusses issues raised by manpower planning and development as well as measures that governments…
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Economic Development, Government Role, Industry
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Phan-Thuy, N. – International Labour Review, 1985
Over the past two decades a number of African and Asian governments have experimented with various types of youth mobilization or employment and training schemes in trying to cope with rural youth unemployment. A critical appraisal is made of some of these in an attempt to establish criteria that productive employment programs for rural youth…
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Rural to Urban Migration, Rural Youth, Training Methods
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Hopkins, M. J. D. – International Labour Review, 1980
Estimates are made of absolute poverty and employment under the hypothesis that existing trends continue. Concludes that while the number of people in absolute poverty is not likely to decline by 2000, the proportion will fall. Jobs will have to grow 3.9% per year in developing countries to achieve full employment. (JOW)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Employment, Employment Level, Employment Patterns
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Freedman, David H. – International Labour Review, 1990
Examines changes in economic conditions and policy that have influenced special employment programs. Reviews and assesses public works programs, job creation, subsidized schemes, self-employment, and welfare-oriented programs. Discusses two critical issues: targeting and program duration. (SK)
Descriptors: Developed Nations, Developing Nations, Employment Programs, Foreign Countries
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Jamal, Vali – International Labour Review, 1988
Considers major characteristics of African countries that influence the African crisis. Distinguishes between export crops and food crops and divides food crops into subsistence and sales components. States that three crises afflict Africa: (1) food production, (2) urban supply, and (3) external imbalances and foreign debt. Reflects on the role of…
Descriptors: Adults, Agricultural Production, Developing Nations, Economic Factors
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Tabatabai, Hamid – International Labour Review, 1988
Examines the causes and impacts of agricultural decline in Ghana. Presents a macroeconomic overview and discusses the nature of decline. Emphasizes the roles of prices and migration. Examines changes in incomes and access to food as both a result and a cause of poor performance in agriculture. (CH)
Descriptors: Adults, Agricultural Production, Developing Nations, Economic Progress
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Lydall, H. F. – International Labour Review, 1975
The study to estimate the employment effects of an increase of manufactured and semi-manufactured products exported from developing to developed countries concluded that the lower the degree of development, the greater the number of jobs generated. Available from: ILO Publications, International Labour Office, CH-1211, Geneva 22, Switzerland.…
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Economic Development, Economic Research, Employment Opportunities
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Bequele, Assefa; Boyden, Jo – International Labour Review, 1988
Examines the types of employment children are most frequently engaged in, the risks involved, earnings, relationship between work and school, and the constraints on the exercise of their rights. Discusses initiatives underway to protect child workers, meet their needs, and formulate government policy. (JOW)
Descriptors: Child Labor, Children, Childrens Rights, Developing Nations
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Richter, Lothar – International Labour Review, 1984
This article presents a brief account of some of the new directions that manpower planning has taken in recent years viewed primarily in the light of activities undertaken by the International Labour Office technical cooperation program in this field. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Cooperative Programs, Developing Nations, Information Sources, Labor Force Development
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Ahmad, Zubeida – International Labour Review, 1984
Rural women engage in a wide range of income-generating activities, but their participation in the labor market is constrained by lack of access to land and other resources, lack of control over labor and income, and lack of physical and occupational mobility. (SK)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Employed Women, Females, Land Settlement
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Bertrand, O.; And Others – International Labour Review, 1981
The authors believe that one should beware of adopting too general an approach to Third World training which fails to take account of different types of education and training. At the same time, they view the economy as a whole, including the rural sector and informal activities. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Employment Projections, Futures (of Society), Job Training
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Watanabe, Susumu – International Labour Review, 1980
It is often the "institutional" framework of a country or region that discourages the adoption of appropriate technologies and impedes their importation, development, and diffusion. The author shows how some government policies create or increase institutional obstacles of this kind, while others help to reduce them. (CT)
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Developing Nations, Economic Factors, Government Role
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Cherns, A. B. – International Labour Review, 1980
Examines the implications of the reduced importance of employment for individuals, for enterprises (work conditions, management styles), trade unions (with a more political than industrial role), and the conservation of resources, concluding with a brief look at the possible benefits of microelectronics for the developing countries. (CT)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Electronic Equipment, Employment, Employment Patterns
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