818 resultados para Brazil – Foreign relations
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Comp. by Edmund Flagg.
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Title varies slightly.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 81 H381-21
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"B-274657"--p. 1.
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Financeira do Tesouro Nacional. Ministério da Fazenda. (Membro do Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística)
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Copied from papers reserved at the India office.
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Description based on: 1869/70.
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Report year ends Dec. 31.
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Title varies slightly.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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This thesis examines the influence of non-state actors on Polish-German relations by considering foreign policy-making towards Poland in Germany and vice versa. The approach chosen for this thesis is interdisciplinary and takes into consideration literature from domestic politics (Area Studies), Foreign Policy Analysis and International Relations (IR). The thesis argues that IR, by purely looking into the quality of inter-state relations, too often treats these relations as a result of policies emanating from the relevant governments, without considering the policies’ background. Therefore, the thesis argues that it is necessary to engage with the domestic factors which might explain where foreign policies come from. It points out that non-state actors influence governments’ choices by supplying resources, and by cooperating or competing with the government on an issue at stake. In order to determine the degree of influence that non-state actors can have on foreign policymaking two variables are examined: the institutionalisation of the state relations in question; and the domestic structures of the relevant states. Specifically, the thesis examines the institutionalisation of Polish-German relations, and examines Germany’s and Poland’s domestic structures and their effect on the two states’ foreign policy-making in general. Thereafter, the thesis uses case studies in order to unravel the influence of non-state actors on specific foreign policies. Three case studies are examined in detail: (i) Poland’s EU accession negotiations with regard to the free movement of capital chapter of the acquis communautaire; (ii) Germany’s EU 2004 Eastern Enlargement negotiations with regard to the free movement of workers chapter of the acquis communautaire; and (iii) Germany’s decision to establsh a permanent exhibition in Berlin that will depict the expulsions of millions of Germans from the East following WWII.