998 resultados para Beatty, John, 1828-1914.


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Top Row (from left to right): Hui K. Li, John E. Robertson, Landis D. McDowell, William Robertson; Middle Row (from left to right): Constantine D. Tripolitis, Abram B. Coryell, Felix J. Watts, Jacob deLiefde, Clarence I. Shutes; Bottom Row (from left to right): Samuel Cohen, Clarence R. Stallings, Wen H. Pan, William S. James

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Mode of access: Internet.

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"Bibliography of Lord Avebury's chief published works": v. 2, p. 321-322.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Using the work and ideas of French theorist Michel Foucault the writer examines s 3LA of the Crimes Act, which provides law enforcement officers with power to compel a person to reveal their private encryption keys and other personal information, and concludes that such a section creates fear, redirects flow of power between law enforcement agencies and citizens, and creates resistance.

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From the seventeenth until the twentieth century, Germans formed a prominent immigrant group in Great Britain. Their number included many occupations, and many occupied positions of significance. This volume brings together the most recent research on the subject, and places it firmly in the context of migration and transnational studies. It focuses on the significance of migration to cultural transfer, and highlights the contribution of Germans to the course of British history.

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Non-British migrants and their communities were an integral part of the multifaceted and multicultural nature of the British Empire. Their history, however, goes beyond a clearly delineated narrative of the Empire and includes transnational and truly global dimensions. German migrants and their transnational network creation within the structures of the British Empire, pursued over more than two centuries in a multitude of geographical settings, is the constitutive framework of the present volume. Eight contributions cover economic, cultural, scientific and political themes. The book questions traditional nation-centred narratives of the Empire as an exclusively British undertaking.