Invisible Immigrants: The Adaptation of English and Scottish Immigrants to 19th Century America by Charlotte Erickson (University of Miami Press; 531 pp.; $17.50)
In: Worldview, Band 16, Heft 3, S. 60-60
5188615 Ergebnisse
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In: Worldview, Band 16, Heft 3, S. 60-60
In: U.S. news & world report, Band 64, S. 34-37
ISSN: 0041-5537
In: National municipal review, Band 28, S. 416-419
ISSN: 0190-3799
In: Ann Arbor paperbacks
In: Inter-parliamentary bulletin: official publication of the Inter-Parliamentary Bureau, S. 13-33
ISSN: 0020-5079
In: Inter-parliamentary bulletin: official publication of the Inter-Parliamentary Bureau, Band 11, S. 349-368
ISSN: 0020-5079
SSRN
Working paper
In: Socialno-ecologicheskie Technologii: priroda i čelovek: ėkologic̆eskie issledovanija : environment and human: ecological studies, Band 9, Heft 2, S. 201-227
ISSN: 2500-2961
The article presents the analysis of the influence of anthropogenic conditions on the dynamics of life forms of meadow plants using the indices of the average number and stability of life forms based on data from long-term monitoring of Zalidov meadows of Kaluga region. It is shown that regular mowing leads to an increase in rod-root plants and an abundance of economically insignificant species. With regular moderate grazing, the number of long root-growing life forms increases, and the abundance of high-value plant species increases. It has been established that for rational use of Zalidov meadows, haying and pasture regimes should be alternated. The issues of the applicability of the indices used to identify general trends in the development of the meadow community depending on anthropogenic impact are discussed.
1864-65 have subtitle: with reports from the Quartermaster General and Surgeon General. ; Cover title. ; Also includes report for 1865 reprinted by order of the Legislature with material from 1863 and 1864 reports. ; Reports not issued for 1853, 1875/76-1876/77. ; Report year ends Sept. 30.: 1863, 1866-82. ; Mode of access: Internet.
BASE
From surrealism's beginnings around a Parisian séance table, it oscillated between the occult and the political. One of its key methods, automatism, provided access to both the esoteric and the exoteric: it took form in the mid-19th century as a spiritualist technique for communicating with the other side while, simultanously, this other side could address political issues as equal rights, de-colonisation and a utopian future with an authority coming from beyond the individual. By tracing the development of automatism, the article shows how automatism in surrealism became a call for both a re-orientation of life and an institutional re-organisation by becoming a divination tool for a future community looking back to hermeticism to find a way forward. The article argues that not only can surrealism fruitfully be understood in the light of an occult revival in reaction to crises but, additionally, that it marks the return of and a reaction to a kind of magical thinking in the modern – due to waning religious and socio-economic orthodoxies – that echoes eerily into our own big data contemporary of social medias where we tend to substitute equations with associations.
BASE
In: American journal of international law: AJIL, Band 115, Heft 4, S. 579-621
ISSN: 2161-7953
AbstractBased on a comprehensive empirical analysis of maritime disputes during the twentieth century, this Article argues that international courts cast a shadow that markedly changes bargaining by potential litigating states. In particular, the filing of optional declarations under Article 287 of UNCLOS increases states' use of non-binding methods of dispute settlement, and the Article theorizes that this occurs because the declarations credibly threaten court involvement and provide more information about likely litigation outcomes. The Article's central finding is that states that file Article 287 declarations have fewer maritime claims, more peaceful negotiations, and less need for judicial dispute settlement.
In: THE CASPIAN REGION: Politics, Economics, Culture, Band 66, Heft 1, S. 138-143
The many changes caused by COVID-19 have impacted all areas of our lives. Since the beginning of the pandemic in every country, people have experienced the same fears: getting sick, being left without a livelihood, dying, losing loved ones, etc. In many states, support was provided by both the government and the employer. Our analyze show how the employees themselves assessed the level of relations between them and the company through the connecting thread of corporate culture. We have determined that, in general, in many cases there is an increase in corporate values, information coming from managers is more trustworthy than information from the mass media. Honesty, openness and communication are becoming the new flagships for the development of corporate culture.