Books on the topic 'Provincial counties'

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1

Assembly, Canada Legislature Legislative. Bill: An act to disunite the united counties of Drummond and Arthabaska, for the purposes of representation in the provincial Parliament. Toronto: J. Lovell, 2003.

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2

Wilkinson, Lisa. Researching amphibian numbers in Alberta (RANA): 2005 provincial summary. [Edmonton]: Alberta Sustainable Resource Development, Fish & Wildlife Division, Biodiversity & Species at Risk Section, 2006.

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3

Town planning and architecture in Provincia Arabia: The cities along the Via Traiana Nova in the 1st-3rd centuries C.E. Oxford, England: B.A.R., 1988.

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4

Leslie, Peter M. The Maastricht model: A Canadian perspective on the European Union. Kingston, Ont: Institute of Intergovernmental Relations, Queens University, 1996.

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5

Winkler, Gerhard. Die nachtridentinischen Synoden im Reich: Salzburger Provinzialkonzilien 1569, 1573, 1576. Wien: Böhlau, 1988.

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6

Provincial Society and Empire - the Cumbrian Counties and the East Indies, 1680-1829. Boydell & Brewer, Incorporated, 2018.

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7

Saville-Smith, K. J. Provincial Society and Empire: The Cumbrian Counties and the East Indies, 1680-1829. Boydell & Brewer, Incorporated, 2018.

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8

Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry (Ont.). Municipal Council., ed. Petitions from the county council of the United Counties of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry to the Provincial Legislature. [S.l: s.n., 1985.

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9

Landau, Norma. The Changing Persona of the Justices and their Quarter Sessions. Edited by Lorna Hutson. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199660889.013.31.

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The standard portrait of the justices of the peace of early modern England is that of gentry, landed provincials, conducting their counties’ local government and so personifying ‘self-government at the king’s command.’ This essay disputes that depiction. First, it argues that it was not until relatively late in the early modern era that local gentry determined the persona of the county bench. Second, it argues that it was not until the later seventeenth century that the early modern state sufficiently differentiated its functions so as to create ‘local government.’ In so doing, it created a sphere of government fit for provincial rulers.
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10

Peter, Larmour, Qalo Ropate, Chivot Max, and University of the South Pacific., eds. Decentralisation in the South Pacific: Local, provincial, and state government in twenty countries. [Suva, Fiji]: University of the South Pacific, 1985.

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11

Peter, Larmour, Qalo Ropate, Chivot Max, and University of the South Pacific., eds. Decentralisation in the South Pacific: Local, provincial, and state government in twenty countries. [Suva, Fiji]: University of the South Pacific, 1985.

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12

Mitchell Sommers, Susan. Father Noah. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190687328.003.0007.

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Ebenezer Sibly needed cash to set up his business, and in 1790 he was hired to manage a parliamentary election in Ipswich, in Suffolk. He had no political experience and no connections to Suffolk. However, by this time he was a senior freemason with ties to Thomas Dunckerley, an influential Provincial Grand Master for many English counties. This chapter re-examines and offers a revisionist interpretation of the connections between Sibly and Dunckerley. With Dunckerley’s connivance, Sibly set up a fraudulent lodge. He used ritual, public performance, and promise of financial benefit to swear an ever-growing number of freemen into membership. He then presented his employer, the candidate Sir John Hadley D’Oyly, as the choice of the lodge. D’Oyly was duly elected. Sibly stayed in town long enough to help secure D’Oyly’s interest and then took the lodge money and left town. The following year he was burned in effigy.
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13

Wilkinson, Lisa C. Researching Amphibian Numbers in Alberta (Rana): 2004 Provincial Summary (Alberta Species at Risk Report,). Alberta Sustainable Resource Development, 2004.

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14

Wilkinson, Lisa C. Researching Amphibian Numbers in Alberta (Rana): 2003 Provincial Report (Alberta Species at Risk Report,). Alberta Enivronment, 2004.

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15

Wilkinson, Lisa C. Researching Amphibian Numbers in Alberta (Rana): 2002 Provincial Summary (Alberta Species at Risk Report,). Alberta Sustainable Resource Development, 2003.

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16

Blindenbacher, Raoul. Dialogues on Distribution of Powers and Responsibilities in Federal Countries. McGill-Queen's University Press, 2005.

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17

Greenough, Paul. The uneasy politics of epidemic aid: the CDC’s mission to Cold War East Pakistan, 1958. Manchester University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526110886.003.0002.

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Global smallpox eradication was achieved only after decades of unsuccessful experiments in smallpox-endemic countries. A case in point occurred in 1958 when a severe epidemic imposed heavy mortality on East Pakistan. In response a Bengali regional-nationalist ‘Citizens Provincial Epidemic Control Committee’ pushed aside the provincial health department and launched an eradication campaign based on student volunteers using foreign-donated vaccine. In a period of ten weeks thousands of volunteers vaccinated thirty million Bengalis, albeit relying on shortcuts in sterile technique and neglect of patient record-keeping. The US government, in support of its Cold War ally, Pakistan, provided half of the vaccine supplies. The US also sent a team of Communicable Disease Center epidemiologists to assist public health officials. The team, led by Alexander D. Langmuir, proposed ‘active surveillance’ methods but was constrained by T. Aidan Cockburn, the Chief Public Health Adviser, who favored the Bengalis’ volunteer approach. A struggle developed between politicised volunteerism and epidemiological professionalism, and the CDC experts failed to prevail. The two sides' published reports thus made contradictory recommendations to the global campaign, but subsequent experience has shown that both mass participation and active surveillance are critical ingredients for successful disease control and eradication programmes.
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18

Harding, Simon. County Lines. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781529203073.001.0001.

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Described by the National Crime Agency as a ‘significant threat’, county lines involve gangs recruiting vulnerable youth to sell drugs in provincial areas. This phenomenon has impacted local drug markets, increasing criminal activity and violence. Exploring how county lines evolve, the book reveals extensive criminal exploitation and control in the daily ‘grind’ to sell drugs. Drawing upon extensive interviews and case studies, the book gives voice to users and dealers, providing an in-depth analysis of techniques, relationships and ‘trapping’. The book examines how London-based urban street gangs establish county line drug-supply networks into the Home Counties. It draws upon two principle theoretical perspectives: social field analysis and street capital theory. It then traces the emergence of county lines, noting operational and cultural shifts in drug supply and distribution, and assesses the question of who joins a county lines. The book moves on to examine how the actual processes of county lines drug-supply networks work in reality, looking at the internal dynamics, and it evaluates the complex set of inter-personal relationships between the user community and county line operatives. It then focuses on the families of those involved in county lines, looking at how violence and intimidation often reverberates back into families. The book concludes that in the United Kingdom, the social fields of the urban street gang and of drug distribution markets, are rapidly evolving; it is important to consider how the relational boundaries of these social fields are interacting with the social field of organised crime. With county lines now a critical issue for policing and government, this is an invaluable contribution to literature on gangs, youth violence and drugs. The book begins by describing how the research study was conducted.
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19

King, Richard. Great Changes in Critical Reception. Hong Kong University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888390892.003.0002.

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Zhou Libo’s 1958 Great Changes in a Mountain Village is a “red classic” novel about the Communist Party’s collectivization of agriculture in the mid-1950s, written following a period of immersion in the process in the author’s hometown of Yiyang, in Hunan Province. While Zhou’s personal involvement and familiarity with local peasants provided an air of authenticity to the work, his presentation of “real people and real things” ran counter to the emphasis on heroism and class conflict in Cultural Revolution art theory. The chapter follows the condemnation of Zhou Libo and his novel, particularly as it appeared in 1970 in the Hunan provincial newspaper, the treatment of the author, and his posthumous rehabilitation.
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20

(Editor), Raoul Blindenbacher, and Abigail Ostien (Editor), eds. Dialogues On Distribution Of Powers And Responsibilities In Federal Countries (A Global Dialogue on Federalism Booklet Series: Vol. 2). McGill-Queen's University Press, 2005.

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21

Owen Sound Field Naturalists. Bruce-Grey Plant Committee., ed. Rare and endangered species of Bruce and Grey Counties, Ontario: A guide to provincially rare, vunerable, threatened and endangered species found in Bruce and Grey. Owen Sound, Ont: Bruce-Grey Plant Committee, Owen Sound Field Naturalists, 2001.

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22

HEARTS in the Americas: Guide and Essentials for Implementation. Pan American Health Organization, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37774/9789275125281.

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The World Health Organization (WHO) launched the Global Hearts Initiative and its HEARTS Technical Package in 2016. Its aim is to improve clinical preventive services in primary health care (PHC) using highly effective, scalable, sustainable, and proven interventions. As the WHO Regional Office for the Americas, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) is developing and coordinating the HEARTS in the Americas Initiative with a clear vision: By 2025, HEARTS will be the institutionalized model for cardiovascular disease risk management, including hypertension, diabetes, and dyslipidemia in primary health care in the Americas. The HEARTS in the Americas Initiative is entering its sixth year of implementation, having expanded from the original cohort of 4 countries to 22 current countries implementing the HEARTS model. The accumulation of knowledge, practices, and experiences from the field and from different levels of implementation has been compiled in this new Guide and Essentials for Implementation. This manual complements the WHO HEARTS technical package Implementation Guide. Expanding on specific lessons learned from the systematic implementation of HEARTS in the Americas as it spans various roles and requires coordination across ministry of health (MOH) departments, stakeholders, partner agencies, scientific societies, and academic institutions. Documenting the implementation and scale-up experiences of countries in the Americas is timely to propel forward the institutionalization of the HEARTS model for cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk management, including hypertension, diabetes, and dyslipidemia in PHC in the Americas by 2025. This manual is designed to be practical and user-friendly. It aims to guide implementers at national and subnational levels to navigate throughout different stages of implementation and to ensure longtime sustainability. The manual is written for national focal points, managers and coordinators at subregional, provincial, district, municipal level, and health facilities implementing HEARTS. It is intended to answer frequently asked questions about the premises, objectives, components, and steps for implementation of the HEARTS in the Americas Initiative.
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23

Forquilha, Salvador. Decentralization reforms in Mozambique: The role of institutions in the definition of results. UNU-WIDER, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.35188/unu-wider/2020/889-4.

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With the introduction of the economic reforms in the late 1980s, the opening up of the political arena and the end of the civil war in the early 1990s, the decentralization process began in Mozambique. Different research developed in recent years shows that, as is the case in other countries in sub-Saharan Africa, the impact of the decentralization reforms on the promotion of local development and the strengthening of democracy in Mozambique is modest. How can this modest impact be explained? Based on three important reforms in the decentralization process in Mozambique, namely the ‘7 million’, municipalization and decentralized provincial governance, this article seeks to answer this question by analysing how different aspects of the institutions affect the results of the reforms. The main argument in the article underlines the idea according to which the results of the decentralization reforms in Mozambique are constrained by the nature and by the operation mechanisms of the political system. Of these institutional factors/constraints, state capacity and independence from private interests, particularly political groups, stand out in the three reforms analysed throughout this article. In this context, the reforms develop according to group interests, particularly party political interests, which capture the state and use the reforms as a mechanism for maintaining and bolstering political power. In this sense, rather than being a means of improving the provision of public services and strengthening democracy, decentralization works more as an instrument for reinforcing state control and pandering to the elite. This is probably the biggest challenge decentralization is facing in Mozambique, therefore making it a fundamental issue to be taken into account in any reform in this area, within the context of strengthening democracy and promoting local development.
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