A Study of Probated Estates in Washington with reference to the State Tax System
In: University of Washington Publications in the Social Sciences 11,1
11466 results
Sort by:
In: University of Washington Publications in the Social Sciences 11,1
In: Aus Deutschlands großer Zeit 18
In: RSF: the Russell Sage Foundation journal of the social sciences, Volume 6, Issue 2, p. 223
ISSN: 2377-8261
In: Chiricú journal: latina/o literatures, arts, and cultures, Volume 4, Issue 1, p. 56
ISSN: 2472-4521
In: Frontiers: a journal of women studies, Volume 40, Issue 2, p. 243-257
ISSN: 1536-0334
In: Luso-Brazilian review: LBR, Volume 49, Issue 2, p. 281-283
ISSN: 1548-9957
In: KAS-Auslandsinformationen, Volume 14, Issue 12, p. 15-21
ISSN: 0177-7521
World Affairs Online
In: The journal of development studies: JDS, Volume 23, Issue Jul 87
ISSN: 0022-0388
Focuses on the most recent large-scale initiative, the Grande Carajas Programme, maintaining that it is likely to exacerbate violent rural conflict, land concentration, landlessness, environmental degradation and a growing food deficit. Considers agrarian reform plans and concludes that improvements in the agrarian situation can be expected with changes in the policy bias against small farmers in Amazonia. (Abstract amended)
In: International review of social history, Volume 26, Issue 2, p. 202-219
ISSN: 1469-512X
The following article attempts to trace the course of working-class living standards in Britain in the comparatively neglected period between 1870 and the First World War. A considerable body of historical opinion sees this period as a time of marked improvement in standards of life, an improvement based essentially on rising real wages. Studies of this period have owed a considerable debt to the pioneering work of A. L. Bowley and G. H. Wood, which produced an invaluable collection of indices for wages and real wages, upon which most general accounts of living standards in the later nineteenth century have drawn. Wood's contention that real wages, in the years roughly between 1874 and 1900, rose by 36 per cent lies at the heart of an interpretation which sees the late-Victorian period as a time of crucial economic and social amelioration. The data are sufficiently comprehensive to show these improvements to be common to all occupations and to lead to the inescapable conclusion that "industrialization paid off generally in higher real wages for all groups in society in the second half of the nineteenth century".
In: Presidential studies quarterly, Volume 21, Issue 1, p. 127
ISSN: 0360-4918