Results 11 to 20 of about 11,318 (180)
Pest categorisation of Saperda tridentata. [PDF]
Abstract The EFSA Panel on Plant Health (PLHP) performed a pest categorisation of Saperda tridentata (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) for the EU. S. tridentata (elm borer) occurs in eastern North America. Ulmus americana and U. rubra are almost exclusively reported as hosts, apart from two 19th century records from the USA of larvae from Acer sp. and Populus
EFSA Panel on Plant Health (PLH) +21 more
europepmc +2 more sources
Comrades in the family? Soviet communism and demand for family insurance
Abstract We study how exposure to (Soviet) communism (EC), a political‐economic regime based on collectivist state planning, affected the preferences for family support, which we refer to as informal family insurance. Against the backdrop that ‘communism gave rise to the abolition of the family’, we document that it actually strengthened the preference
Joan Costa‐Font, Anna Nicińska
wiley +1 more source
Four species of Bacidina (Ramalinaceae, Lecanorales, Ascomycota) are described as new to science from northern Europe (mainly Swedish material): Bacidina ferax S.Ekman, Bacidina lignicola S.Ekman, Bacidina maculans S.Ekman and Bacidina populnea S.Ekman.
Stefan Ekman
wiley +1 more source
Myths of Modernism: Austrian Art after 1918
The development of art in Austria after 1918 remains little explored; the main focus of research continues to be fin‐de‐siècle Vienna. Where interwar Austrian modernism is studied at all, interest is mostly limited to the municipal housing sponsored by the Social Democratic council.
Matthew Rampley
wiley +1 more source
Behind the curtain: How did women's work history vary across Central and Eastern Europe?
Abstract This paper investigates the differences in female work experience across Central and Eastern European countries (CEECs). We use retrospective SHARELIFE data to analyse women's work history from 1950 to 1990. We provide descriptive evidence that women's work experience varied across CEECs.
Telmo Pérez‐Izquierdo +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract The leading elites of the ethnonationalist movements that developed in the aftermath of World War I in Western Europe usually refused to see their nations and territories as ‘national minorities’. In their view, they were stateless nations or nationalities.
Xosé M. Núñez Seixas
wiley +1 more source
Fear of the Russian bear? Negotiating Finnish national identity online
Abstract National identities are an important tool for collective political persuasion and mobilisation among political elites and lay people. Recent research on nationalism has shown that the negotiating of national identities, like any political deliberations and operations, increasingly occur on the Internet.
Emma Nortio +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Nature, Politics, and the Traumas of Europe
Abstract Nature has been the major source of demographic shocks until the nineteenth century, after which Politics has gradually become the main factor of catastrophic traumas. During the first part of the past century, war, violence, forced migration, man‐made famines, and the epidemics unchained by them were responsible for tens of millions of deaths.
Massimo Livi‐Bacci
wiley +1 more source
The article is dedicated to certain aspects of the Sovietisation of general education schools in Lithuania in the 1940/41 school year. It provides the facts of the Bolshevik indoctrination in the local area – Šakiai county schools. The “re-education” of
Stanislovas Buchaveckas
doaj +1 more source
ABSTRACT In Latvian towns and villages, post‐Soviet capitalism has produced a palpable change that locals describe as “emptiness.” People point to empty houses and apartments, and they list friends and relatives who have left. They fear school closures and the cancellation of transportation routes. They imagine the future as an entirely different world,
DACE DZENOVSKA
wiley +1 more source

