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1

Coalition, Northern Ireland Women's. Common cause: The story of the Northern Ireland Women's Coalition. Belfast: Women's Coalition, 1998.

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2

Ennals, J. R. Work organization and Europe as a development coalition. Philadelphia, Penn: John Benjamin, 1999.

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3

Downs, William M. Coalition government, subnational style: Multiparty politics in Europe's regional parliaments. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1997.

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4

Blanning, T. C. W. The origins of the French revolutionary wars. London: Longman, 1986.

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5

Zajc, Drago. Oblikovanje koalicij v Srednji Evropi: Primer Nemčije Avstrije in Italije ter Češke, Madžarske in Slovenije : poskus analize s poudarkom na obdobju po zadnjem valu demokratizacije. Ljubljana: Fakulteta za družbene vede, 2009.

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6

Jeremy, Brecher, and Costello Tim, eds. Building bridges: The emerging grassroots coalition of labor and community. New York City: Monthly Review Press, 1990.

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7

Institute, International Republican, ed. Political party building programs. Washington, D.C: International Republican Institute, 1999.

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8

Peterson, Abby. Neo-sectarianism and rainbow coalitions: Youth and the drama of immigration in contemporary Sweden. Aldershot, Hants, England: Ashgate, 1997.

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9

Dennen, J. van der. The origin of war: The evolution of a male-coalitional reproductive strategy. Groningen, the Netherlands: Origin Press, 1995.

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10

Estabrook, Thomas. Labor-environmental coalitions: Lessons from a Louisiana petrochemical region. Amityville, NY: Baywood Publishing Company, Inc., 2008.

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11

Crime Prevention Coalition of America. and National Crime Prevention Council (U.S.), eds. Mobilizing the nation to prevent crime, violence, and drug abuse: A report from the Crime Prevention Coalition of America. Washington, DC: National Crime Prevention Council, 2002.

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12

author, Gutman Yechiel, and Yaʻari Yehudah editor, eds. Memshalot Yiśraʼel le-dorotehen: Haḥlaṭot ḥakhmot ṿe-haḥlaṭot meṭupashot. Rishon le-Tsiyon: Miśkal - hotsaʼah la-or mi-yisudan shel Yediʻot aḥaronot ṿe-Sifre Ḥemed, 2017.

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National Center for Immigrant Students (U.S.), ed. Delivering on the promise: Positive practices for immigrant students : a report from the Center for Immigrant Students, National Coalition of Advocates for Students. Boston, Mass: The Coalition, 1994.

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14

Southworth, Ann. Lawyers of the Right: Professionalizing the Conservative Coalition. University of Chicago Press, 2008.

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15

Mills, M. G. L., and M. E. J. Mills. Morphometrics, demographics, and genetic viability. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198712145.003.0002.

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Morphometric data showed that southern Kalahari male cheetahs are larger than females and coalition males are larger than single males. Both tend to be smaller than cheetahs from other regions. The estimated density was 0.7 adult cheetahs/100 km2. Adult males were either single (43.2%) or in two-male (35.8%) or three-male (20.9%) coalitions. Only two out of seven two-male coalitions were full siblings. Litter sizes at birth and emergence were similar to those in the Serengeti, but age at independence and at first litter were older, and litter size at independence larger. Cub sex ratio was equal, but there was a predominance of males amongst adults. Age at death was 6.7 ± 2.1 years, and the oldest known animal died at 12 years of age. The most common cause of adult mortality, especially for males, was injuries inflicted by conspecifics or competitors. Genetic data showed a stable and genetically healthy population.
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16

Chaisty, Paul, Nic Cheeseman, and Timothy J. Power. Coalitional Presidentialism in Comparative Perspective. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198817208.001.0001.

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This book provides the first cross-regional study of an increasingly important form of politics: coalitional presidentialism. Drawing on original research of minority presidents in the democratizing and hybrid regimes of Armenia, Benin, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Kenya, Malawi, Russia, and Ukraine, it seeks to understand how presidents who lack single party legislative majorities build and manage cross-party support in legislative assemblies. It develops a framework for analysing this phenomenon, and blends data from MP surveys, detailed case studies, and wider legislative and political contexts, to analyse systematically the tools that presidents deploy to manage their coalitions. Paul Chaisty, Nic Cheeseman, and Timothy J. Power focus on five key legislative, cabinet, partisan, budget, and informal (exchange of favours) tools that are utilized by minority presidents. They contend that these constitute the ‘toolbox’ for coalition management, and argue that minority presidents will act with imperfect or incomplete information to deploy the tool or tools that provide(s) the highest return of political support with the lowest expenditure of political capital. In developing this analysis, the book assembles a set of concepts, definitions, indicators, analytical frameworks, and propositions that establish the main parameters of coalitional presidentialism. In this way, Coalitional Presidentialism in Comparative Perspective provides crucial insights into this mode of governance.
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17

Moury, Catherine. Coalition Government and Party Mandate: How Coalition Agreements Constrain Ministerial Action. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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18

Moury, Catherine. Coalition Government and Party Mandate: How Coalition Agreements Constrain Ministerial Action. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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19

Coalition government and party mandate: How coalition agreements constrain ministerial action. New York: Routledge, 2012.

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20

Coalition Government and Party Mandate: How Coalition Agreements Constrain Ministerial Action. Routledge, 2013.

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21

Silinsky, Mark. The Taliban. ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798216022312.

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Understand the complexities of the most lethal insurgent group of America's longest war—the Taliban. Battle hardened, tribally oriented, and deeply committed to its cause, the Taliban has proven itself resourceful, adaptable, and often successful. As such, the Taliban presents a counterinsurgency puzzle for which the United States has yet to identify effective military tactics, information operations, and Coalition developmental policies. Written by one of the Department of the Army's leading intelligence and military analysts on the Taliban, this book covers the group's complete history, including its formation, ideology, and political power, as well as the origins of its current conflict with the United States. The work carefully analyzes the agenda, capabilities, and support base of the Taliban; forecasts the group's likely course of action to retake Afghanistan; and details the Coalition forces' probable counterinsurgency responses. Author Mark Silinsky also reviews the successes and failures of the latest U.S. counterinsurgency doctrine to extrapolate the best strategies for future counterinsurgency campaigns.
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22

Moury, Catherine. Coalition Government and Party Mandate. Routledge, 2014.

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23

Bergman, Torbjörn, Hanna Back, and Johan Hellström, eds. Coalition Governance in Western Europe. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198868484.001.0001.

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Coalition government is the most frequent form of government in Western Europe, but there is relatively little systematic knowledge about how this form of government has developed in recent decades. This volume analyses governments that have formed in the Western European countries since the Second World War and covers the full life cycle of coalition governments from the formation of party alliances before elections to coalition formation after elections, governing and policy-making when parties work together in office, and the stages that eventually lead to governments terminating. Since the early 1990s, many coalition governments form in a context of increased fragmentation of party systems, increased polarization, and the rise of populist parties. The volume captures these changes and examines their implications for the different stages of the coalition life cycle. A particular emphasis of the volume is on the study of how coalitions govern together even when they have different agendas. Do individual ministers decide, or the prime minister, or are the policy outputs of a government a result of a process of coalition compromise? Focusing on the coalition governance stage, we analyse the variation in the use of various control mechanisms across countries, for example showing that many coalition governments draft extensive contracts to control their partners in cabinet. The volume covers 16 West European countries and introduces the case of Croatia. Systematic cross-national data is available in an online appendix.
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24

Chaisty, Paul, Nic Cheeseman, and Timothy J. Power. Legislative Powers and Coalition Management. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198817208.003.0005.

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This chapter considers the ways in which presidents deploy legislative powers in coalition management. It covers decree and statute powers, and at least three types of veto powers: package, partial, and amendatory. It discusses the impact of a variety of system-level factors (electoral and party system), coalition-level factors (presidential party size and ideological composition), and conjunctural factors (crisis and time) on the relative cost of the deployment of legislative tools. It examines case studies from Ukraine, Chile, Russia, Benin, and Brazil to highlight different types of legislative tool deployment. It also uses MP survey evidence to assess the relative importance of legislative powers in coalition maintenance, and to discuss the propensity of legislators to delegate their legislative powers to presidents.
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25

Como, David R. Internal Revolutions. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199541911.003.0015.

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This chapter examines the private, manuscript writings of three parliamentarian laymen. It explores the ways in which the ideas and experiences of the 1640s were internalized by devoted supporters of the cause. The diaries of Nehemiah Wallington (a presbyterian) are read alongside the journal of Thomas Juxon and the letters of Cheney Culpeper (supporters of the “independent” political coalition). The chapter demonstrates that Juxon and Culpeper were united by a series of political opinions—skepticism about monarchy and the House of Lords, belief in transnational, divinely sanctioned political change, and acceptance of a degree of religious toleration—which set them apart from Wallington and help to explain the revolutionary trajectory that parliamentarian politics assumed from 1645. Indeed, some of the more radical ideas eventually expressed by political theorists in print were being canvassed in private by ordinary supporters of parliament’s cause before they were projected into the public sphere.
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26

Networks Governance, Partnership Management and Coalitions Federation. Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.

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27

Assens, Christophe, and Aline Courie Lemeur. Networks Governance, Partnership Management and Coalitions Federation. Palgrave Macmillan Limited, 2015.

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28

Assens, Christophe, and Aline Courie Lemeur. Networks Governance, Partnership Management and Coalitions Federation. Palgrave Macmillan, 2016.

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29

Godsey, William D. Resilience in the Contest with France, 1792–1815. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198809395.003.0011.

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The reformed structures of composite monarchy would serve the Habsburg cause well in the struggle with the highly centralized French state. The Estates again managed the routine structures of ordinary taxation and the imposition of much extraordinary taxation; and they interposed their credit on behalf of the government. The War of the Second Coalition (1799–1801) would be another highpoint in the history of their financial mediation. The Estates helped preserve Habsburg authority during Napoleon’s occupation of Vienna and large swathes of the central lands on two occasions. That the government did not wobble in any significant way or the population succumb to the siren calls of the French is also attributable to the Habsburg regime’s firm base in the landowning classes as represented by the Estates.
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30

Chen, Ling. Manipulating Globalization. Stanford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.11126/stanford/9781503604797.001.0001.

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The era of globalization saw China emerge as the world’s manufacturing titan. However, the “made in China” model—with its reliance on cheap labor and thin profits—has begun to wane. Beginning in the 2000s, the Chinese state shifted from attracting foreign investment to promoting technological competitiveness of domestic firms. This shift, however, caused tensions between winners and losers, leading local bureaucrats to compete for resources in government budget, funding, and tax breaks. While bureaucrats successfully built coalitions to motivate businesses to upgrade in some cities, in others, vested interests within the government deprived businesses of developmental resources and left them in a desperate race to the bottom. In Manipulating Globalization, Ling Chen argues that the roots of coalitional variation lie in the type of foreign firms with which local governments forged alliances. Cities that initially attracted large global firms with a significant share of exports were more likely to experience manipulation from vested interests down the road compared to those that attracted smaller foreign firms. The book develops the argument with in-depth interviews and tests it with quantitative data across hundreds of Chinese cities and thousands of firms. Chen advances a new theory of economic policies in authoritarian regimes and informs debates about the nature of Chinese capitalism. Her findings also shed light on state-led development and coalition formation in other emerging economies that comprise the new “globalized” generation.
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31

Mattox, Gale A., and Stephen M. Grenier. Coalition Challenges in Afghanistan: The Politics of Alliance. Stanford University Press, 2015.

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32

Coalition challenges in Afghanistan: The politics of alliance. 2015.

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33

Como, David R. Print House, Petitions, and Provinces. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199541911.003.0010.

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This chapter analyzes the rise of an “independent coalition,” which emerged out of the growing religious controversy afflicting parliament’s cause by early 1644. New religious ideas—including sharpened arguments for religious toleration and more extreme attacks on the validity of existing church forms—began to spread in press and pulpit, resulting in a clampdown on publishing, which in turn further exacerbated tensions. The chapter charts the spread of religious conflict into parliament’s armies and from London to the provinces, examining a series of petitions, maneuvers, and mobilizations that revealed the creeping advance of religious disputes, and the ways those disputes migrated back and forth between London and the countryside. This, in turn, reveals the ligatures of an emerging “independent” political alliance, with nodes across England. More generally, the analysis suggests that conditions of civil war were creating a national political environment conducive to widespread, integrated, partisan politics.
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34

Como, David R. Rumor Wars. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199541911.003.0012.

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Following military failures in late 1644, long-simmering religious differences burst into public, threatening to sunder parliament’s cause. A formidable presbyterian alliance gathered strength, deploying multiple tactics to pressure parliament to settle the church and crack down on the sects; at the same time, a developing independent coalition adopted equally sophisticated techniques of organization and propaganda to counter this push. This chapter analyzes these practices—including petitioning, lobbying, secret printing, street propaganda, rumormongering, and regular meetings—to reveal a novel environment of energetic partisan politics. These organizational developments were accompanied by ideological shifts, in which presbyterians drew back from earlier militant political commitments, while some independents articulated newly radical political ideas, hinting at social egalitarianism, press freedom, democratization of the polity, or limitations on state power. Moreover, these ideological shifts and religious divisions increasingly dovetailed with disputes over military reorganization, culminating in the creation of the New Model Army.
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35

Bradshaw, Jonathan, and Gill Main. Impact of the Recession on Children in the United Kingdom. Edited by Yekaterina Chzhen. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198797968.003.0012.

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Child poverty has been a focus of UK policy since then Prime Minister Tony Blair’s 1999 commitment to eradicate it within a generation. Significant reductions in child poverty were achieved from 2000–10. However, despite the 2010 Child Poverty Act enshrining this commitment into law, two factors threaten progress: the 2008 global financial crisis which shifted policy focus to national debt reduction rather than poverty reduction, and the shift from a Labour government to a Conservative-led coalition in 2010 and a Conservative majority government since 2015. Austerity, positioned as a necessary response to the crisis, has become the dominant economic policy. Public spending cuts have disproportionately impacted children and families. This chapter draws on nationally-representative data from the UK to explore trends in child poverty and deprivation, 2007/8–2013/14. While child poverty rates are yet to increase substantially, the vulnerability of children to future economic shocks is highlighted as a cause for concern.
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36

Santucci, Jack. More Parties or No Parties. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197630655.001.0001.

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Abstract How should we think about electoral reform? What are the prospects for modern-day efforts to reform away the two-party system? This book offers a “shifting coalitions” theory of electoral-system change, puts the Progressive Era in comparative perspective, and warns against repeating history. It casts reform as an effort to get or keep control of government, usually during periods of party realignment. Reform can be used to insulate some coalition, dislodge the one in power, or deal with noncommittal “centrists.” Whether reform lasts depends less on the number of parties than on whether it helps coalitions hold themselves together. This is where the Progressives got it wrong. Unable to win support for “multi-party politics,” they built a reform movement on the idea of “no parties.” They polarized local politics on the issue of “corruption,” won proportional representation in twenty-four cities, then watched (and sometimes joined) its repeal in all but one case. Along the way, they found they needed parties after all, but the rules they had designed were not up to the task. This movement’s legacy still shapes American politics: nonpartisan elections to undersized city councils. Today’s reformers might do well to make peace with parties, and their critics might do well to make peace with having more.
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37

COALITION GOVERNMENT: MULTIPARTY POLITICS IN EUROPE'S REGIONAL (PARLIAMENTS & LEGISLATURES). Ohio State University Press, 1998.

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38

COALITION GOVERNMENT: MULTIPARTY POLITICS IN EUROPE'S REGIONAL (PARLIAMENTS & LEGISLATURES). Ohio State University Press, 1998.

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39

Bynander, Fredrik, and Pär Daléus. Swedish Coalition Governments and the Quest for Re-election. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198783848.003.0010.

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This chapter is a comparison of the leadership capital formation process of two Moderate party prime ministers, Carl Bildt and Fredrik Reinfeldt. Their government formation challenges were similar but their strategies differed and the ultimate outcomes—electoral defeat for Bildt and re-election for Reinfeldt—suggest superior “capital management” in the latter case. The findings, however, show that the ability to maintain support for the entire coalition is core for electoral success, and that this task is paradoxical for a leader of both a government and the senior coalition partner. Also, capitalizing on major events during the term in office is crucial as illustrated by the similar exposure to financial crises by the two governments and the relative success of the Reinfeldt government in exhibiting strength and efficacy under pressure.
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40

Kaarbo, Juliet. Coalition Politics and Cabinet Decision Making: A Comparative Analysis of Foreign Policy Choices. University of Michigan Press, 2013.

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41

Shadlen, Kenneth C. Global Change, Political Coalitions, and National Responses. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199593903.003.0001.

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This chapter introduces the broad changes in the global politics of intellectual property that marked the late 1900s and early 2000s, and a coalitional argument for understanding cross-national and longitudinal diversity in response to the new external environment. The chapter situates the book’s analysis in the context of broader scholarship in comparative and international political economy, highlighting the importance of coalitions for understanding national forms of compliance to global changes. The chapter reviews scholarship on the politics of intellectual property, with an eye toward integrating international and domestic drivers of national policies. The chapter concludes with discussion of the logic of case selection, the method of data collection and comparative analysis, and the organization of the remainder of the book.
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42

Growth, Crisis, Democracy: The Political Economy of Social Coalitions. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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43

(Editor), Jeremy Brecher, and Tim Costello (Editor), eds. Building Bridges: The Emerging Grassroots Coalition of Labor and Community. Monthly Review Press, 1990.

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44

(Editor), Jeremy Brecher, and Tim Costello (Editor), eds. Building Bridges: The Emerging Grassroots Coalition of Labor and Community. Monthly Review Press, 1990.

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45

Power in coalition: Strategies for strong unions and social change. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2010.

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46

Power in coalition: Strategies for strong unions and social change. Australia: Allen & Unwin, 2010.

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47

Looking for America: A report from the National Coalition of Advocates for Students. Boston, MA: NCAS, 1994.

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48

Teichman, Judith A. Politics of Inclusive Development: Policy, State Capacity, and Coalition Building. Palgrave Macmillan, 2016.

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49

Blanning, T. C. W. Origins of the French Revolutionary Wars. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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50

Blanning, T. C. W. The origins of the French revolutionary wars. 2016.

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