R. Jeevitha. BOHR International Journal of Advances in Management Research, 2, page 103-106. BOHR Publishers, (2023)
DOI: 10.54646/bijamr.2023.24
Abstract
The idea of sustainable practices in our economy is becoming more common in academics, business, and the process of making public policy. A circular economy is an unconventional business model that reduces pollution and waste and the lack of resources. This article provides a comprehensive analysis of the policies and procedures that nations such as China, Germany, Japan, Scotland, Denmark, and India have put into place. The information is gathered using Web of Science, Scopus journals, and other gray articles published by the Government of India, which broadens both the understanding of the circular concepts and the understanding that these studies have a specific focus.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 conf/lacci/MasitaHP18
%A Jeevitha, R
%B BOHR International Journal of Advances in Management Research
%D 2023
%I BOHR Publishers
%K circular practices
%N 1
%P 103-106
%R 10.54646/bijamr.2023.24
%T Circular practices in India
%V 2
%X The idea of sustainable practices in our economy is becoming more common in academics, business, and the process of making public policy. A circular economy is an unconventional business model that reduces pollution and waste and the lack of resources. This article provides a comprehensive analysis of the policies and procedures that nations such as China, Germany, Japan, Scotland, Denmark, and India have put into place. The information is gathered using Web of Science, Scopus journals, and other gray articles published by the Government of India, which broadens both the understanding of the circular concepts and the understanding that these studies have a specific focus.
@inproceedings{conf/lacci/MasitaHP18,
abstract = {The idea of sustainable practices in our economy is becoming more common in academics, business, and the process of making public policy. A circular economy is an unconventional business model that reduces pollution and waste and the lack of resources. This article provides a comprehensive analysis of the policies and procedures that nations such as China, Germany, Japan, Scotland, Denmark, and India have put into place. The information is gathered using Web of Science, Scopus journals, and other gray articles published by the Government of India, which broadens both the understanding of the circular concepts and the understanding that these studies have a specific focus.},
added-at = {2024-05-28T08:12:58.000+0200},
author = {Jeevitha, R},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/298a665d9b956a1de99cbe30fa358d319/bijamrjournal},
booktitle = {BOHR International Journal of Advances in Management Research},
doi = {10.54646/bijamr.2023.24},
ee = {https://doi.org/10.1109/LA-CCI.2018.8625210},
interhash = {8437e9102e604713b09b030c907042bd},
intrahash = {98a665d9b956a1de99cbe30fa358d319},
keywords = {circular practices},
number = 1,
pages = {103-106},
publisher = {BOHR Publishers},
timestamp = {2024-05-28T08:12:58.000+0200},
title = {Circular practices in India},
volume = 2,
year = 2023
}