DSpace コレクション: 2006-03-292006-03-29http://hdl.handle.net/11150/532024-03-29T16:04:44Z2024-03-29T16:04:44ZFASB非営利会計概念フレームワークにおける組織区分の検討 : GASB 概念フレームワークと比較して池田, 享誉http://hdl.handle.net/11150/8372013-01-22T16:33:52Z2006-03-28T15:00:00Zタイトル: FASB非営利会計概念フレームワークにおける組織区分の検討 : GASB 概念フレームワークと比較して
著者: 池田, 享誉2006-03-28T15:00:00Z表紙 ・ 目次http://hdl.handle.net/11150/8332016-01-18T07:26:38Z2006-03-28T15:00:00Zタイトル: 表紙 ・ 目次2006-03-28T15:00:00Zアーサー・ケイリーと複式簿記の絶対的完全性について井尻, 雄士http://hdl.handle.net/11150/8342013-01-22T16:33:50Z2006-03-28T15:00:00Zタイトル: アーサー・ケイリーと複式簿記の絶対的完全性について
著者: 井尻, 雄士2006-03-28T15:00:00ZGlobalization and CivilizationTanahashi, Keiseihttp://hdl.handle.net/11150/8352013-03-28T01:56:25Z2006-03-28T15:00:00Zタイトル: Globalization and Civilization
著者: Tanahashi, Keisei
抄録: In this paper, globalization is defined as the geographical expansion of human interaction, and civilization is defined as the totality of physical and metaphysical facilities, including institutional facilities, for human interaction. These definitions lead to the elucidation of today’s globalization and its impact on human society in a historical perspective. The definitions also highlight the obvious: namely, if a society has physical facilities different from others, it also has different metaphysical facilities to match, and vice versa. Today’s globalization attempts to establish and homogenize the institutional framework for free-market capitalism worldwide. By doing so, it marginalizes many societies and civilizations that have not yet espoused capitalistic freedom, as some modern and affluent societies have done. For these societies and civilizations, communal cooperation for survival is more important than individual emancipation. Thus, globalization in the current form is unsustainable, unless it develops some mechanism to help promote these marginalized societies to have time and resources to adapt their civilization to globalization and its economic dynamism.2006-03-28T15:00:00Z