Results 301 to 310 of about 598,538 (334)
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Health in southeast Asia

The Lancet, 2011
The Series paper on emerging infectious diseases in southeast Asia by Richard Coker and colleagues (Feb 12, p 599) focuses attention on high-profi le and undoubtedly signifi cant disorders such as infl uenza, zoonoses, and vector-borne diseases. Other common, important, but less newsworthy infectious diseases including those less conventionally ...
Ngoun Chanpheaktra   +7 more
openaire   +6 more sources

Tetanus in Southeast Asia

Asia Pacific Journal of Public Health, 1988
With an estimated 337, 000 cases and 270, 000 deaths due to neonatal tetanus each year, tetanus remains a major public health problem in Southeast Asia. Although immunisation coverage of pregnant women with tetanus toxoid and infants with Diphtheria Pertussis Tetanus (DPT) has increased, it is clear that immunisation activities must be accelerated to ...
A Schnur, I Mochny, R J Kim-Farley
openaire   +3 more sources

Locating Southeast Asia

2005
Southeast Asia' calls to mind a wide range of images: tropical forests and mountains, islands and seas, and a multitude of languages, cultures and religions. The area has never formed a unified political realm nor has it ever developed a cultural or civilisational unity.
Schulte Nordholt, H.G.C.   +2 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Melioidosis in Southeast Asia

Acta Tropica, 2000
After the first report of human melioidosis in Burma by Whitmore and Krishnaswami (1912), it took approximately 50 years for the establishment of its endemicity in Southeast Asian countries such as Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand. In other Southeast Asian countries, little is known about the epidemiology although melioidosis is gradually being ...
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South Asia and Southeast Asia

2012
For many centuries, South Asia and Southeast Asia did not constitute two distinct regions of the world but one. This one region encompassed the bulk of the landmasses, islands and maritime spaces which were affected by the seasonal monsoon winds. Throughout its fertile and often extensive river plains it adopted recognizably similar patterns of culture
openaire   +2 more sources

Are there Technocrats in Southeast Asia?

Asian Survey, 1976
THE AUTHORS OF the three papers did not document how the term technocrats came to be applied to Western-oriented modernizers in Southeast Asia. As technocracy has a fairly well defined meaning in Western intellectual history, it would have been interesting to establish how the term made its appearance with regard to Southeast Asia in the last decade. I
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Globalization in Southeast Asia

The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2000
The authors attempt to accomplish four interrelated tasks in this article: (1) to develop a plausible and defensible approach to studying globalization; (2) to define Southeast Asia; (3) to delimit and historicize the globalization process in Southeast Asia; and (4) to describe and analyze the economic performance of Southeast Asia over the past 30 ...
Peter A. Coclanis, Tilak Doshi
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The Future of Southeast Asia

Asian Survey, 1970
he Chinese Communist Government has succeeded in making China the determining factor in the regional and global politics of Southeast Asia. This success is due to the translation of the hopes of all modern Chinese governments into reality: making aggression against China costly; turning China into a nation to be reckoned with; and restoring the ...
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Buddhism in Southeast Asia

2010
The regional (for example, South, Southeast, and East Asia) and national (for example, Myanmar [Burma], Thailand) designations in use in the early 21st century are of recent vintage and may obscure our understanding of Buddhist histories in the region.
Anne Blackburn, Thomas Patton
openaire   +1 more source

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