Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Anatolian_Tigers> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 79 of
79
with 100 triples per page.
- Anatolian_Tigers abstract "Anatolian Tigers (Turkish: Anadolu Kaplanları) is a term internationally used in the context of the Turkish economy to refer to and to explain the phenomenon of a number of cities in Turkey which have displayed impressive growth records since the 1980s, as well as to a defined new breed of entrepreneurs rising in prominence and who can often be traced back to the cities in question and who generally rose from the status of SMEs.Where particular cities are concerned, the term is most often used for the capitals or depending centers of Denizli, Gaziantep, Kayseri, Bursa, Kocaeli, Kahramanmaraş. Within Turkey, the accent is laid on cities that have received little state investments or subsidies over the years. Çorum, Denizli, Gaziantep and Kahramanmaraş, in particular, are cited among the cities who "made it themselves". In time order, while Denizli in Turkey's Aegean Region was the early hour precursor for rapid growth in an Anatolian Tiger pattern, Gaziantep, Malatya, Konya and Kayseri are the most recently cited prominent Tigers on the basis of the number of companies they have among Turkey's 500 biggest. These largest are the forerunners of further large companies and a multitude of smaller ones.Aside from their production units, the definition generally excludes companies who have their headquarters in the largest cities of Turkey; namely İstanbul, Ankara, İzmir, Bursa and Adana, as well as companies constituted with public capital. The term is also echoed, in the form "Anatolian Lions" (Turkish: Anadolu Aslanları), by the name of the private sector association Askon that brings together businessmen from a number of other cities who have found common grounds between each other. This association has branches in Ankara, Burdur, Bursa, Gebze, İzmit, Konya, Malatya and Trabzon. These lions are less often cited among the tigers for several reasons. Other variations of the term, such "Turkey's Tigers" or "Turkish Tigers", as used by the PBS without excluding the most commonly used form of "Anatolian Tigers" have also been pronounced.Beyond their shared characteristics in an economical perspective, references have also been made, especially in international media, to different political connotations within the term, including by associating this capital with Islamic values or extending its whole under such definitions as "Islamic capital" or "green capital". The political choices and the voting trends of the cities and of particulars in question may differ widely between each other. A 2005 study by the European Stability Initiative that was focused on Kayseri uses the term "Islamic Calvinists" to define the entrepreneurs and their values.Several business awards or conferences in Turkey draw reference from the term "Anatolian Tigers" or its variants. The term was copied after the Asian Tigers.".
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageExternalLink www.askon.org.tr.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageExternalLink www.esiweb.org.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageID "10836951".
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageLength "7715".
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageOutDegree "64".
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageRevisionID "661799934".
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Adana.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Adıyaman.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Aegean_Region.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Aegean_Region,_Turkey.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Afyonkarahisar.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Ankara.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Balıkesir.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Burdur.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Bursa.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Calvinism.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Calvinists.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Category:Economic_booms.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Category:Economy_of_Turkey.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tiger_economies.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Denizli.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Economy_of_Turkey.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Four_Asian_Tigers.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Gaziantep.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Gebze.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Giresun.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Islam.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Isparta.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Istanbul.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Kahramanmaraş.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Karaman.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Kayseri.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Kocaeli_Province.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Konya.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Kütahya.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Malatya.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Niğde.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Ordu.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink PBS.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Phenomenon.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Public_Broadcasting_Service.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Samsun.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Small_and_medium-sized_enterprises.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Small_and_medium_enterprises.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Tiger_Cub_Economies.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Tiger_economy.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Trabzon.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Turkey.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Turkish_economy.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Çankırı.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Çorum.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink Ünye.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink İstanbul.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink İzmir.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLink İzmit.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageWikiLinkText "Anatolian Tigers".
- Anatolian_Tigers hasPhotoCollection Anatolian_Tigers.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-tr.
- Anatolian_Tigers wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Anatolian_Tigers subject Category:Economic_booms.
- Anatolian_Tigers subject Category:Economy_of_Turkey.
- Anatolian_Tigers subject Category:Tiger_economies.
- Anatolian_Tigers hypernym Term.
- Anatolian_Tigers type Article.
- Anatolian_Tigers type Article.
- Anatolian_Tigers type Economy.
- Anatolian_Tigers comment "Anatolian Tigers (Turkish: Anadolu Kaplanları) is a term internationally used in the context of the Turkish economy to refer to and to explain the phenomenon of a number of cities in Turkey which have displayed impressive growth records since the 1980s, as well as to a defined new breed of entrepreneurs rising in prominence and who can often be traced back to the cities in question and who generally rose from the status of SMEs.Where particular cities are concerned, the term is most often used for the capitals or depending centers of Denizli, Gaziantep, Kayseri, Bursa, Kocaeli, Kahramanmaraş. ".
- Anatolian_Tigers label "Anatolian Tigers".
- Anatolian_Tigers sameAs Anatolischer_Tiger.
- Anatolian_Tigers sameAs Tigres_de_Anatolia.
- Anatolian_Tigers sameAs Anatóliai_tigrisek.
- Anatolian_Tigers sameAs Tigres_da_Anatólia.
- Anatolian_Tigers sameAs m.02qrkdr.
- Anatolian_Tigers sameAs Anadolu_Kaplanları.
- Anatolian_Tigers sameAs Q754347.
- Anatolian_Tigers sameAs Q754347.
- Anatolian_Tigers wasDerivedFrom Anatolian_Tigers?oldid=661799934.
- Anatolian_Tigers isPrimaryTopicOf Anatolian_Tigers.