134 resultados para The travelling concept of narrative
em University of Michigan
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"Commentary [by] Miland E. Knapp": p. 343-355.
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Special t.p.: Posthuma fragmenta poematum Georgii Coryati Sarisburiensis, sacrae theologiae baccalaurei, quondem e sociis Novi collegii in inclyta academia Oxoniensi, ac postea ecclesiae Odcombiensis in agro Somersetensi ministri, ubi tandem anno 1606, extremum viatae diem clausit. Londini, anno domini 1611: vol. II, p. [377-408].
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Bibliography: p. 219-240.
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Special t.p.: Posthuma fragmenta poematum Georgii Coryati Sarisburiensis, sacrae theologiae baccalaurei, quondem e sociis Novi collegii in inclyta academia Oxoniensi, as postea ecclesiae Odcombiensis in agro Somersetensi ministri, ubi tandem anno 1606, extremum vitae diem clausit. Londini, anno domini 1611: vol.II, p. [377-408]
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"Counterinsurgency (COIN) requires an integrated military, political, and economic program best developed by teams that field both civilians and soldiers. These units should operate with some independence but under a coherent command. In Vietnam, after several false starts, the United States developed an effective unified organization, Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development Support (CORDS), to guide the counterinsurgency. CORDS had three components absent from our efforts in Afghanistan today: sufficient personnel (particularly civilian), numerous teams, and a single chain of command that united the separate COIN programs of the disparate American departments at the district, provincial, regional, and national levels. This paper focuses on the third issue and describes the benefits that unity of command at every level would bring to the American war in Afghanistan. The work begins with a brief introduction to counterinsurgency theory, using a population-centric model, and examines how this warfare challenges the United States. It traces the evolution of the Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) and the country team, describing problems at both levels. Similar efforts in Vietnam are compared, where persistent executive attention finally integrated the government's counterinsurgency campaign under the unified command of the CORDS program. The next section attributes the American tendency towards a segregated response to cultural differences between the primary departments, executive neglect, and societal concepts of war. The paper argues that, in its approach to COIN, the United States has forsaken the military concept of unity of command in favor of 'unity of effort' expressed in multiagency literature. The final sections describe how unified authority would improve our efforts in Afghanistan and propose a model for the future."--P. iii.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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With music.
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Thesis (M.S.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
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Final report, issued June 1977.
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"Table of commission cases": p. 203-217.
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Sketches of South America, illustrative of allusions in the foregoing narrative, to the geography, natural history, inhabitants, etc., of that part of the world. Extracts translated from Felix de Azara's Voyages dans l'Amérique Méridionale... v.2, p. [121]-287.
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Generally attributed to John Pendleton Kennedy, brother of the author. cf. H.T. Tuckerman, Life of J.P. Kennedy, 1871, p. 26 and 421.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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I. Gladstone declares for home rule.--II. "Under protection of the league."--III. The general election of 1886.--IV. Vatican politics.--V. Cairo in 1887.--VI. Failure of the Wolff convention.--VII. The Persico mission.--VIII. Balfour chief secretary.--IX. My arrest at Woodford.--X. In gaol.--XI. The papal rescript.--XII. The Parnell Tragedy. A postscript.--Appendices: A. The canon of Aughrim. B. Mr. Blunt to Mr. John Morley. C. Mr. Blunt to the Marquess of Salisbury. D. Mr. Blunt to Mr. Evelyn, M. P. E. Mr. Blunt to Mr. John Morley.--Index.