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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 20 page report discusses the nation of Bahrain and the fact that its government and people clearly understand that they face a number of obstacles to a comprehensive implementation of electronic commerce. However, Bahrain is well on its way in terms of infrastructure development, education efforts, and, partnering with technologically-advanced organizations. Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Page Count:
20 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWbarain.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
southern Persian Gulf, between the Qatar Peninsula on the east and the coast of Saudi Arabia on the west" (Encarta). It should also be noted that "Manama is Bahrains capital
and largest city" (Encarta) and that the nation was under British control from 1861 to 1971, when it gained its independence (Encarta). In other words, it shares many of the
experiences of nations formerly under European rule in Asia, African, and the Middle East which did not attain their independence until relatively recent times. Bahrain is now a constitutional monarchy
with an economy heavily dependent oil and petroleum refining. The idea of introducing e-commerce is one whose time may have come . . . assuming that it is handled correctly.
It almost goes without saying that the development and implementation of a wide array of technology has become of increasing interest to businesses, governments, policy makers, and academics over
the last three decades. Once the domain of the most developed nations of the world, high-technology industries and the increasing high-tech component to conventional manufacturing and other types of industry
are now being thought of as the keys to future industrial and market competitiveness in nations that were once dismissed as "backwaters." Nations throughout the world, regardless of their current
level of development, have found that the gap between the technology-haves and technology-have-nots, has reached proportions similar to those in the pre-industrial world. The dilemma that has presented itself
has been to narrow the gap to better serve the public welfare of citizens of a nation while not inhibiting the role of competition and free trade in global development.
The decision determining where and how boundaries of technology transfer takes place, and under what conditions, has become a key factor in international relations. In a situation such as
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