Your Search Results(showing 3811)

    • Trusted Partner
      Agriculture & related industries
      July 2002

      Agricultural Research Policy in an Era of Privatization

      by Edited by Derek Byerlee, Ruben G Echeverria

      Recent decades have witnessed a dramatic shift from public to private sector agricultural research in many developed countries. Developments in plant breeding and biotechnology, for example, have created profitable opportunities for private investment. However, new issues, such as intellectual property rights, have arisen as a consequence. This book discusses these and related issues.

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      Humanities & Social Sciences
      December 1999

      The debate on the American Civil War era

      by Hugh Tulloch, Roger Richardson

      This study is the first to critically survey the changing and highly controversial historical literature surrounding the American Civil War era, from contemporary interpretations up to the present.. The book analyses both historians attitudes and assumptions and suggests that each writer's perspective was partly determined by the dictates of time and place.. The author engages with all aspects of the Civil War era; social, cultural and economic as well as its political dimensions.. Aimed at sixth form colleges and university students. ;

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      The Arts
      2005

      Fine Arts in the Era of Mao Zedong

      by Zou Yuejin

      The book put forward the concept of 'Fine Arts in the Era of Mao Zedong' academically for the first time. Starting from the publication of Mao Zedong's Talks at the Yan'an Forum on Literature and Art in 1942 and ending with the passing away of Mao Zedong, the book surveys this period by collecting more than 1,000 pictures and other data, which are arranged under eight themes. The book restores this period of the history of Chinese fine arts to the original form and gives prominence to the time features embodied in this phenomenon of fine arts. The introduction in the book expounds fine arts in the era of Mao Zedong in a macroscopic manner, discussing historical background, thoughts of literature and art, social environment and theme typology concisely and tersely so as to provide readers with theoretical perspective and approaches in understanding and perceiving this phenomenon of fine arts.

    • Trusted Partner
      January 1989

      Liberalism and Recent Legal and Social Philosophy

      Association for Legal and Social Philosophy. 15th Annual Conference at New College, Oxford, 7th–9th April 1988

      by Herausgegeben von Bellamy, Richard

    • Trusted Partner
      Children's & YA

      Pastoral Song

      by Dong Hongyou

      This book tells the story of a youth choir in Wuhan during the founding era of New China. The novel could be seen as a "musical novel" for citing many famous Chinese and foreign songs. Just like in Vladimir Korolenko's novel The Blind Musician, where the melodious flute sound of the old groom Joachim has been guiding the growth of the five-year-old blind child, the songs in this book that were created in different eras also play a role as the "spiritual nourishment" for the teenager Jiangnan and his partners in his childhood, leading them to grow from narrow-minded, hesitant, and fragile to broad, firm, and strong. In this novel, apart from the fact that music forms a great part, it also has another prominent feature, which is the regional culture and folk customs of old Wuhan city. The loud and strong chanting on the pier of the Yangtze River, the mighty sound of the surging river, the melodious bells of Hankow Customs House, the vendor's hawking in the alleys of the old Hankou, as well as various customs, snacks, and dialects, all of which help create a vivid painting of local customs that presents lively daily life and the wharf culture.

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      Humanities & Social Sciences
      February 2026

      AIDS in Soviet Russia

      A story of deception, despair and hope

      by Rustam Alexander

      The first book to tell the shocking story of the AIDS crisis in Soviet Russia. Throughout the 1980s, as the world was grappling with the escalating crisis of AIDS, Soviet Russia continued to deny there was a problem. Arguing that the disease was limited to foreigners and 'immoral' groups, the government failed to take meaningful action, long past the point other countries had begun to recognise the full scale of the threat. In this ground-breaking book, Rustam Alexander tells the story of AIDS in Soviet Russia. Fixated on disinformation, censorship and the persecution of marginalised communities, the Soviet authorities wasted precious time, allowing the epidemic to strike at the very heart of the nation: its children. Yet, despite the government's failure, a number of brave journalists, doctors and nascent gay groups decided to take matters into their own hands and engage in full-fledged AIDS activism. Tracing the political and social response to AIDS in the final years of the Soviet era, Alexander sheds light on the devastating consequences of government inaction. He draws on personal stories, media reports and archival materials to provide a riveting account of the Russian people's fight against AIDS amid the tumultuous transformations of Gorbachev's perestroika.

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    • Trusted Partner
      December 1989

      Unmittelbar zur Epoche des NS-Faschismus

      Arbeiten zur politischen Philologie 1978–1988

      by Klaus Briegleb

      Das ›Thema‹ dieses Buches stellt den Blick auf den Versuch ein, die Geschichte des NS-Faschismus als gegenwärtige zu begreifen. Das Gegenstandsfeld ist Sprache. Eine politische Philologie würde ihre Geschichte-aufschreibende Tätigkeit von vornherein nach der weltabgewandten Seite hin verkürzen, wenn ihr am Gegenstand Dichtung die Empfindung für die Gewaltpolitik verlorenginge, die mit Sprache im technischen Zeitalter gemacht wird und auf soziale Zustimmung dabei stößt. Diese Empfindung kann sie aber auch in eine feindliche Stellung gegen die Sprachpolitik und ihre national-identifikatorischen Ziele bringen. Dies ist in den Versuchen dieses Buches zu vermeiden gesucht.

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      Humanities & Social Sciences
      November 2023

      Intimacy and mobility in an era of hardening borders

      Gender, reproduction, regulation

      by Haldis Haukanes, Frances Pine

      This book is a collection of articles by anthropologists and social scientists concerned with gendered labour, care, intimacy and sexuality, in relation to mobility and the hardening of borders in Europe. Interrogating the relation between physical, geopolitical borders and ideological, conceptual boundaries, it offers a range of vivid and original ethnographic case studies that will capture the imagination of anyone interested in gendered migration, policies of inclusion and exclusion, and regulation of reproduction and intimacy. The book presents ethnographic and phenomenological discussions of people's changing lives as they cross borders, how people transgress and reshape moral boundaries of proper gender and kinship behaviour, and moral economies of intimacy and sexuality. It also focuses on migrants' navigation of social and financial services in their destination countries, putting questions about rights and limitations on citizenship at the core.

    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      March 2017

      Online Public Opinion in the Information Era

      Status quo, Trends, Responses

      by Liao Zhikun

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    • Trusted Partner
      July 2019

      Arts, Portraits and Representation in the Reformation Era

      Proceedings of the Fourth Reformation Research Consortium Conference

      by Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht

    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      February 2018

      How to save politics in a post-truth era

      by Ilan Zvi Baron

    • Trusted Partner

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