Printed document, 2pp, 12.25 x 8 inches. Announcing to Peruvians the state of peace reigning throughout the American continent. ; This document is an English translation of the "Gaceta Extraordinaria del Gobierno." Translated by Cecilia Bonnor. The language of the original document is Spanish.
Intro -- Contents -- Foreword -- 1. Crossing Divides: Archaeology as Long-Term History -- 2. Agency and Practice in Apalachee Province -- 3. Long-Term History, Positionality, Contingency, Hybridity: Does Rethinking Indigenous History Reframe the Jamestown Colony? -- 4. When Moral Economies and Capitalism Meet: Creek Factionalism and the Colonial Southeastern Frontier -- 5. Not Just "One Site Against the World": Seneca Iroquois Intercommunity Connections and Autonomy, 1550-1779 -- 6. A Prophet Has Arisen: The Archaeology of Nativism among the Nineteenth-Century Algonquin Peoples of Illinois -- 7. Mountain Shoshone Technological Transitions across the Great Divide -- 8. The Plains Hide Trade: French Impact on Wichita Technology and Society -- 9. "Like Butterflies on a Mounting Board": Pueblo Mobility and Demography before 1825 -- 10. The Diné at the Edge of History: Navajo Ethnogenesis in the Northern Southwest, 1500-1750 -- 11. A Cross-Cultural Study of Colonialism and Indigenous Foodways in Western North America -- 12. Identity Collectives and Religious Colonialism in Coastal Western Alaska -- 13. Crossing, Bridging, and Transgressing Divides in the Study of Native North America -- References Cited -- About the Contributors -- Index.
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Addresses by celebrated Americans, grouped under historical headings. ; v. 1. I. Colonialism. II. Constitutional government. III. The rise of democracy. IV. The rise of nationality.--v. 2. V. The anti-slavery struggle.--v. 3. V. The anti-slavery struggle (continued) VI. Secession.--v. 4. VII. Civil War and Reconstruction. VIII. Free trade and protection. IX. Finance and civil service reform. ; Mode of access: Internet.
During this two year period, race relations have worsened. In Kenya the Mau Mau movement started. It is particularly anti-European and anti-Christian. One major cause for its appearance is the belief among the natives that the soil was alienated for European agricultural colonization. The second factor is represented by the social modifications brought about by the whites. The population has increased very quickly, and one solution to this problem is in the development of the economic resources of Occidental Africa. The problem of race relations is also acute in Bechuanaland because of the marriage of the chief's heir to a white woman. In the United Kingdom itself there are about 10,000 students and 40,000 colored workers and no discrimination. In matters of health tuberculosis is one of the greatest problems of social medicine. Great progress has been made in the case of leprosy, but malaria is still the greatest health hazard. A new organization, the Aplied Nutrition Unit, has been established. It is concerned with medical and dietetic aspects of nutrition. In several regions a program of housing construction has been started. D. Bystryn.
34 pp. ; 24 cm ; Odb. z: Sprawy Morskie i Kolonialne, 1938, z. 4 ; Summ. fre. ; 34 s. ; 24 cm ; Odb. z: Sprawy Morskie i Kolonialne, 1938, z. 4 ; Streszcz. fr.
Printed document, 3pp. [in text, at end: Guatemala: 15 de Septiembre de 1821]. His recounting of the meeting that led to the Declaration ; This document is an English translation of the "Manifesto del gefe político á los ciudadanos de Guatemala." Translated by Cecilia Bonnor. The language of the original document is Spanish.
Addresses by celebrated Americans, grouped under historical headings. ; Contents.--v. 1. I. Colonialism. II. Constitutional government. III. The rise of democracy. IV. The rise of nationality.--v. 2. V. The anti-slavery struggle.--v. 3. V. The anti-slavery struggle (continued) VI. Secession.--v. 4. VII. Civil war and reconstruction. VIII. Free trade and protection. IX. Finance and civil service reform. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: From Sea to Shining Sea ... and Beyond -- Part I. Acquiring Territory -- 1. Fundamentals: Lessons from Louisiana -- 2. Forms: Trouble with Texas? -- 3. Limits: Conquest and Colonialism -- Part II. Governing Territory -- 4. Constitutional Architecture I:Territorial Legislatures and Executives -- 5. Constitutional Architecture II: Territorial Courts -- 6. War and Peace: Military Occupation and Governance -- 7. Bulwark or Façade? The Rights of Territorial Inhabitants -- Conclusion: Imperial Reflections -- Notes -- Index.
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N°807 ; Numéro du 1911-03-13 ; Le journal Les Débats fournit des conseils en ce qui concerne les coloniaux français et la révolte des tribus au Maroc. ; Bibliothèque municipale de Toulouse
Addresses by celebrated Americans, grouped under historical headings. ; Vol. 1, 1904; v. 2, 1903; v. 3-4, 1901. ; v.1. I. Colonialism. II. Constitutional government. III. The rise of democracy. IV. The rise of nationality.--v.2. V. The anti-slavery struggle.--v.3. V. The anti-slavery struggle (cont.) VI. Secession.--v.4. VII. Civil war and reconstruction. VIII. Free trade and protection. IX. Finance and civil service reform. ; Mode of access: Internet.