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FOURTH INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION (11) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   172613


Belt and Road 2.0 Initiative and Russia / Heifetz, Boris ; Stepanov, Nikita   Journal Article
HEIFETZ, Boris Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article analyzes the six-year period of implementation of the global Chinese project One Belt, One Road (OBOR), or the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Its positive aspects are highlighted: expanding the number of participants and their areas of interaction, creating a powerful financial base, creating new transborder transportation routes, increasing trade and investment among the countries participating in the project. Problems have been identified, including the lack of transparency of OBOR projects, insufficient consideration of national interests and local needs of China's partners, increasing their geopolitical risks, and the "debt trap" of Chinese loans. Possible ways of deepening the Russian-Chinese interaction at the new stage of BRI 2.0 development are proposed.
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2
ID:   180609


Coast Guard Must Embrace the Fourth Industrial Revolution / Pecora, Krystyn   Journal Article
Pecora, Krystyn Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The service needs to accelerate its efforts to embrace emerging technologies to retain relevance against today’s peer-nation threats.
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3
ID:   163865


Correctly valuing the work of the future / Ryder, Guy   Journal Article
Ryder, Guy Journal Article
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4
ID:   170243


Digital China: a Fourth Industrial Revolution with Chinese Characteristics? / Ito, Asei   Journal Article
Ito, Asei Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper examines both the universal features and unique aspects of China’s digitalization process. The impact of digitalization, domestically and in other Asian countries, is also explored. China’s digital economy has grown rapidly since the end of the first decade of the 21st century, and compared to other countries with similar levels of economic development, China has a high rate of use of digital services. China’s digitalization process is driven by both private companies and by the state’s strategic initiatives, including social governance. China faces both opportunities and risks from digitalization. Workers in rural areas as well as older workers may face a higher risk of job loss through automation in the future. Chinese IT companies are eager to expand their activities both domestically and in foreign countries, and their investments in so-called “unicorn” companies in Southeast Asia are especially noteworthy.
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5
ID:   163864


Fourth industrial revolution: shaping a new era / Philbeck, Thomas ; Davis, Nicholas   Journal Article
Thomas Philbeck and Nicholas Davis Journal Article
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6
ID:   163871


Fourth industrial revolution: digital fusion with the internet of things / Chou, Shuo-Yan   Journal Article
Chou, Shuo-Yan Journal Article
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7
ID:   175173


From geopolitics to geotechnics: global futures in the shadow of automation, cunning machines, and human speciation / Grove, Jairus   Journal Article
Grove, Jairus Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This exploration provides an alternative future to that offered in the discussions surrounding what is often referred to by the ‘fourth industrial revolution’ or the ‘third offset’. I argue that even modest projections of existing trends have the capability of altering the grammar or ecology of geopolitics as well as the drivers for competition and catastrophe. Such changes are more significant than questions of how this or that actor might be different or which great powers may shape the international order in a hundred years. The essay seeks to understand what disruptive changes in non-human capability might mean for the shape of a potential geopolitics to come. In a more general sense, I want to think about how violence will be distributed differently. Will there be new sources and even kinds of competition unique to a global system populated and in some cases, structured by cunning machines – some mechanical, others digital – and what are the implications for how we imagine international relations?
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8
ID:   163866


Gig work and the fourth industrial revolution: conceptual and regulatory challenges / Ruyter, Alex de ; Burgess, John ; Brown, Martyn   Journal Article
Alex de Ruyter, Martyn Brown, and John Burgess Journal Article
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9
ID:   173267


Global crisis as a trigger of geoeconomic transformations: challenges for Russia / Evstafiev, D ; Ilnitsky, A   Journal Article
D. Evstafiev, A. Ilnitsky Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract A GLOBAL ECONOMIC CRISIS is a "slumbering reality" of sorts barely discernible in economic activity per se. Judging by the formal macro-economic parameters, we are in the period of a relatively high global economic growth. Against the background of the existing and socially insurmountable development asymmetries, negative expectations look like the main tangible outcrops of a global economic crisis1 further aggravated by new technologies. Its expectations directly affect not so much the development pace as expectations of repercussions of realized "dormant" crisis trends. It has become absolutely clear that considerable or even radical structural transformations of global economic architecture cannot be avoided and that they will be followed by transformations of the global political and military space.
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10
ID:   173405


Human Security Implications of the Fourth Industrial Revolution in East Asia / Soh, Changrok ; Connolly, Daniel   Journal Article
Connolly, Daniel Journal Article
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11
ID:   163877


Sweden: the role of the state in the fourth industrial revolution - interview with Ylva Johansson / Ylva Johansson   Journal Article
Ylva Johansson Journal Article
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