百度试题 结果1 题目In the 1950’s, India’s leaders voiced a very strong objection ___ the “brain drain” as its best students were moving to the West. A. at B. to C. on D. in 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 B. to 反馈 收藏 ...
A republic in the making: India in the 1950sdoi:info:doi/10.1080/09584935.2019.1649053Pratinav Anil
India: the airport revolution: from nationalization in the 1950s through to the 1990s, India's civil aviation sector was typically characterized by apathy, backwardness and inefficiency. However, since the 1990s the entire industry has been undergoing a revolution from the ground up. Daniel Ship, ...
This paper concerns the significance of Official Development Assistance (ODA) in Japan's relationship with India. It explores how and why peaks in Japan's ODA to India parallel the two highpoints in the overall bilateral relationship ? the early post-war period (roughly to the early1960s), ...
In the 1950s, former Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai and the then Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru joined hands to expound the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence, spearheading a new global guideline for international relations and greatly promoting the prestige of developing countries and newly ...
百度试题 题目 A. India 1. When did most people from India arrive in London? The 1950s and 60s. 2. How often ___? Every two weeks. 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 does a typical family have a curry 反馈 收藏
In the 1950s, many of them considered that mass distribution of foam tablets, a local contraceptive presented as simple to use, cheap and efficient, was a possible solution for the population crisis. At the same time, a potential opening of huge markets for this product generated intense ...
India in the eastern Himalaya Mountains between Nepal and Bhutan. Long isolated from the outside world, Sikkim was settled by Tibetans who established a kingdom there in the 1600s. A British protectorate after 1890, Sikkim passed to India in 1950 and became a state of that country in 1975....
Like in the 1950s, India has feet in both camps — US-West and Russia-China, and expects to gain from it. But Jaishankar insists it “signifies” something new — a “realism, which is contemporary [and] ambitious”. Is the nation’s terminal ambition then to remain content with ...
However, even in per capita terms, China's and India'simpressive growth rates of 6.9% and 4.6%, respectively, over the past decadehave previously been exceeded by Japan and West Germany in the 1950s; Japan,Greece, Spain and Taiwan in the 1960s; South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore inthe ...