Significance of Global scale
The term "global scale" signifies different meanings across disciplines. In history, it represents wide-ranging perceptions and cultural representations, indicating an expansive worldwide viewpoint, particularly in education. Within health sciences, it denotes a broad perspective encompassing large populations to understand patterns in reproductive health and behavior. It also emphasizes the need for global governance and resource allocation during pandemics. Furthermore, it highlights efforts to reduce health inequities on a worldwide level.
Synonyms: Worldwide, International, Planetary, Universal, Global, Broad scope, Worldwide level, International level, Universal scale, Global reach, Extensive range
The below excerpts are indicatory and do represent direct quotations or translations. It is your responsibility to fact check each reference.
The concept of Global scale in local and regional sources
Global scale, in this context, signifies widespread perceptions and cultural representations within a novel, and an expansive, worldwide viewpoint, particularly in education.
From: Triveni Journal
(1) An expansive viewpoint or action that considers the entire world, especially in the context of education.[1] (2) Indicates the wide-ranging perceptions and cultural representations found throughout the novel.[2]
The concept of Global scale in scientific sources
Global scale, as defined by Regional sources, involves global governance, analyzing the pandemic's aftermath, understanding reproductive health patterns across large populations, and addressing health inequities.
From: Sustainability Journal (MDPI)
(1) Supporting research and development contributes to the creation of innovation, which, in line with the efficient use of natural resources, leads to an increase in the competitiveness of a country on a global scale.[3] (2) The global scale is used to measure overall CQ, providing a comprehensive assessment of an individual's cultural intelligence capabilities and competencies.[4] (3) The global scale is considered when analyzing energy consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and other factors, providing a broader context for understanding China's role and impact on the world's energy and environmental landscape.[5] (4) It denotes that the problems are widespread and affect many countries across the world.[6] (5) Global scales refer to the application of methodologies for determining urban rooftop photovoltaic potential across the entire world, enabling unified urban energy planning.[7]
From: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (MDPI)
(1) The challenge is to continue collecting more valid and reliable data in order to achieve an extrapolation between environmental and respective consequences for the well-being of population’s risk factors to make a comparison on a national and this.[8] (2) Referring to the entire world or having worldwide implications, highlighting the widespread nature of certain trends and challenges.[9] (3) The correlations of each subscale with the global scale are high, suggesting that each subscale contributes significantly to the overall measurement of the construct.[10] (4) The global scale refers to the overall or general effect observed across the entire study area, where built environment variables, except the HHI, showed a significant positive effect on taxis' emissions.[11] (5) The contribution of outdoor air pollution sources to premature mortality was examined on a global scale, emphasizing the widespread impact of air pollution.[12]
From: Journal of Public Health in Africa
(1) It is a consideration when examining the proportion of patients impacted by infections acquired in a hospital setting, although few published statistics are available.[13] (2) This is where the Virchow Prize for Global Health has the potential to address and reduce health inequities, and more.[14] (3) On this, there must be global governance, triage of patients, and allocation of scarce resources, and in addition, the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemic should be analyzed forensically in each country in order to prevent future errors and improve pandemic planning.[15]
From: Asian Journal of Pharmaceutics
(1) Over the past two decades, DM has become significantly more prevalent on this.[16]
From: Religions Journal (MDPI)
(1) Her pictures and posts contain the hashtags #hijab, #muslima, #modest, #modesty, #modestclothing, #Islam, #modestfashion, #modeststreetfashion, #convert, #jilbab, #khimar and many more, and thus attract more and more followers on this.[17] (2) The authors of the model relate reflectiveness to the establishment of a moral compass, involvement in civic behaviors and questioning the current practices leading to social change. This can be a change in the local community as well as on a.[18] (3) This refers to the extent of a conspiracy that 16% of the French population and 44% of the Muslim population believe in.[19] (4) The functions of networks operate on a global scale, facilitating the connection and disconnection of various locations at any given moment, with Castells naming such nodes global hubs.[20] (5) This refers to the broader trends and debates concerning religion, identity, and modernity that affect societies worldwide.[21]