Academic literature on the topic 'Western and Northern Territories (Poland)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Western and Northern Territories (Poland)"

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Szewczyk, Monika Iwona. "What people remember, but history does not see. Resettlement of Carpathian Roma during Operation Vistula." Wrocławski Rocznik Historii Mówionej 13 (November 3, 2023): 86–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.26774/wrhm.373.

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This article pertains to the resettlement of the Carpathian Roma during Operation Vistula and their successive relocation to the Western and Northern Territories of post war Poland. The story of their displacement is absent from narratives regarding the sub-deportation social landscape in post-1947 Poland, just as there is very little information about their subsequent resettlement in the present-day Podkarpackie Voivodeship.
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Łysoń, Piotr, Stanisław Radkowski, and Wacława Kraśniewska. "Perception and preservation of national heritage in historically conditioned regions." Wiadomości Statystyczne. The Polish Statistician 63, no. 11 (November 28, 2018): 56–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0014.0724.

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The aim of the article is to present an author’s proposal to distinguish regions based on the analysis of historical borders (from the last 400 years, mainly the borders crossing Poland in the 19th and the 20th century) and to verify the hypothesis that those historical borders diversify our country in the sphere of perception and preservation of national heritage and in relation to the analysed social indicators. The study contains statistical data on the perception and preservation of national heritage generalised for the elaborated historically conditioned regions from the cyclic, multidimensional Social Cohesion Survey conducted by Statistics Poland in 2015. In addition, data on monuments of the National Heritage Board of Poland and population data based on National Official Register of the Territorial Division of the Country (TERYT) were also taken into account. The largest differences in relation to the country’s average values of the analysed indicators occurred in the western and northern territories of Poland, the Śląskie voivodship area in Poland before the World War II, as well as Galicia and the eastern part of Russian partition within the present borders of Poland — east of the Vistula, Narew and Pisa rivers.
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Szczepańska, Marta. "Asymilacja nazewnicza i oswajanie przestrzeni tzw. Ziem Odzyskanych w realiach powojennych na przykładzie rynków staromiejskich." Prace i Studia Geograficzne 68, no. 4 (2023): 59–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.48128/pisg/2023-68.4-04.

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This article concerns postwar changes of hodonyms and agoronyms in the area of old town markets of selected cities, in the context of adaptation processes of the allochthonous population. The analysis includes four voivodship cities in the area of the northern and western territories, known as the Recovered Territories (after the administrative division of Poland on June 28, 1946): Gdańsk, Olsztyn, Szczecin and Wrocław. The results of the comparative research are presented in descriptive, cartographic and tabular form. Based on them, it was concluded that the naming changes of the old town market squares were the result of naming assimilation (identified as a top-down process) and domestication of space (identified as a bottom-up process). Both processes contributed to an entirely new chapter in the history of cities in these lands, creating a semantic storyline construct that is unique in Poland and the world.
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Rak, Maciej. "Dialektologia wobec zmian językowych na polskiej wsi. Jak mogłoby wyglądać nowe spojrzenie?" ANNALES UNIVERSITATIS PAEDAGOGICAE CRACOVIENSIS. STUDIA LINGUISTICA, no. 16 (December 29, 2021): 173–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.24917/20831765.16.15.

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The article concerns the linguistic situation in the Polish village and the need for a new approach in dialectological research. In the 21st century, Polish dialectology becomes a de facto subdiscipline of sociolinguistics. The disintegration of the dialects means that there is a need for new descriptive research in the area that was part of Poland before 1945. In the western and northern territories (until 1945 belonged to Germany), it seems justified to conduct sociolinguistic research taking into account the communicative communities.
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Drozd, Roman. "Fighting for Own Rights. The Lemkos in Rzeszów Voivodeship in the Years 1968–1972." Res Historica 56 (December 21, 2023): 1027–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/rh.2023.56.1027-1044.

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As a result of Operation „Vistula”, the Ukrainian population, including Lemkos, was dispersed in the Western and Northern Territories of Poland. The authorities assumed that they would have submitted to the rapid national assimilation there. However, the deported population aimed to return to their homeland and preserve their national identity. To this end, the representatives turned to the authorities with particular demands. Lemko activists in the Rzeszów Voivodeship were very active in this field. Taking advantage of the political crisis in Poland caused by the events of March 1968, they asserted constitutional rights and compensation for the harm done to the forcibly relocated population. These efforts resulted in failure because the authorities did not intend to change the current national policy of assimilation.
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Kolomyichuk, Oleksandr. "“I Had No Childhood”: A Trauma History of Deported Ukrainians from Western Boykivshchyna." Journal of Ethnology and Folkloristics 17, no. 2 (December 1, 2023): 25–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/jef-2023-0016.

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Abstract The article is devoted to the trauma history of Ukrainians from Western Boykivshchyna, part of the Boykivshchyna ethnographical region situated in modern Ukraine. Operation Vistula (1947–1950) was the forced resettlement of more than 150,000 Ukrainians and mixed Polish-Ukrainian families from the territory of Rzeszów, Lublin and Kraków provinces (Voivodeships) to the western and northern territories of Poland, leading to radical changes within this regional group. The article deals with the difficult experience of the resettlers not only in the context of psychological, but also cultural, trauma. According to the theory of Polish sociologist Piotr Sztompka, three main phases of cultural trauma induced by resettlement have been highlighted and are outlined as strategies to cope with trauma: contemporary resettlers’ preservation of native culture, religion and family tradition, and sharing memories of the past.
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Strauchold, Grzegorz. "The circumstances of the liquidation of the Ministry of Recovered Territories." Masuro-⁠Warmian Bulletin 287, no. 1 (April 15, 2015): 111–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.51974/kmw-142680.

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As a result of falsified legislative elections to the Sejm in early 1947. Communist Polish Workers’ Party received almost the full political power in Poland. Legally opposition, placed in the Polish Peasant Party and illegal, anti-communist political and military structures clearly weakened, were unable to influence the situation in the country. During 1947 and 1948 were promoted top-down thesis that had been successfully resolved all issues related to the integration so called Recovered Territories with the rest of the country. Incorporated in 1945 Eastern German territories.It was not true, but such views formed part of the fight against the Stalinist leadership of the PPR with the leader of the Communists‘national’Władysław Gomułka. During 1948,. his political position has been marginalized. As the leader of PPR and head of the Ministry of Recovered Territories had lost the ability to influence the situation in the western and northern regions.At the beginning of 1949. Ministry was closed despite the many unresolved lands new problems.
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Siemaszko, Karol. "Przestępstwa popełnione przez żołnierzy Armii Czerwonej na Środkowym Nadodrzu po zakończeniu II wojny światowej (1945–1946) w świetle repertoriów Prokuratury Sądu Okręgowego w Zielonej Górze." Miscellanea Historico-Iuridica 21, no. 2 (2022): 269–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.15290/mhi.2022.21.02.12.

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The western and northern territories of Poland (former German territory) were a troubled area in the few months after the end of the war. In the first post-war period, there were no stable power structures, including organs of justice and public order. The prevailing state of anarchy in this territory was the reason for an increase in crime. The perpetrators of crimes were not only civilian settlers but also Red Army soldiers stationed in the area. It should be emphasized that they often treated the territories of the western and northern territories as a conquered territory, and not as part of an allied state. The author presents the issue of post-war criminality in the Lubuskie Region (the so-called recovered territory), where the perpetrators were soldiers of the Red Army. This article was developed on the basis of the indexes of Prosecutor’s Office of the Regional Court in Zielona Góra from 1945-1946. The prosecutor’s office of the Regional Court in Zielona Góra, like the Regional Court in Zielona Góra, started its operation in the early autumn of 1945. Initially, the judiciary and public order authorities in the Lubuskie Region were struggling with personnel and organizational problems typical of the post-war period, therefore their effectiveness in prosecuting and preventing crime was relatively low. Moreover, it should be remembered that the Red Army soldiers were not subject to the jurisdiction of Polish courts and the prosecutor’s office. Cases concerning crimes committed by Soviet soldiers, registered by the prosecutor’s office in Zielona Góra, were transferred to the Military Prosecutor’s Office of the Red Army in Poznań.
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Konopska, Beata, and Teresa Bogacz. "Names on maps as an element of the discussion about relativism in the understanding of national identity (based on the example of western and northern Polish territories after 1945 and 1989)." Polish Cartographical Review 49, no. 4 (December 1, 2017): 199–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/pcr-2017-0016.

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Abstract The article tackles the difficult problem of identity creation of new inhabitants of western and northern Poland after 1945 and of relativism in the understanding of national identity after 1989. One of the manifestations are geographical names, which are reflected on maps. The authors of the article looked at this difficult, historically unprecedented process of integration and identification of new inhabitants with the geographical space through the prism of maps, entering into the contemporary discussion about the transformations taking place in the understanding of national identity.
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Biskupska, Kamilla. "A beautiful flourish. The foundation story of Wroclaw (and Wroclaw residents)." tekst i dyskurs - text und diskurs, no. 13 (2020) (December 30, 2020): 43–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.7311/tid.13.2020.03.

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In the article, I present the content and the context of the foundation story of Wroclaw – created after 1945 in one of the largest and most destroyed cities which joined Poland after World War II (Polish Western and Northern Territories). The analyzed empirical material consists of personal documents – statements of Wroclaw residents written and submitted in 1966 for the competition entitled: “What does the city of Wrocław mean to you”. The most important element of this story about the creation of the city is the figure of a pioneer, shaped in the image of a mythical hero. The features of pioneers (such as courage, uncompromising love for the city and openness to others) have become an important narrative co-creating the discourse about the city in the narratives of subsequent generations of Wroclaw residents.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Western and Northern Territories (Poland)"

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Lotz, Christian. "Die Deutung des Verlusts erinnerungspolitische Kontroversen im geteilten Deutschland um Flucht, Vertreibung und die Ostgebiete (1948-1972) /." Köln : Böhlau, 2007. http://books.google.com/books?id=qhxoAAAAMAAJ.

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Books on the topic "Western and Northern Territories (Poland)"

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Aurora College (N.W.T.) and Aurora Research Institute, eds. Northern research agenda survey: Western Northwest Territories perspectives. [Inuvik, N.W.T.?]: Aurora Research Institute, Aurora College, 1996.

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Maria, Romanowska-Zadrożna, and Zadrożny Tadeusz, eds. Straty wojenne, malarstwo obce: Obrazy olejne, pastele, akwarele utracone w latach 1939-1945 w granicach Polski po 1945 bez ziem zachodnich i północnych = Wartime losses, foreign painting : oil paintings, pastels, watercolours, lost between 1939-1945 within the post-1945 borders of Poland excluding the Western and Northern territories. Poznań: Ministerstwo Kultury i Dziedzictwa Narodowego, 2000.

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Census, Canada Statistics Canada 1991. Place name lists. Western Provinces and the Territories. Ottawa: Statistics Canada, 1991.

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Kitson, Albert Ernest. Geological reports on the proposed "Western Province railway" and the "Northern Territories railway". Accra, Ghana: Minerals Commission/GTZ Publication Project, 1991.

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Fragman, Ori. Flowers of the Eastern Mediterranean: Including southern Turkey, Lebanon, western Syria, Cyprus, northern and central Israel, the Palestinian Territories and northern Jordan. Ruggell [Liechtenstein]: A.R.G. Gantner Verlag, 2001.

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Cameron, Kirk. Northern governments in transition: Political and constitutional development in the Yukon, Nunavut and the Western Northwest Territories. Montreal, Quebec: Institute for Research on Public Policy, 1995.

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Commons, Canada Parliament House of. Bill: An act to regulate the grain trade in Manitoba and the North-West Territories. Ottawa: S.E. Dawson, 2002.

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Commons, Canada Parliament House of. Bill: An act to supervise and control th[e] warehousing, inspecting and weig[h]ing of grain in Manitoba and th[e] North-west Territories. Ottawa: S.E. Dawson, 2003.

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Ryszard, Wytrych. Orly na sniegu. Zysk i S-ka, 2009.

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Bogucki, Mateusz, ed. Okruchy starożytności. Użytkowanie monet antycznych w Europie Środkowej, Wschodniej i Północnej w średniowieczu i w okresie nowożytnym. University of Warsaw Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31338/uw.9788323547051.

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Ancient coinage (understood here as pre-AD 6th century Greek, Celtic and Roman issues) constitutes a small percentage of hoards and other assemblages found in Central, Eastern and Northern Europe, dated to the Middle Ages and to the modern period. Ancient coins have also been recorded at other sites in contexts dated to the same time, such as burial or settlement sites. Finds sometimes include pierced coins, which suggests they may have been used as amulets or jewellery. The book contains the texts written by researchers from Poland, Germany, the Czech Republic, Sweden and Denmark. The aim of their studies of the archaeological, numismatic and written sources was to examine the use of ancient coins in the territories of present-day Poland, Baltic States, western Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, eastern Germany and Scandinavia in a period spanning from approximately 7th century to the turn of the 18th century.
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Book chapters on the topic "Western and Northern Territories (Poland)"

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Walerski, Konrad. "From East to West. Modernization in the Western and Northern Territories of Poland (1944–1989)." In Roadblocks to the Socialist Modernization Path and Transition, 33–62. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-37050-2_2.

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AbstractAt the end of World War II (1943–1945), the Soviet Union appropriated the eastern parts of Poland, while part of Germany was incorporated into the remaining Polish territory. This was a revolutionary transformation. The German population of Silesia, Pomerania, and Eastern Prussia was replaced by Poles mainly from the Polish eastern territories. This initiated a process of organizing a new social and economic reality in a socialist way: settlement, reconstruction of towns and villages, industry, administration, education, and encounters of different social groups, regional cultures, and mentalities. Till the end of the 1970s, these regions were seen by Polish sociologists as social laboratory in which the process of “Soviet-inspired modernization” took place at high speed.
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Siewior, Kinga. "Regained Landscapes: The Transfer of Power and Tradition in Polish Discourse of the Regained Territories." In East Central Europe Between the Colonial and the Postcolonial in the Twentieth Century, 183–207. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-17487-2_8.

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AbstractThe chapter discusses colonial strategies underlying landscape representations of the Regained Territories in the literature of the Polish People’s Republic. These regions, incorporated into Poland after 1945, were at the centre of Polish (and socialist) spatial imaginary, functioning as a mythical place of the origin of Polish statehood and a space of utopian fantasies of a new socialist society, established through state-driven settlement. Foreign landscape, in fact marked by German influence, was to be “recovered” or, rather more accurately, “repossessed,” in practice—Polonised/colonised. Hence, I discern here mechanisms of aestheticisation (ideologisation) of the landscape that oscillated around two basic categories: (1) popular topoi of terra nullius and (2) the specific poetics of familiarity, developed by Jan Bułhak (one of the most influential founders of Polish modern photography) in his pre-war works from the Eastern Borderlands (Kresy)—the space of centuries-old Polish expansion. In the analytical part of the chapter, I focus on how the Eastern Borderlands landscape migrates into western spaces and new ideological and literary contexts, as well as on how Eastern Borderlands colonial tradition functions here as a template for “domestication” of a new Western Borderland.
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Landini, Irene, and Giuseppe Sciortino. "External Controls: Policing Entries, Enforcing Exits." In IMISCOE Research Series, 21–49. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-26002-5_2.

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AbstractIn this chapter, we provide an empirical critique of the conceptual frame of debates on convergence and divergence among EU states regarding migration policies. The key assumption underlying such debates is that EU states are essentially independent units, with their own admission and control challenges. We suggest, on the contrary, that migration control policies in Western European states should be considered as an interdependent, yet politically segmented, system.We test this view by analysing two migration policy fields widely different in terms of history and development, i.e., visa and return policy. With regard to visa policies, the systematic configuration emerges clearly. We show that, over time, the original Northern model of visa controls has become the widely accepted normative model across all European states today, formalised in the New Common Visa Code. Existing differences between North and South Europe have to be read in light of this generally homogenous background. On the contrary, policy harmonization and cooperation in return policies and practices have always remained low. We do not observe, however, evidence of a North-South cleavage. Interestingly, a process that we could define as “converge” is at play, since all EU states have shown to be largely ineffective in removing unauthorised TCNs from their territories.
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Wihtol de Wenden, Catherine. "Migration and Development." In IMISCOE Research Series, 75–85. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-31716-3_6.

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AbstractThe topic of the relationship between migration and development is one of the most controversial areas in migration research and policy. For a long time, it was considered that development was an alternative to migration, because in European history, emigration flows from Southern European countries came to an end when those countries experienced economic growth and developed more democratic political systems. In Spain, Portugal, Italy, and Greece, migration decreased or disappeared around the time of their entry into the EU. However, the assumption that the same patterns will emerge in countries on the southern rim of the Mediterranean Sea runs into several problems. The first problem relates to the demographic situation. Italy, Spain, Portugal, and Greece have all experienced a rapid demographic decrease and have thus ceased to offer a reserve of labour force for Northern Europe, as they did in the 1970s. The second reason is the gradual convergence of living standards in those Southern European countries compared with those of Northern Europe, which developed around the same time as European freedom of circulation was achieved. Freedom of circulation also created opportunities for circulation without settlement, a trend which similarly increased in Eastern European countries, when citizens of new EU Member States adopted mobility as a way of life between Romania, Poland, and Western European countries. For Eastern Europe after the 1990s, circular migration became possible as a result of the opening of borders thanks to their entry into the EU. Over the last 30 years, all Southern European countries, which were formerly emigration countries, became new immigration countries.
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Doyle, William. "Religion and the Churches." In The Old European Order 1660-1800, 151–73. Oxford University PressOxford, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198203865.003.0008.

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Abstract The lines dividing western Europe into Catholic and Protestant in 1660 had not changed significantly in 1800. France, Spain, Italy, the Habsburg dominions, Poland, and southern Germany were Catholic. Great Britain, the United Provinces, northern Germany, and Scandinavia were Protestant in one form or another. Russia and certain neighbouring territories observed their own variant on Greek Orthodoxy. In 1660, however, France harboured an important Protestant minority, Poland an Orthodox one, Protestant Holland was in fact half Catholic, and in Ireland Protestant England ruled an overwhelmingly Catholic population. Such dissident communities were profoundly mistrusted by governments, associated as they were with civil wars and attempts for over a century to change the established order. Only in the United Provinces, where a Protestant government ruled a fairly evenly divided population, was toleration implemented with any goodwill and even there formal Jaws forbade Roman practices.
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Drozd, Roman. "Próby reaktywowania działalności Kościoła greckokatolickiego w Polsce w latach 1947-1958." In Fontes historiae examinare: Studia ofiarowane Profesorowi Rościsławowi Żerelikowi w sześćdziesięciopięciolecie urodzin, 343–57. Ksiegarnia Akademicka Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/9788381386524.19.

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ATTEMPTS TO REACTIVATE THE ACTIVITY OF THE GREEK CATHOLIC CHURCH IN POLAND IN 1947-58 The article presents attempts to reactivate the activity of the Greek Catholic Church in Poland in 1947-58. The process of liquidating the structures of the Greek Catholic Church in 1947 and the special powers that Cardinal August Hlond received in this respect are presented. The author shows the fate of Greek Catholics during the period of displacement within the ‘Vistula Operation’ and the attitude of the Roman Catholic hierarchy to their relocation. An attempt to include Greek Catholics in the Orthodox Church in the early 1950s is also described, as well as the new possibilities of changing the situation of the clergy and Greek Catholic faithful after 1956. Ultimately, the Roman Catholic hierarchy agreed to hold Greek Catholic services in the western and northern territories of Poland within the Roman Catholic Church, but no consent was given to creating its structures. The reconstruction of the structures of this Church took place only in 1990.
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"8 A Quasi-Reformation: The Catholic Church in the Western Territories, 1945–1956." In Individualism and the Rise of Democracy in Poland, 265–311. Boydell and Brewer, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781800108578-010.

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Yekelchyk, Serhy. "Western Ukrainian Lands between the Wars: The Birth of Radical Nationalism." In Ukraine Birth of a Modern Nation, 121–34. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195305463.003.0008.

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Abstract Following the end of World War I, the victorious Allies organized a series of conferences in Paris to redraw the map of Europe. Although they outwardly embraced the idea of national self-determination that had been promoted by U.S. president Woodrow Wilson, not all the peoples of Europe were awarded their own nation-states. As they dismantled the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Allies divided the empire's ethnic Ukrainian lands among two new states (Poland and Czechoslovakia) and an expanded Romania. Poland and Romania also managed to acquire some Ukrainian territories that had belonged to another defunct empire, tsarist Russia. As a result, western Ukraine, which is best defined in the interwar period as the Ukrainian-inhabited territories outside the Soviet Union,1 was now larger than it had been under the Habsburgs. More than 7 million strong by the early 1930s, western Ukrainians constituted one of the largest stateless minorities in interwar Europe.
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Stefansson, Vilhjalmur. "The Barren Grounds Grizzly Bear." In A Republic Of Rivers, 143–48. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195061024.003.0024.

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Abstract Vilhjalmur Stefansson (1879-1962) and Rudolph M. Anderson led one of the earliest expeditions into the high Arctic, studying the anthropology and biology of the northern Mackenzie and southern Franklin districts of the Canadian Northwest Territories from 1908 through 1912. Stefansson and Ander son returned and explored the western Canadian Arctic, including Herschel Island, from 1913 through 1918. Stefansson also actively explored the northern and western coasts of Alaska.
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Pearce, Scott. "The World Shegui Entered." In Northern Wei (386-534), 114—C8N80. Oxford University PressNew York, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197600399.003.0008.

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Abstract In Chapter 8 we step back in time to look at the world that the first emperor of Northern Wei, Daowu, entered in the year 396: the heavily populated and richly productive Yellow River plains. In earlier times these had been core territories of the Han empire (206 bce–220 ce) and its short-lived successor, Western Jin (266–316). When Daowu arrived there almost a century later, he found the wreckage of an empire destroyed by the “disorders of the Eight Princes,” the inter-familial power struggle that destroyed Western Jin. Though led by Chinese princes, the armies engaged in those internecine conflicts had been increasingly made up of soldiery of Tibetan or Inner Asian origin. In the end, the soldiers would themselves become princes, of new kinds of states conventionally called in the Chinese historiographical tradition the “Sixteen Kingdoms.” Shegui’s was one of the last of these to emerge, and in the end the most successful. Emerging from Western Jin collapse within the Chinese world itself was the “eminent lineage,” or “great family,” local leaders who were the sole repository of order in a traumatized world. Among other things done by such people was the building of a vast array of small fortresses (wu bi), to attempt to protect themselves from bandits, or each other, or alien armies (such as that of Shegui).
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Conference papers on the topic "Western and Northern Territories (Poland)"

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Kolomiiciuk, Oleksandr. "A break of tradition: the case of deported ukrainians from Western Boykivshchyna in 1947." In Ethnology Symposium "Ethnic traditions and processes", Edition II. Institute of Cultural Heritage, Republic of Moldova, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.52603/9789975333788.29.

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In this article, based on the materials of the author’s search ethnographic expeditions аnd published works, by the example of ritual culture the result of breaking tradition of Ukrainians from Western Boykivshchyna, who were displaced within the framework of ’Operation Vistula’ have been analysed. It was the forced resettlement of approximately 150,000 Ukrainians and mixed Polish-Ukrainian families from the territory of Rzeszów, Lublin and Krakow provinces (Voivodeships) to the western and northern territories of Poland (1947–1950). After the deportation of the Ukrainians, the processes of accelerated breaking of both their the way of life and the unique world of traditional culture with its archaic customs and rites have begun. This was actively facilitated by local government policies aimed at inciting inter-ethnic tensions, creating difficult relations with representatives of various regional groups of the Polish ethnic community, as well as censure and ridicule of the traditional elements of the folk culture of re-settlers by their neighbors. Nevertheless, with the help of tradition (in ritual form or in form of their memories), re-settlers from Western Boykivshchyna continue to keep memory of their own (non) traumatic past, and, based on it, construct their own identity in the perspective of modernity.
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Герцен, Андрей. "Средневековые фортификации Северо-Западного Причерноморья в атласе Рицци-Дзаннони." In Cercetarea și valorificarea patrimoniului arheologic medieval. "Ion Creanga" State Pedagogical University, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37710/idn-c12-2022-89-101.

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Unique maps of the atlas of Poland compiled by G.A.B. Rizzi-Zannoni in the middle of the 18th century and published in early 1772 are important scientific sources. The atlas contains detailed information on the historical geography of the Northern and North-Western Black Sea region. Of particular importance is the unique map of Moldavia and the territories adjacent to it (the 23rd, as well as the 22nd and 24th sheets of the atlas), compiled based on earlier sources – the rich cartographic materials of the predecessors (G.L. Beauplan, D.K. Cantemir and others), and first of all, the works of the cartographers of the Ottoman Empire, which flourished in the 15th – 17th centuries, have not yet been identified or studied. The work of Rizzi-Zannoni is a reproduction of the oldest (found at the moment) topographic map of the North-Western Black Sea region, reflecting the geographical picture no later than the first half of the 16th – second half of the 17th centuries. Current and further study of the fortifications (castles, fortresses and other fortifications) marked on the maps of Rizzi-Zannoni and representing the most important complexes and objects of historical and cultural heritage are impossible without the involvement of the author’s unique information. Descriptions and reconstructions of fortifications that ignore topography and other details reported by this unique source are a priori incomplete or may even be erroneous. The historic-geographical information recorded on the Rizzi-Zannoni maps is of enormous multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary significance. Its consideration is important for modern and future studies of geography, history, archaeology, architecture, culture, art, ethnography, linguistics, the toponymy of the region as a whole and each heritage site.
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Бидношия, Юрий. "Graphic presentation of dialect-ethnographic texts of Western Polissia." In Patrimoniul cultural: cercetare, valorificare, promovare. Institute of Cultural Heritage, Republic of Moldova, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.52603/9789975351379.25.

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Western Polessia is a region divided after World War II by the state borders between Ukraine, Belarus and Poland. This was reflected not only in the languages of education, the general cultural background, but also, in particular, on the principles of presentation of dialectethnographic texts. When compiling and editing the volume “Ethnographic Image of Ukrainians Abroad. Corpus of expeditionary folklore and ethnographic materials” (part 1, 2019), we encountered different graphic design of dialectal and ethnographic texts of Western Polissia in publications from different countries. The volume contains texts from the territory of Brest region (Belarus) and Northern Podlasie (Poland), recorded by the staff of the Rylsky Institute of Art Studies, Folklore and Ethnology, as well as kindly provided by other researchers’ published and unpublished materials, collected since the early 1970s. As this volume is adjacent to the 10-volume collection of field materials “Ethnographic Image of Ukraine”, it became necessary to unify the graphic presentation of Western Polissia texts from different regions and different scientific schools. The developed algorithms for metagraphing of texts from the phonetic transcription of AUM and the special system of F. Klimchuk made it possible to present them in a unified and accessible way for non-philological readers. This emphasizes the unity of the Western Polissian dialect and the cultural continuum.
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Renner, Dalton John, and Jed Day. "UPPER DEVONIAN (LATE FRASNIAN) BRACHIOPOD FAUNA OF THE TWIN FALLS FORMATION (GRUMBLER GROUP), NORTHERN TERRITORIES, WESTERN CANADA." In 54th Annual GSA North-Central Section Meeting - 2020. Geological Society of America, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2020nc-348328.

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5

Krasnoyarova, Natalya A., Darya I. Chuykina, Olga V. Serebrennikova, and Natalya V. Dorofeyeva. "Study of the properties and features of the composition of the oils of the northern territories of Western Siberia." In PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCED MATERIALS WITH HIERARCHICAL STRUCTURE FOR NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND RELIABLE STRUCTURES 2019. AIP Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5132047.

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Трейстер, М. Ю. "Blechkanne. Copper Hammered Pitchers of the First Centuries AD from the North Pontic Area and Sarmatia." In Древности Боспора. Crossref, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.25681/iaras.2018.978-5-94375-250-6.216-238.

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The article is devoted to the finds of jugs hammered out of sheet of the Straldzha type in the North Pontic region, which were first investigated by B.A. Raev in the 1970s and 1980s, who assumed that they were made in the workshops of Thrace. An analysis of the chronology of the vessels shows that in Sarmatia, with rare exception, predominate finds in the funeral contexts of the late 1st and the first half of the 2nd century AD., while in the Bosporus and partly in the South-Western Crimea, the finds of such pitchers predominate in the complexes and layers of the mid-3rd – early 4th century AD. Taking into account the finds of recent decades in the territory of the Western and North-Western Pontic area, in the Crimea, as well as in the burials of the nomads of Asian Sarmatia and the mapping of finds, it becomes evident that the center of the conglomeration of finds in the Northern Black Sea Coast is located in the Bosporan Kingdom with the “splashes” on adjacent territories: to the west – to the region of the South-Western Crimea and to the north-east – to the nomads of the Lower Don region. The doubts expressed by J. Kunow and D.B. Shelov over 30 years ago that pitchers of the Straldzha type were manufactured only in Thrace and Shelov’s assumption, that they may have been produced in the northern Black Sea area, become especially relevant now. To consider, as before, that all these pitchers, which were simple, easy in production and used most probably to boil water, found in the Northern Black Sea area (where the number of finds exceeds the Thracian ones by a factor of two) were made in Thrace, becomes more and more complicated and, in my opinion, contradicts logic. I am not going to postulate that the finds from Thrace were made in the Bosporan Kingdom, they could have been made in the local workshops or in Pannonia.
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Mathewson, Andrew. "“Show-Stopper” — Effectively Managing Project Social Risks: Improved Approaches to Aboriginal Engagement and Consultation." In 2012 9th International Pipeline Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ipc2012-90145.

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A number of proposed pipelines in western and northern Canada have highlighted critical path social risks associated with effectively engaging and consulting with impacted Aboriginal rightsholders along pipeline rights-of-way. Opening up new markets for Canada’s oil sands, shale and off-shore gas resources will require an expansion of the pipeline system in northern British Columbia, Alberta and the Northwest Territories. While navigating the regulatory approval process can be a formidable hurdle, a far greater challenge is how proponents manage the process of building relationships and consulting with affected Aboriginal communities. Failing to earn Aboriginal support for proposed projects can be a “show-stopper”. Exploration of new basins in Canada, driven by increased demand for energy in Asia, may compete with other land uses and constitutionally-protected rights and practices of indigenous peoples. Public, media and environmental response to new pipelines is often lead by the reaction of impacted communities. The task of identifying the social risks to a project, understanding the engagement process, fulfilling the regulatory consultation requirements of different jurisdictions, balancing impacts with benefits, managing issues and resolving disputes, communicating with the public and media effectively all require improved skills and approaches. The paper surveys the stakeholder engagement experience and differences in approaches for recently proposed major arctic gas and western oil pipeline projects, as well as pipelines to service Liquefied Natural Gas export facilities on the Pacific north coast, providing practical insights with possibly international application. Utilizing decision and risk analysis and scenario planning methodologies, applied to development of an Aboriginal engagement and consultation strategy, the paper examines how multi-billion dollar investments in new pipelines can be better secured by integrating stakeholder engagement into a project’s risk management design. With greater precision and improved approaches proponents can effectively manage social risks, reduce stakeholder conflict and associate project uncertainties.
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Reports on the topic "Western and Northern Territories (Poland)"

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Van Breemen, O., H. H. Bostock, and W. D. Loveridge. Geochronology of Granites Along the Margin of the northern Taltson Magmatic Zone and western Rae Province, Northwest Territories. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/132907.

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Aspler, L. B., J. R. Chiarenzelli, B. L. Cousens, and D. Valentino. Precambrian geology, northern Angikuni Lake, and a transect across the Snowbird tectonic zone, western Angikuni Lake, Northwest Territories (Nunavut). Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/210176.

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Gouwy, S. A. Devonian conodont biostratigraphy of the Mackenzie Mountains, western part of the Northwest Territories. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/326098.

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In this paper, a review of the current understanding of Devonian conodont biostratigraphy in the Mackenzie Mountains in the Northwest Territories is presented. The Devonian stratigraphy of the northern and southern Mackenzie Mountains is presented on two chronostratigraphic charts, from the first deposits on top of the sub-Devonian unconformity to the lower part of the Imperial and Fort Simpson formations. Schematic maps give an overview of the regional distribution of the formations in the Mackenzie Mountains. This update revealed that several of the assemblage and formation contacts are younger than presumed in an earlier time-stratigraphic chart; several formations and members are now better constrained in the updated charts. The update also pointed out intervals in the charts for which no data were available and for which more research is needed to constrain formations in the Devonian conodont biozonation.
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