Difference between revisions of "Driving Forces"
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<td valign="top">'''[[Economic Driving Forces]]''' | <td valign="top">'''[[Economic Driving Forces]]''' | ||
<font size="-2">Including:<br> | <font size="-2">Including:<br> | ||
[[E-commerce in developing countries]], [[Crisis of the capitalism]], , [[Open Source]], [[Declining Dollar]], [[Chinese Families' economic condition]], [[Shift to Alternative Energy Sources]] and [[Affective Issues on China Economy]], [[Increasing influence of Seoul's economic condition on the overall Korean economy]]</font> | [[E-commerce in developing countries]], [[Crisis of the capitalism]], , [[Open Source]], [[Declining Dollar]], [[Chinese Families' economic condition]], [[Shift to Alternative Energy Sources]] and [[Affective Issues on China Economy]], [[Increasing influence of Seoul's economic condition on the overall Korean economy]],[[continuing the low growth of korea's economy]]</font> | ||
</td> | </td> |
Revision as of 11:41, 17 November 2005
A driving forces is a conceptual tool that help us understand deep trends working in the world, that have an effect on the terrain of your focal issue. Below is an introduction how to determine a driving force, a template to fill in and instructions how to upload your driving forces. These where originally meant for students, but can of course be used by anyone. How to determine a driving force? |
[[1] [WTHPD1]] WTHPD2 [| WTHPD3] | WTHPD4 [WTHPD5 | http://WTHP5.coolhost.biz] [WTHPD6] http://WTHP7.coolhost.biz http://WTHP8.coolhost.biz
"Elimination the gap between poor and rich in china"