Results 261 to 270 of about 181,837 (310)
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Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, 1936
(1938). The Civil War in Spain—VI. Bulletin of Spanish Studies: Vol. 15, No. 57, pp. 19-29.
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(1938). The Civil War in Spain—VI. Bulletin of Spanish Studies: Vol. 15, No. 57, pp. 19-29.
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Civil Wars, 1999
War in the end of the century is most frequently civil (intra‐state) in its cause, and usually most uncivil in its manner of conduct. Late‐twentieth century uncivil war has two leading characteristics: it neither recognises any value or humanity in the enemy, nor does it distinguish between war and crime.
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War in the end of the century is most frequently civil (intra‐state) in its cause, and usually most uncivil in its manner of conduct. Late‐twentieth century uncivil war has two leading characteristics: it neither recognises any value or humanity in the enemy, nor does it distinguish between war and crime.
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Most nations have experienced an internal armed conflict since 1960. The past decade has witnessed an explosion of research into the causes and consequences of civil wars, belatedly bringing the topic into the economics mainstream.
Christopher Blattman, Edward Miguel
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AORN Journal, 1973
We operated in old bloodstained and often pus‐stained coats … with undisinfected hands … We used undisinfected instruments … and marine sponges which had been used in prior pus cases and only washed in tap water.
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We operated in old bloodstained and often pus‐stained coats … with undisinfected hands … We used undisinfected instruments … and marine sponges which had been used in prior pus cases and only washed in tap water.
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2008
Abstract This chapter examines the ways in which the laws of war applicable between nations were justified, adapted, and sustained in a civil war, and then looks at the regulations designed to produce an orderly and effective fighting force. The codes of war that covered the law of conduct in war (ius in bello) were of three kinds. First,
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Abstract This chapter examines the ways in which the laws of war applicable between nations were justified, adapted, and sustained in a civil war, and then looks at the regulations designed to produce an orderly and effective fighting force. The codes of war that covered the law of conduct in war (ius in bello) were of three kinds. First,
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2009
'This masterly book succinctly surveys contemporary literature on the sources of conflict in developing countries as well as policies to secure a stable peace, including many insightful contributions by the author. The treatment of this important but controversial field is both informative and well balanced.
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'This masterly book succinctly surveys contemporary literature on the sources of conflict in developing countries as well as policies to secure a stable peace, including many insightful contributions by the author. The treatment of this important but controversial field is both informative and well balanced.
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The shadow of the civil war: A historiography of civil war memory
American Nineteenth Century History, 2003The memory of the Civil War has become one of the most vibrant and contested subjects in nineteenth-century American history over the past two decades. Studies of Civil War memory potentially can reveal much about the cultural, political, and intellectual world of the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Gilded Age.
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2022
This chapter talks about John Jay II's embodiment of the words “Why We Resist, and What We Resist,” which were printed in the pages of a leading southern journal during the secession crisis. The chapter recounts how John Jay II indicted President-Elect Abraham Lincoln and himself as zealots eager to inflict their shared abolitionist agenda with the aid
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This chapter talks about John Jay II's embodiment of the words “Why We Resist, and What We Resist,” which were printed in the pages of a leading southern journal during the secession crisis. The chapter recounts how John Jay II indicted President-Elect Abraham Lincoln and himself as zealots eager to inflict their shared abolitionist agenda with the aid
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Agriculture and the Civil War. The Impact of the Civil War.
The Journal of Southern History, 1966John Hebron Moore, Paul W. Gates
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