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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Revolution-Essays"

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Lesmana, Maman, et Ikhfy Kanzan Ilahiyah. « THE MEANING OF REVOLUTION IN AMIN AR-RAYHANI’S ESSAYS ». Language Literacy : Journal of Linguistics, Literature, and Language Teaching 7, no 1 (28 juin 2023) : 23–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.30743/ll.v7i1.6922.

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This study discusses the meaning of revolution in Amin Ar-Rayhani's essays in the book of Ar-Ar-Rayhaniyyāt (The Ar-Rayhani Essays) entitled Ats-Tsauratu Al-Ifransiyyatu (French Revolution) and Ats-Tsauratu Al-Ḥaqīqiyyatu (The Real Revolution) . The two essays are discussed in this study with a revolutionary theory approach. The purpose of this research is to explain the meaning of revolution in his two essays. The research method used by the researchers is a qualitative research method with a historical approach. The main data are obtained from the above-mentioned essays and then the secondary data are from books, articles, journals, theses, and other scientific works. The theory used in this study comes from the six types of revolution put forward by Chalmers Johnson. Based on the results of the research, the first essay is included in the argumentation essay and the second one in the narrative essay. Both essays are categorized under the type of revolution of conspirational coup de'Etat.
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Churner, Rachel. « October before October ». October 162 (décembre 2017) : 108–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/octo_a_00311.

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Rachel Churner introduces essays by Annette Michelson and Rosalind Krauss on Soviet cinema, reprinted in conjunction with the centennial of the October revolution. Published in the early 1970s, these essays provide a glimpse into how the founders of October thought about the revolution—and, in particular, Sergei Eisenstein's film October, which commemorated the tenth anniversary of the revolution—in the years before they started their publication.
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Blackey, Robert, et Nzongola-Ntalaja. « Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Africa : Essays in Contemporary Politics ». International Journal of African Historical Studies 21, no 4 (1988) : 741. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/219774.

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Robert-Gonçalves, Mickaël, Nicole Brenez et Bani Khoshnoudi. « Cinema and Revolution : Fifty years after the Carnation Revolution ». Aniki : Revista Portuguesa da Imagem em Movimento 11, no 1 (29 janvier 2024) : 81–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.14591/aniki.v11n1.1063.

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This special section of Aniki is designed to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Portuguese revolution of 1974-1975. The five articles included in it reflect the need to bring together international research, particularly on a theme with such a wide geographical scope as this one, highlighting the importance of adopting cross perspectives. The analyses proposed in these essays take a variety of approaches – critical film studies, the history of cinema’s modes of production, the ontology of the documentary, comparative analysis – and move through different filmic forms and revolutionary territories, namely: France, the Philippines, Spain, Romania and Brazil. Together, these essays allow us to update the links between cinema and revolution and extend them to other historical contexts and case studies, thus contributing to the global history of a cinema that has for a long time been confronting revolution and society in creative and inspiring ways.
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Pivovar, E. I. « Overcoming the Revolution ». MGIMO Review of International Relations 13, no 2 (28 avril 2020) : 205–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.24833/2071-8160-2020-2-71-205-210.

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Hernández Busto, Ernesto. « Essays : Revolution, Still Photos : Images and Myths from the Cuban Revolution ». Review : Literature and Arts of the Americas 44, no 1 (mai 2011) : 59–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08905762.2011.564863.

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Skinkichi (Hrsg.), Eto, et Harald Z. Schiffrin (Hrsg.). « The 1911 Revolution in China. Interpretive Essays ». Verfassung in Recht und Übersee 19, no 3 (1986) : 361–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0506-7286-1986-3-361.

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Grange, Joseph. « Process Pragmatism : Essays on a Quiet Revolution ». Process Studies 33, no 2 (1 octobre 2004) : 347–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/44797675.

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Moosvi, Shireen. « Book review : Partha Chatterjee (ed.). After the Revolution : Essays in Memory of Anjan Ghosh ». Studies in People's History 8, no 1 (juin 2021) : 159–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23484489211017035.

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Spickard, James V., et Lonnie D. Kliever. « The Terrible Meek : Essays on Religion and Revolution ». Sociological Analysis 50, no 3 (1989) : 310. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3711574.

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Thèses sur le sujet "Revolution-Essays"

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Skorge, Øyvind Søraas. « The century of the gender revolution : empirical essays ». Thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London), 2016. http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/3447/.

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The inclusion of women in the public sphere delineates the last century from the previous ones. This thesis investigates three key aspects of the gender revolution. At the turn from the 18th to the 19th century, countries began to grant women equal voting rights to men. Equality in the act of voting, however, failed to ensue. To address this conundrum, the first essay argues that elites and organizations had greater incentives to mobilize women to vote under a proportional representation (pr) than a plurality electoral system. I test the argument empirically by studying a reform which required half of the about 600 Norwegian municipalities to replace plurality with pr before the 1919 election. The difference-in-difference design reveals the reform increased women’s share of the votes cast by about ten percentage points, thus notably reducing gender inequities in political participation. Women’s inclusion in voting did, however, not imply women’s inclusion in employment, education, and political offices. Indeed, after World War II, the social partners and political parties favored policies aimed at male-breadwinner families. The second essay studies the puzzle of why unions, employers, and parties nonetheless, from the 1970s and onwards, went from opposing to proposing work-family policy reforms, such as daycare services and paid parental leave. My argument is that, as women have become an increasingly important part of the membership base for unions and source of high-skilled labour for employers, the social partners have come to push for the expansion of work-family policies. Yet, centralised corporatist institutions, which give policy influence, are needed for unions and employers to succeed with their policy demands. Both a time-series crossnational quantitative analysis and an in-depth case study of Norway and shadow case studies of the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Sweden support the argument. By the new millennium, women made up half of the labor force but only one-third of managers, indicating that significant gender inequities remain. The third essay therefore examines whether the introduction of full-time daycare services increase mothers’ possibility and willingness to invest a professional career. Empirically, the essay exploits a staggered, large-scale expansion of daycare centres across Norwegian municipalities in the 2000s. Analysing registry data on the whole Norwegian population, the instrumental variable estimates indicate that the availability of daycare services made women more likely to enter into occupations requiring longer hours and leadership positions. In sum, the thesis demonstrates that reforms of political and public policy institutions can impact both the pace and the direction of theongoing gender revolution.
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Spurlock, J. D. « Essays in reform on the eve of Revolution : the Academy of Chalons-sur-Marne, 1776-1789 ». Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1993. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/10048148/.

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This thesis recounts the history of the Academy of Chalons-sur-Marne and its use of its privilege as a royal academy to hold essay contests to promote public discussion of France's social and economic structures and the Crown's recent attempts to reform them. A study of the public and private activities of the Academy, it grants insight into the revolutionary education of both the academicians and their public. It seeks to understand the process whereby those without legitimate political voice considered themselves summoned by this academy to express their views and then analyzes the texts which were for many a first written formulation of political opinion. It surveys the Academy's success in attracting public interest in its competitions and shows how this proved prejudicial to its survival and that of the reforms its essay contests had been designed to support. The Chalons contests provoked essays from across the social and geographic spectrum. They constitute a significant sample of literate opinion on the eve of the Revolution and provide, along with the Academy's correspondence with Crown ministers, 14,000 pages of primary source material for this study. Chapter one sets the context with an overview of French academies and the Crown's intentions in founding them. Chapter two surveys the Chalons Academy's history and its relationship to the movement for reform. Chapter three profiles its essay competitors; chapters four and five analyze its competition essays on the begging and labouring poor. Chapter six summarizes the reception given its contests by the public and government and considers their response to the questions announced after the first contest. Chapter seven recounts the government's censorship of the Academy's activities and the response it evoked. The thesis concludes with an assessment of the influence of the Chalons Academy and its competitions on the events of the Revolution.
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Deustua, José R. « La historia económica institucionalista en debate : alrededor del libro The Mexican Economy, 1870-1930 : Essays on the Economic History of Institutions, Revolution, and Growth, editado por Jeffrey L. Bortz y Stephen Haber ». Economía, 2015. http://repositorio.pucp.edu.pe/index/handle/123456789/118081.

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BETTARELLI, LUCA. « Essays in Political Economics ». Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10281/138674.

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The thesis is intended to shed light on some crucial open questions in the political economy literature. The structure of the work is as follows: Section 1 reviews the literature; Section 2 compares constitutional systems over a set of economic outcomes; Section 3 is a research connecting revolution to voting behaviours. In detail, the aim of the literature review is twofold: it is aimed to provide the theoretical background for the empirical part of the thesis, and it goes over empirical works in the political economy literature so to highlight the novelty of the thesis. In Section 2, the difference in performance between constitutional systems is investigated. The effect of constitutional structures (such as the effect of a presidential vs a parliamentary system) over policy outcomes has been widely studied in the economic literature. This paper accounts for the heterogeneity in parliamentary systems by investigating whether stable and unstable parliamentary systems behave differently in terms of the policy they implement. This distinction of constitutional systems generates results that are more robust compared to the previous literature. More precisely, we find that parliamentary and presidential systems do not systematically differ but it depends on structural characteristics of the former constitutional design. Moreover, we show that this result is robust to changes in the set of countries and to changes in the definition of stability. Finally, we discuss how these results are consistent with the presence of a selection effect in parliamentary systems. Indeed, Section 3 analyses the autocracy-democracy transition focusing on the peculiar case of Tunisia and Egypt in the aftermath of the Arab Spring waves. In particular, the analysis is aimed at connecting revolution to election. In literature, revolutions have been mainly described as collective action problems where people coordinate in order to overthrow a tyrannical political regime. But, participating or not into revolutionary waves depends on a cost-benefit calculation. It follows that the expected gross individual benefits from participating would hardly overcome net benefits, so making people reluctant to participate into revolutionary riots. Indeed, a revolution may be successful if a critical mass of well-organized people mobilize, while outcomes is enjoyed by all those symphatizing with the revolution goals, irrespective of participation. The intrinsic aims of this first-mover group may have a great impact on the post-revolution path, also through the election behaviours of people who have directly take part into revolutionary riots. After proposing the theoretical intuitions, we make use of the generalized structural equation approach accounting for the path-dependency between response variables so to empirically investigate the relationship between revolution, election and people preferences in the Arab Spring context.
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Friedrich, Silke 1980. « Essays in political economy ». Thesis, University of Oregon, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/10899.

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xii, 116 p. : ill. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library catalog for the location and call number.
The following essays address the impact of special interest groups on economic decision making processes. The hypothesis of the first essay is that there exists a dynamic relationship between politicians and lobby groups. Politicians may choose to support "projects" proposed to them by lobbies because they yield clear economic benefits. However, governmental support may continue after these benefits have been exhausted, implying a cost to society and yielding rents to the lobbies. A theoretical framework is developed to model the incentives a government might have to behave in a manner consistent with the hypothesis. In this structure despite the fact that they support projects from which all economic rents have been extracted, politicians are rationally reelected. In the second chapter I examine how structural changes in the US steel industry affect the voting behavior of House Representatives on trade related bills. The hypothesis is that Representatives face opposing incentives after the PBGC bailed out the pension plans of major steel firms. Representatives have an incentive to vote less for protectionist policies, because the bailout makes the steel firms more competitive. But the Representatives also have an incentive to yield to the demands of affected steel workers, who favor more protection after the bailout. The data set underlying this study is a panel including votes on trade related bills over 9 years. The results obtained using fixed effects techniques support the hypothesis. In the third chapter, I develop a theoretical model of the dissolution of countries. I model a society with two different groups of citizens, who have different preferences over public goods, to analyze under which political regime the dissolution of these groups into separate countries is most likely. Differentiating between revolutions and civil wars allows me to look at the effects of both forms of political violence. I find that while the threat of a revolution can induce oligarchies to increase the franchise, the threat of a civil war can induce a. country to dissolve peacefully. The model predicts that peaceful dissolution is more likely in democracies, whereas oligarchies are more likely to risk civil war to stay united.
Committee in charge: Christopher Ellis, Co-Chairperson, Economics; Bruce Blonigen, Co-Chairperson, Economics; Glen Waddell, Member, Economics; Michael Dreiling, Outside Member, Sociology
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Tepper, Alexander. « Essays in economic and financial history ». Thesis, University of Oxford, 2011. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:9f10c836-05be-4fe8-ba57-1ce237fa0d9f.

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Division One: “Malthus Gets Fat” (Two Chapters) Chapter One develops a simple dynamic model to examine the takeoff from a Malthusian economy to a modern growth regime. It finds that several factors, most notably the rate of technological progress and the economic structure, determine the fastest rate at which the population can grow without declining living standards; this is termed maximum sustainable population growth. It is only when this maximum sustainable rate exceeds the peak rate at which a society expands that takeoff can occur. I also investigate the effects of trade and international income transfers on the ability to sustain takeoff. It is also shown that present income growth is not necessarily indicative of the ability to sustain takeoff and that factors which increase current income growth may actually inhibit takeoff, and vice versa. Chapter Two applies the sustainable population growth framework to Britain during the Industrial Revolution. The model shows a dramatic increase in sustainable population growth at the time of the Industrial Revolution, well before the beginning of modern levels of income growth. The main contributions to the British breakout were technological improvements and structural change away from agricultural production. At least until the middle of the 19th Century, coal, capital and trade played a minor role. Division Two: “Leverage and Financial Market Instability” (Four Chapters) Chapter One develops a model of how leverage induces explosive behavior in financial markets. I show that when levered investors become too large relative to the market as a whole, the demand curve for securities can suddenly become upward-sloping as levered investors are exposed to forced liquidations. The size and leverage of all levered investors defines the minimum elasticity-adjusted market size for stability or MinEAMASS, which is the smallest elasticity-adjusted market size that can support the group of levered investors analyzed. This gives rise to a measure of instability that can predict when markets become vulnerable to a leverage-driven market liquidity crisis. Chapter Two iterates the model of Chapter One forward in time to generate an inflating bubble that suddenly bursts, reproducing many of Kindleberger's (1996) stylized facts about the dynamics of bubbles in a simple framework. Chapter Three applies my measure of instability in a historical investigation of the 1998 demise of hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM). I find that a forced liquidation of LTCM threatened to destabilize some financial markets, particularly for bank funding and equity volatility. Chapter Four discusses how the model applied to the stock market crash of 1929. There the evidence suggests that a tightening of margin requirements in the first nine months of 1929 combined with price declines in September and early October caused enough investors to become constrained that the market was tipped into instability, triggering the sudden crash of October and November.
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Voigtländer, Nico. « Essays on Economic Growth and the skill bias of technology ». Doctoral thesis, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10803/7374.

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Esta tesis doctoral es una colección de tres artículos. Los capítulos 1 y 2, co-autorados con Joachim Voth, investigan por qué Europa en 1700 ya era más rico que el resto del mundo y por qué Inglaterra fue el primer país en industrializarse. Encontramos que las dinámicas de la población, en lugar del crecimiento de la productividad, fueron los promotores más importantes del desarrollo económico de Europa Occidental durante la temprana edad moderna (1450-1700). Calibramos un modelo probabilístico para representar Inglaterra en 1700 y encontramos que ingresos iniciales más altos unidos a limitaciones de fertilidad aumentaron la probabilidad de industrialización. En el tercer capítulo, presento un nuevo hecho estilizado y analizo su contribución al sesgo del cambio tecnológico hacia los trabajadores más cualificados: El porcentaje de trabajadores cualificados en la producción intermedia está altamente correlacionado con la proporción de trabajo cualificado en la producción final. Esto genera un efecto multiplicador que refuerza la demanda de trabajo cualificado a lo largo de la cadena de producción. El efecto es importante, explica más de un tercio del aumento de la demanda de trabajadores cualificados en la industria manufacturera de EE.UU.
This dissertation is a collection of three essays. Chapters 1 and 2, co-authored with Joachim Voth, investigate the question why Europe in 1700 was ahead of the rest of the world and why England was the first country to industrialize. We find that population dynamics, rather than productivity growth, were the most important drivers for Western Europe to overtake China in the early modern period (1450-1700). We calibrate a probabilistic model to match England in 1700 and find that higher initial per capita incomes together with fertility limitation increased its industrialization probabilities. In the third chapter, I present a novel stylized fact and analyze its contribution to the skill bias of technical change: The share of skilled labor embedded in intermediate inputs correlates strongly with the skill share employed in final production. This delivers a multiplier that reinforces skill demand along the production chain. The effect is large, accounting for more than one third of the observed skill upgrading in U.S. manufacturing.
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NETTERSTRØM, Kasper Ly. « Essays on the revolution in Tunisia ». Doctoral thesis, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/47307.

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Defence date: 10 July 2017
Examining Board: Professor Olivier Roy, European University Institute (supervisor); Professor Hanspeter Kriesi, European University Institute; Professor Malika Zeghal, Harvard University; Associate professor Nadia Marzouki, EHESS
The Tunisian Revolution and constitutional process constitute the first successful indigenous democratization process in the Arab World. In this article based thesis the historic event is analysed and discussed in relation to the established theories of democratization. The thesis contains four different articles. The first focuses on why the Tunisian Islamists accepted the country’s new constitution despite the fact that it contained principles that were in opposition to some of their previous Islamist beliefs. The second centres on the role of the Tunisian General Labor Union. It seeks to explain why the union could play such a crucial role in the revolution and constitutional process despite the fact that its leadership had close connections to the previous regime. The third article looks into how the Tunisian religious sphere changed as a result of the revolution. The fourth article tries to answer why the revolution came to be understood as a conflict between 'Islamists' and 'secularists' through an analysis of the conflict between the Islamists and the Tunisian General Labor Union. Finally, in the last chapter the state of comparative politics is discussed in relation to the conclusions of the different articles.
Chapter 4 ‘The Tunisian revolution and governance of religion' of the PhD thesis draws upon an earlier version published as an article 'The Tunisian revolution and governance of religion' (2017) in the journal ‘Middle East critique’
Chapter 2 ‘The Islamists’ compromise in Tunisia' of the PhD thesis draws upon an earlier version published as an article 'The Islamists’ compromise in Tunisia' (2015) in the journal ‘Journal of democracy'
Chapter 3 ‘The Tunisian General Labor Union and the advent of democracy' of the PhD thesis draws upon an earlier version published as an article 'The Tunisian General Labor Union and the advent of democracy' (2016) in the journal ‘The Middle East journal’
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Castriotta, Larissa. « Role models in the contemporary Chinese essay : : Ba Jin and the post-cultural revolution memorial essays in Suixiang lu/ ». 2000. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/theses/1383.

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Feng, Na. « Essays on Education, Political Movements and Income Growth in China ». Thesis, 2016. https://doi.org/10.7916/D84M94JQ.

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This dissertation presents research on three topics relating to how education is linked to economic development in China. The data are obtained from the 2003, 2005, 2006 and 2013 Chinese General Social Survey (CGSS). The first essay examines the consequences of the Cultural Revolution. Using the 2003 and 2006 CGSS, the research is able to identify participants in a specific initiative, the “up to the mountains and down to the villages” movement (referred to as the Sentdown Campaign) and the length of time that they were involved in the initiative. The econometric results--including OLS, Heckit and 2SLS methods--provide evidence of substantial negative and long-lasting effects of the Cultural Revolution on education, labor force participation and personal income. Those who were involved in the Sentdown Campaign were found to be able to recoup some of these losses through the accumulation of education after they came back from rural areas, but these were generally not enough to compensate for the overall disruptions the Cultural Revolution caused on them. Furthermore, those who were sent down and stayed for more than five years in the countryside were not able to recuperate any lost years of schooling and, instead, suffered bigger losses in income than any of the other groups discussed in this essay. The second essay examines the attitudes of urban Chinese citizens towards migrants, as obtained using survey data from the 2005 CGSS. Estimating probit equations of the likelihood that the respondents in the sample had positive attitudes towards migrants, the research shows the connections between a range of explanatory variables and these attitudes. Educational attainment is not found to reduce negative attitudes towards migrants, a result that is different from the literature on the determinants of attitudes towards immigrants in recipient countries. The research also finds that as migrant presence grows in workplaces and neighborhoods, urban residents actually become more positive in their attitudes towards migrants. Gender is also found to have a significant impact on attitudes towards migrants. Men tend to have much more positive attitudes towards migrants, perhaps because social conventions frown against urban women having friendships with migrant men, or because the marriage market in urban China favors urban men marrying rural women. The third essay examines the role played by human capital in accounting for income growth in China between 2003 and 2013. An Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition of the growth in individual hourly income shows that the overall role played by human capital on income growth in China during this decade is significant for men but not for women. For men, human capital accounts for 0.1796 in log-income change between 2003 and 2013, which given the total log-income change in this time period for men was 0.9160, represents close to 20 percent of the growth in income in the country. For women, the impact is small and actually negative, equal to -0.0433 out of the 0.8435 increase in log-income during the decade, a result that is mostly the outcome of declining rates of return to education among females.
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Livres sur le sujet "Revolution-Essays"

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Fanon, Frantz. Toward the African revolution : Political essays. New York : Grove Press, 1988.

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Oswald, Mosley. Revolution by reason and other essays. Lewiston, NY : Edwin Mellen Press, 1997.

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Geras, Norman. Literature of revolution : Essays on Marxism. London : Verso, 1986.

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L, Donovan Arthur, et History of Science Society, dir. The Chemical revolution : Essays in reinterpretation. Philadelphia, PA : History of Science Society, 1988.

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Nzongola-Ntalaja, Georges. Revolution and counter-revolution in Africa : Essays in contemporary politics. London : Institute for African Alternatives, 1987.

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Yoder, John Howard. The original revolution : Essays on Christian pacifism. Scottdale, Pa : Herald Press, 2003.

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Halman, Talât Sait. Rapture and revolution : Essays on Turkish literature. Syracuse, N.Y : Syracuse University Press, 2007.

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Pollard, Sidney. Essays on the industrial revolution in Britain. Aldershot : Ashgate/Variorum, 2000.

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Foran, Charles. Join the revolution, comrade : Journeys and essays. Emeryville, Ont : Biblioasis, 2008.

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Foran, Charles. Join the revolution, comrade : Journeys and essays. Emeryville, Ont : Biblioasis, 2008.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Revolution-Essays"

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Berridge, G. R. « The Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy ». Dans The Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy and other essays, 1–15. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230309029_1.

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Berridge, G. R. « Wartime Embassies ». Dans The Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy and other essays, 165–92. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230309029_10.

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Berridge, G. R. « The Origins of the Diplomatic Corps : Rome to Constantinople ». Dans The Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy and other essays, 16–31. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230309029_2.

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Berridge, G. R. « Diplomatic Education and Training : The British Tradition ». Dans The Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy and other essays, 32–49. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230309029_3.

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Berridge, G. R. « A Political Consul in Nineteenth-Century Armenia ». Dans The Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy and other essays, 50–70. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230309029_4.

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Berridge, G. R. « Specific Reciprocity and the 105 Soviet Spies ». Dans The Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy and other essays, 71–86. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230309029_5.

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Berridge, G. R. « Home or Away ? » Dans The Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy and other essays, 87–102. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230309029_6.

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Berridge, G. R. « Diplomacy after Death ». Dans The Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy and other essays, 103–19. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230309029_7.

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Berridge, G. R. « British Ambassadors and their Families in Constantinople ». Dans The Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy and other essays, 120–44. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230309029_8.

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Berridge, G. R. « Communicating with the Orient before the Twentieth Century ». Dans The Counter-Revolution in Diplomacy and other essays, 145–64. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230309029_9.

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