Capital in the first century / Thomas Piketty
Material type: TextPublication details: London ; London : The Belknap Press of Harvard University, 2017. Description: xi, 793 p. : ill. ; 20 cmISBN: 9780674430006 Subject(s): Economic development | Capital | Income distributionDDC classification: 332.041 LOC classification: HD75 | .N396 2003Online resources: Publisher descriptionItem type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | Bangladesh Public Administration Training Centre Library General Reading Room | 332.041 GOC 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 110153 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
PART I. INTRODUCTION -- Paradigms of risk / Mark Pelling -- PART II. GLOBAL PROCESSES AND ENVIRONMENTAL RISK -- Does global environmental change cause vulnerability to disaster? / W. Neil Adger, Nick Brooks -- Changes in capitalism and global shifts in the distribution of hazard and vulnerability / Ben Wisner -- Gender, disaster and development: the necessity for integration / Maureen Fordham -- Natural disasters, adaptive capacity and development in the twenty-first century / Mohammed H.I. Dore, David Etkin -- PART III. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE AND VULNERABILITY -- Actors in risk / Ian Christoplos -- Beyond disaster, beyond diplomacy / Ilan Kelman -- Insurance industry: can it cope with catastrophe? / Julian E. Salt -- PART IV. LOCAL CONTEXTS AND GLOBAL PRESSURES -- Social construction of natural disaster: Egypt and the UK / Jacqueline Homan -- Understandings of catastrophe: the landslide at La Josefina, Ecuador / Arthur Morris -- Vulnerability reduction and the community-based approach: a Philippines study / Katrina Allen -- Risk regime change and political entrepreneurship: river management in the Netherlands and Bangladesh / Jeroen Warner -- Disaster as manifestation of unresolved development challenges: the Marmara earthquake, Turkey / Aplaslan Özerdem -- Ecological reconstruction of the upper reaches of the Yangtze river / Chen Guojie -- PART V. CONCLUSION -- Emerging concerns / Mark Pelling
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