Integration
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See: Integrated Production, Social Integration, Racial Integration, Economic Integration, Educational Integration, Regional Integration, Horizontal Integration, Vertical Integration, Integration Clause, Order of Integration, Integration (Mathematics), Antiderivative, Symbolic Integration, Numerical Integration.
References
2017
- (Wikipedia, 2017) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/integration#Sociology_and_economy Retrieved:2017-9-16.
- Social integration, in social sciences, is the movement of refugees and underprivileged sections of a society into the mainstream of societies
- Racial integration, refers to social and cultural behavior
- Desegregation, racial integration in the United States
- Economic integration, refers to trade unification between different states
- Educational integration of students with disabilities
- Regional integration, a process in which states enter into a regional agreement in order to enhance regional cooperation through regional institutions and rules
- Horizontal integration and vertical integration, in microeconomics and strategic management, refer to a style of ownership and control
- Integration clause, in a contract, a term used to declare the contract the final and complete understanding of the parties
- A step in the process of money laundering.
- Integrated production
2017b
- (Wikipedia, 2017) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/integration#Mathematics Retrieved:2017-9-16.
- Integration (mathematics), the computation of a definite integral, a fundamental concept of calculus, which allows, among many other uses, computing areas and averaging continuous functions.
- Indefinite integration, in calculus, the process of calculating indefinite integrals, also known as antiderivatives.
- Symbolic integration, the computation, mostly on computers, of antiderivatives and definite integrals in term of formulas
- Numerical integration, the numerical methods for computing, usually with computers, definite integrals and, more generally, solutions of differential equations
- Order of integration, the number of times a time series must be first differenced in order to make it stationary