Ottoman Trade Relations in the 19th Century
In: ACADEMIC REVIEW OF HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES Vol.: 1 Issue: 3 Year: 2018, pp. 120-129
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In: ACADEMIC REVIEW OF HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES Vol.: 1 Issue: 3 Year: 2018, pp. 120-129
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In: European review of economic history: EREH, Band 24, Heft 2, S. 314-331
ISSN: 1474-0044
Abstract
Spain's investment boom (1850–1874) has been largely attributed to capital inflows. Sudrià challenged the consensus on the basis of Moro et al. capital balance estimates. Dishoarding of bullion and previous savings would have catered for an increasing investment demand. I argue that the empirical basis for Sudrià's claim is flawed. Moro et al. underestimated the net capital inflow and biased upwards the change in reserves. The current account deficit resulted from an inflow of capital that allowed investment to raise facilitating imports of capital goods and raw materials. Foreign capital contributed significantly to the investment boom.
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies
"International Relations and the 19th Century Concert System" published on by Oxford University Press.
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) has changed worldwide due to the acute financial and economic crises that the world has witnessed in the last decades. The world economy changed rapidly, where many states became hostile towards FDI, particularly in conflict zones. Such an attitude has changed since many countries realized the benefits of FDI and its contribution to their economies. The research uses a qualitative method to provide more substantial evidence for the findings through convergences and rationale of finding. It will also increase the generalization of the results and adds to a better understanding of FDI and encourage researchers to identify the barriers and obstacles in attracting more FDI projects to Oman, such as legislative, bureaucracies, market size, and the investment climates. The outcome of this research reveals the challenges that foreign direct investment in Oman. These are bureaucracy, the investment climate, which is related to the rules and regulation, the market size of Oman, which is considered very small in international scales, and the Omanization project, which aims to replace the expatriate's workforce with nationals. This research paper conducted a SWOT analysis for Oman's investment environment, which showed many strong points as Oman enjoyed many opportunities that the government might take as the opportunities to use those as drivers to enhance the foreign direct investment inflow to Oman. Much of the analysis showed some weak points where the government should tackle it and improve it. This study took Singapore and the United Arab Emirates as secondary case studies, where both states had a successful experience in attracting foreign direct investment due to different policies where the Oman government can learn from such practices. Keywords: Determinants, Motivators, Foreign, Investment, Oman
BASE
In: Itinerario: international journal on the history of European expansion and global interaction, Band 1, Heft 3-4, S. 38-39
ISSN: 2041-2827
In: The journal of social science: (TJSS) : uluslararası bilimsel hakemli sosyal bilimler dergisi, Band 5, Heft 10, S. 333-348
ISSN: 2587-0807
This article aims to examine power relations between China and West in the 19th century, in particular, from the first Opium War (1839-1842) to Self-strengthening Movement (1864-1884) since when Europeans, for the first time, came to China with new technologies, armaments, and ideas, and told them what is good for Chinese, Chinese were bewildered because they did not know how to respond. China had lived under its sense of superiority as mandate of heaven with its neighbours for a long centuries. They had not seen people like westerners before. They were complacent with regards to foreign world, and did not keep up with contemporary world conditions. Thus, when they encountered superior power of westerners throughout the 19th century, they failed to response successfully, and started to lose everything they believed and had for centuries. In Chinese respond to West, two strategies were put forth, which one ise a sort of external balancing, but not via military alliance with another country, but through the concept of most favoured nation clause by inviting other western countries to China in order to use "one barbarian country to another barbarian country". The other strategy China utilized is a kind of internal balancing by menas of self-strengthening movement.
The history of translation in 19th century Spain is characterized above all by the fact that it was a period of transition between the concept of translation effective prevalent in the 18th century – restricted to the country's cultural elites – and the contemporary concept, which developed mainly from the second half of the 19th century onwards and continued into the 20th century. In the 19th century, the bourgeoisie embraced culture to an ever-greater extent, increasing public awareness of translations and, consequently, of translators. Thus, the notion that translations 'improved' the originals in order to adapt them to neoclassical norms gradually lost ground over the course of the century. On the other hand, there are other specific areas of research into the history of translation in Spain in the 19th century, some of which merit greater attention from researchers. These include, inter alia, the relationship between translation and exile, especially in the first decades of the century; the disappearance in practice of editorial censorship in the second half of the century and, consequently, the end of self-censorship; the progressive dignification of the status of the translator, prompted by the intellectual protection of authors' and translators' rights on an international scale; the deliberate use of translation as a vehicle for the transmission of new political, artistic and scientific ideas and, lastly, the decisive increase in literacy rates in the Spanish population, which turned literature into a consumer product. Finally, in the 19th century the Spanish translation industry experienced a gradual decline in the almost monopolistic influence that French culture and French as a source language had exerted upon it ever since the 18th century, from the arrival of the Bourbon dynasty onwards.
BASE
During the past four decades, Oman has transformed into a modern state with remarkable changes in all fields, including public health and the provision of medical services. Little attention has been paid so far to the history of the development of biomedicine in Oman. A history of healing practices, just like clinical patient histories, helps to diagnose problems, plan interventions and predict their future within a dynamic context. This study is the first to explore the beginnings and evolution of biomedicine in Oman during the 19th century, categorising it into three eras: from the casual system offered by occasional visiting biomedical practitioners to the more organised, but limited, British military hospital and, finally, to public missionary medical care toward the end of the 19th century. The study concludes by recommending further focus on medical humanities, including the history of medicine, as a contributing factor to improve and sustain the art and practice of medicine within the existing Omani health care system.
BASE
19th Century Barnsley Murders is a telling account of crimes in the Barnsley area that have remained unpublished for more than a century. The book reveals the dark heart of the town and reflects not only the poverty and squalor in which many people of the time lived, but also the deep-rooted prejudices and double standards of the period. Crimes include poaching in the local area, a serious poisoning of bread and butter pudding at an eating house and the tragic story of a man who was poisoned for a joke. More sinister happenings include a case of body snatching, which brought the whole town of
In: Političeskie issledovanija: Polis ; naučnyj i kul'turno-prosvetitel'skij žurnal = Political studies, Heft 6, S. 158-171
ISSN: 1026-9487, 0321-2017
In: International affairs, Band 76, S. 25-40
ISSN: 0020-5850
World Affairs Online
In: Explorations in economic history: EEH, Band 36, Heft 4, S. 344-359
ISSN: 0014-4983
In: Crowell source readers in American history
In: Translocality, S. 179-204
In: Journal of social history, Band 23, Heft 4, S. 695-714
ISSN: 1527-1897