62,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 6-10 Tagen
payback
31 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

The issue of development constitutes the cornerstone of our research project. In this project on development in Tunisia, we focused our work on different dimensions of development. Another point seems primordial and fundamental to us; we have emphasized this many times; it is the importance of the inequality of development in Tunisia, both at the regional and local level; at the inter-regional and intra-regional level; between the different governorates but, also, and above all, between the delegations; between industrialized areas and poor rural areas; between the coast and the interior; in a…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The issue of development constitutes the cornerstone of our research project. In this project on development in Tunisia, we focused our work on different dimensions of development. Another point seems primordial and fundamental to us; we have emphasized this many times; it is the importance of the inequality of development in Tunisia, both at the regional and local level; at the inter-regional and intra-regional level; between the different governorates but, also, and above all, between the delegations; between industrialized areas and poor rural areas; between the coast and the interior; in a word, between the center and the periphery. This book falls within this framework, focusing on the problematic issues of human development and regional (local) development in Tunisia. The main objective of our research is the analysis of the results of Tunisian development policy, with its main dimensions: The human dimension, the spatial aspects, the local dimension, the demographic elements and the social aspects.
Autorenporträt
Adel Bousnina is a professor at the University of Tunis. A specialist in development issues, he is the author of more than forty scientific articles and six books: The Tunisian coast and desert, Unemployment of graduates, Some aspects of development, Population and development, Forgotten peripheral Tunisia and Tunisian proverbs and population.