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The Evolution of Real Estate Business: From Land Ownership to Property Investment Markets
This article examines the long historical arc of #real_estate as a field of business, wealth creation, and #urban_development. Beginning with early forms of #land_ownership rooted in feudal and agrarian systems, the study traces how #property progressively became a commodity, an investment vehicle, and ultimately a globally traded financial asset class. Drawing on Bourdieu's theory of capital and social fields, #world_systems_theory, and the concept of #institutional_isomorph


The Rise of Gwadar Port in 2026: An Academic Reflection on Infrastructure, Development Theory, and the Future of Regional Integration
The rise of Gwadar Port in 2026 offers an important case for students and researchers interested in #Infrastructure, #Development_Theory, #Economic_Geography, and #Regional_Integration. Gwadar is not only a port project. It is also a social, institutional, and strategic development process. Located on Pakistan’s Arabian Sea coast and linked to the wider China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, Gwadar has become a useful example for examining how physical infrastructure can influence


Historical Development of Logistics and Supply Chain Management
The historical development of logistics and supply chain management shows how societies organized the movement, storage, and distribution of goods from early trade routes to today’s global production networks. At first, #logistics was mainly connected to survival, agriculture, military organization, and local markets. Over time, it became a central part of #trade, #urban_development, industrial production, international business, and global economic power. This article studie


Historical Development of Real Estate Business: From Land Ownership to Global Property Investment
The historical development of the real estate business shows how #land, housing, buildings, and urban space became central parts of modern economic life. In early societies, land was mainly connected to survival, farming, family continuity, political power, and social status. Over time, however, land and property became market assets that could be bought, sold, rented, financed, insured, inherited, taxed, planned, and traded. This article examines the long movement from tradi
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