Books on the topic 'Local negotiations'

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1

Haywood, Peter. Preparing for local negotiations. London: Human Resources Directorate, Manpower & Pay Policy Unit, North West Thames Regional Health Authority, 1991.

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2

Adrian, John M. Local Negotiations of English Nationhood, 1570–1680. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230307216.

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F, White Orion, and Wilkinson Michaux H, eds. Intergovernmental mediation: Negotiations in local government disputes. Boulder: Westview Press, 1986.

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4

San Francisco (Calif.). Municipal Transportation Agency. and Transport Workers Union of America. Local 200., eds. Negotiations overview 2007: Transport Workers' Union, Local 200. [San Francisco, Calif: Municipal Transportation Agency, 2007.

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5

Sheldon, Helen. Local authority/developer negotiations: A case study of local authority development control. Bristol: Bristol Polytechnic, Department of Town and Country Planning, 1991.

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6

Sheldon, Helen. Local authority/developer negotiations: A case study of local authority development control. Bristol: Bristol Polytechnic, Department of Town and Country Planning, 1991.

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7

Sheldon, Helen. Local authority/developer negotiations: A case study of local authority development control. Bristol: Bristol Polytechnic, Department of Town and Country Planning, 1991.

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8

McGrattan, Colm. Break-up of Local Government Staff Negotiations Board: Strategic re-positioning by management sides. Dublin: University College Dublin, 1996.

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9

Raymond, Saner, Jáuregui Sergio, Yiu Lichia, and Centre for Socio-Eco-Nomic Development, eds. Negociaciones en cambio climático y ambiente : dinámica global y local : reflexiones desde Bolivia =: Climate change and environmental negotiations : global and local dynamics : reflections from Bolivia. Bolivia: Centre for Socio-Eco-Nomic Development, 2001.

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10

Raymond, Saner, Jáuregui Sergio, Yiu Lichia, and Centre for Socio-Eco-Nomic Development, eds. Negociaciones en cambio climático y ambiente : dinámica global y local : reflexiones desde Bolivia =: Climate change and environmental negotiations : global and local dynamics : reflections from Bolivia. Bolivia: Centre for Socio-Eco-Nomic Development, 2001.

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11

Citizens Budget Commission (New York, N.Y.). The citizens' stakes in collective bargaining: Recommendations for the current negotiations with the municipal employee unions : a report of. [New York, New York]: The Commission, 2000.

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12

Banerjee, Riya, and Gopa Samanta. Negotiating Terrain in Local Governance. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-60663-3.

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13

1945-, Huelsberg Nancy A., and Lincoln William F. 1940-, eds. Successful negotiating in local government. Washington, D.C: ICMA, 1985.

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14

Welz, Gisela, Eva Maria Blum, Ana Isabel Afonso, and Franziska Sperling. Negotiating environmental conflicts: Local communities, global policies. Frankfurt am Main: Institut für Kulturanthropologie und Europäische Ethnologie, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, 2012.

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15

Alan, Bicker, Sillitoe Paul, and Pottier Johan, eds. Negotiating local knowledge: Power and identity in development. London: Pluto Press, 2003.

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16

Arnold, Denise. Situating the Andean Colonial Experience. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9781641894043.

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Re-situating Andean colonial history from the perspective of the local historians of ayllu Qaqachaka, in highland Bolivia, this book draws on regional oral history combined with local and public written archives. Rejecting the binary models in vogue in colonial and postcolonial studies (indigenous/non-indigenous, Andean/Western, conquered/conquering), it explores the complex intercalation of legal pluralism and local history in the negotiations around Spanish demands, resulting in the so-called "Andean pact." The Qaqachaka's point of reference is the preceding Inka occupation, so in fulfilling Spanish demands they seek cultural continuity with this recent past. Spanish colonial administration, applies its roots in Roman-Germanic and Islamic law to many practices in the newly-conquered territories. Two major cycles of ayllu tales trace local responses to these colonial demands, in the practices for establishing settlements, and the feeding and dressing of the Catholic saints inside the new church, with their forebears in the Inka mummies.
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17

Okamura, Kazuo. Combining local negotiation and global planning in cooperative software development projects. Cambridge, Mass: Center for Coordination Science, Sloan Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of management, 1993.

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18

Charlesworth, Julie. Negotiating new forms of urban governance: The case of Hertfordshire. Leeds: University of Leeds, 1996.

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19

Politics Embedded: Women's Quota and Local Democracy : Negotiating Gender Relations in North India. Zürich: LIT, 2014.

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20

Eguavoen, Irit. Negotiating local governance: Natural resources management at the interface of communities and the state. Berlin: Lit, 2010.

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21

UNISON. Single status: Negotiating single status : the new national agreement for Local Government : the UNISON guide. London: UNISON, 1997.

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22

L, Kraemer Kenneth, ed. Modeling as negotiating: The political dynamics of computer models in the policy process. Norwood, N.J: Ablex Pub. Corp., 1985.

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23

Galla, Amareswar. One community, many cultures: Best practice in partnership and negotiation for ethno-cultural advocacy and local governance. Civic Square, ACT: ACT Multicultural Council Inc., 1999.

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24

Vásquez, Luis Ignacio Areiza. Documentos de paz. Medellín [Colombia: s.n.], 1999.

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25

Loyal but French: The negotiation of identity by French-Canadian descendants in the United States. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 2008.

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26

Thompson, Catherine. Negotiating grants: Issues for local authorities and voluntary groups : a resource pack from NCVO's Community CareProject. London: National Council for Voluntary Organisations, 1987.

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27

Local Negotiations Of English Nationhood 15701680. Palgrave MacMillan, 2011.

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28

Adrian, John M. Local Negotiations of English Nationhood, 1570-1680. Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.

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29

Richman, Roger. Intergovernmental Mediation: Negotiations in Local Government Disputes. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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30

Adrian, John M. Local Negotiations of English Nationhood, 1570-1680. Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.

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31

Adrian, Prof John, and Prof John M. Adrian. Local Negotiations of English Nationhood, 1570-1680. Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.

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32

Intergovernmental Mediation: Negotiations in Local Government Disputes. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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33

Schöneich, Svenja. Living on a Time Bomb: Local Negotiations of Oil Extraction in a Mexican Community. Berghahn Books, Incorporated, 2022.

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34

Richman, Roger. Intergovernmental Mediation: Negotiations in Local Government Disputes (Westview special studies in peace, conflict, and conflict resolution). Westview Pr (Short Disc), 1985.

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35

Bithell, Caroline. The Renaissance of the Corsican Confraternities and Their Musical Negotiations. Edited by Jonathan Dueck and Suzel Ana Reily. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199859993.013.002.

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Caroline Bithell’s essay offers a history of a local religious institution—the Corsican confraternity—which constructs itself as a local alternative to a global religious bureaucracy—the Catholic hierarchy. She traces the musical life of the confraternities between the late 20th and early 21st centuries, and comments on the contemporary role played by the confraternities in both church and society. The distinctive polyphonic song repertoires of the confraternities are central to their identities, negotiated with contemporary church and Corsican institutions. In sum, in Corsica, the confraternities provide an alternate institutional space for (conservative) local musical and expressive traditions to continue, despite the shifts in musical and liturgical practices stemming from Vatican II.
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36

Leblon, Anais. Local Vocabularies of Heritage . les Vocabulaires Locaux du Patrimoine: Translations, Negotiations and Transformations. Traductions, Negociations et Transformations. Lit Verlag, 2018.

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37

Frankel, Susy. Traditional Knowledge, Indigenous Peoples, and Local Communities. Edited by Rochelle Dreyfuss and Justine Pila. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198758457.013.33.

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This chapter situates the claims for protection of traditional knowledge in the international intellectual property (IP) context. Drawing on examples, it discusses the meaning of “traditional knowledge” and how the goals and means of protecting that knowledge do not fit within the framework of IP law. In order to address the overlap with IP and provide protection against misuse of traditional knowledge, a number of international bodies have been involved in negotiations and treaty drafting. The chapter discusses those developments, and concludes that even though international resolution looks unlikely in the short-term, the protection of traditional knowledge will continue to feature in international IP debates until a minimum level of agreement at least reached. In order to attain such agreement, there needs to be relevant national laws and, as a practical matter, sufficient investment in the innovation of traditional knowledge in order to deliver the value of protection to its holders.
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38

Kay, Tamara, and R. L. Evans. Mobilizing Public and Legislative Hostility against NAFTA. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190847432.003.0005.

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This chapter examines how activists used outsider strategies and mobilized public pressure to increase legislative opposition to NAFTA during the substantive treaty negotiations that followed passage of fast-track reauthorization. It focuses on activists’ mobilization of a mass movement of NAFTA opponents during the year and a half of NAFTA’s substantive negotiations beginning in June 1991 until President Bush signed the agreement in December 1992. While the AFL-CIO and some environmentalists concentrated on insider strategies, labor unions and the majority of environmental organizations created a strong anti-NAFTA grassroots coalition and mobilized; they held local protests and rallies, wrote press releases, held forums with community groups and local politicians, and appeared in media outlets in over one hundred cities. The chapter also reveals how activists’ pressure led to the negotiation of additional labor and environmental side agreements.
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39

Bhattacharya, Sanjoy. Global and Local Histories of Medicine: Interpretative Challenges and Future Possibilities. Edited by Mark Jackson. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199546497.013.0008.

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This article attempts to develop a more inclusive set of conceptual frameworks for global histories of health and medicine. It is based on the assessment of a very well known global story: the programme to eradicate smallpox. It is a case study worthy of analysis because its histories have been particularly prone to narrow notions of globality. An effort is made in this article to study a variety of voices and to examine how a diversity of people carried out intricate negotiations with different political and social constituencies and helped to expunge variola. The approach here, which is also recommended as a mode of research, is to go behind the scenes to study views expressed in private, and then assess how the resulting convictions, discussions, and debates impacted on the unfolding of policy.
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40

Negotiating with Planning Authorities (The Estates Gazette Professional Guides). Estates Gazette Ltd, 1990.

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41

Lange, Barbara Rose. Everyday Musical Ethnicity and Roma (Gypsies) in Hungarian Pentecostalism. Edited by Jonathan Dueck and Suzel Ana Reily. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199859993.013.17.

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This chapter explores the musical negotiation of the ethnic inequalities between Roma and Magyar that characterize secular life in Hungary among Pentecostal believers from both groups. The ethos of “spiritual brotherhood” within Hungarian Pentecostalism was the theological ground for these negotiations. During the communist period the believers mostly sang gospel hymns and a Christian variant of popular music that was meaningful to local Roma. Both ethnic communities modified their musical performance styles to participate in common “brotherhood,” though the secular inequalities between the ethnicities meant that these changes were not equally made (or equally easily demanded) by both groups. Christian contemporary music, renewed Western missionization, and new inequalities came with the postcommunist era.
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42

Negotiating Cohesion Inequality and Change. Policy Press, 2013.

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43

Alconini, Sonia, and Alan Covey. Conclusions: Inca Imperial Identities. Edited by Sonia Alconini and Alan Covey. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190219352.013.55.

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This chapter provides commentary on the central themes emerging in the chapters in Part 4, which emphasize the bottom-up reconstruction of imperial negotiations in the Inca Empire. Scholars approach such analysis in different ways, depending on theoretical orientations, archaeological methodologies, and the available evidence from colonial ethnohistory and archaeology. A consistent theme across several diverse local cases is the symbolic management of local landscapes, which served as a source of local identity and power during Inca imperial interventions. Local elites influenced the spread of imperial power on provincial landscapes, and many of them appropriated elements of Inca aesthetics as they produced new hybrid craft goods and architecture. Frontier regions were particularly dynamic spaces for evolving local and imperial identities, and the Incas widely resettled populations to contested landscapes to transform frontiers into provincial spaces.
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44

Tripp, Aili Mari. Women’s Organizations and Peace Initiatives. Edited by Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, Naomi Cahn, Dina Francesca Haynes, and Nahla Valji. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199300983.013.34.

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Women’s peace movements in the post–Cold War era frequently share three common characteristics: a grassroots and local focus due to exclusion from formal peace negotiations; an early and sustained commitment to bridging differences between factions; and the use of international and regional pressures to create success on the local level. This chapter reviews each of these characteristics through case studies. Examples from Sri Lanka, Somalia, and Nepal illustrate the successes and challenges of grassroots or local peace movements led by women. Peace processes in Burundi, led by women activists, exemplify a commitment to unity across ethnic lines. The chapter concludes with examples from Liberia and Sierra Leone, demonstrating the efficacy of international and regional organizations supporting local peace movements.
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45

Guerrieri, Pilar Maria. Negotiating Cultures. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199479580.001.0001.

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This book focuses on the city of Delhi, one of the largest mega-cities in the world, and examines—from a historical perspective—the processes of hybridization between cultures within its local architecture and urban planning from 1912, when the British Town Planning Committee for New Delhi was formed, to 1962, when the first Master plan was implemented. The research originates directly from primary documents and examines how and to what extent the city plans, the neighbourhoods, the types of residential, public buildings and the architectural styles have changed over time. The analysis of architectural elements, the city and its intricacies, is in itself useful to understand how foreign models were adopted, how much resistance was encountered, and how much adaptation there was to local conditions. The book establishes and demonstrates that Delhi has played an active role in the complex process of hybridization in both the pre- and post-Independence periods, developing its own character as opposed to merely accepting what was brought from abroad. Both periods have been characterized by a resilient and continuing compromise between indigenous and foreign elements and thus the post-1947 period cannot be construed as more ‘indigenous’ than that which preceded it. Delhi can be considered to be a comprehensive model or case study of the intermingling and conflict of cultures; its initial transition period, when the actual mega-city was born, gives an important starting point to critically investigate the current phenomenon of globalization.
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46

Lorence, James J. The Moment of Decision. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037559.003.0006.

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This chapter explains how Empire Zinc acted out of fear that a successful strike might enhance the Mexican American unity already encouraged by the policies Jencks had encouraged Local 890 to adopt. The genius of democratic unionism was the empowerment of local union members and their community, which encouraged an immediate and vigorous response to the company's refusal to negotiate. Once the strike began, local committees were created with responsibility for various functions, including relief, negotiations, publicity, police relations, and fund-raising. As the community mobilized, it became clear that the great union advantage was to be its human resources, organizational capacities, and wide-ranging ability to employ external support in both the union family and the Mexican American community.
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47

Verhoeven, Wil. The Global British Novel. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199574803.003.0031.

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This chapter focuses on the global British novel. While the novel as such has its roots in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century romance, the British novel owes its emergence and subsequent rise to global supremacy during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries to the expansion and ascendancy of the British Empire. The history of the globalization of the British novel in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries is therefore by necessity a history of negotiations and compromises between the foreign British form at the core of the literary system and the various local realities in the peripheral zones. Consequently, the chapter's discussion of the British novel's transmission to America, the West Indies, India, and Europe will focus on variations in the dynamic interaction between the core's formal influence and local resistance; between hegemonic ideology and local mentalités; and between global markets and local material practices.
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48

Martin, Lou. Prosperous, Independent Rural-Industrial Workers. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039454.003.0005.

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This chapter explores the variety of methods used by semiskilled operatives and unskilled laborers to improve their working conditions and to extract better wages and benefits from their employers during the 1940s and 1950s. Unlike millions of urban-industrial workers, they did not join truly national labor organizations and participate in national strikes. Instead, they relied on a system of local negotiations, often informal, occasionally invoking state and federal agencies to influence the outcome. Because this system delivered many of the same material benefits that American Federation of Labor (AFL) and Congress of Industrial Organization (CIO) unionists won in these decades, local steel and pottery workers saw no need to make fundamental changes to their systems of collective bargaining, and they come to value the local nature of labor relations.
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49

Negotiating Cohesion Inequality And Change Uncomfortable Positions In Local Government. Policy Press, 2015.

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50

Besnier, Niko. Negotiating Local Subjectivities on the Edge of the Global. Amsterdam University Press, 2007.

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