996 resultados para HISTORICAL ARCHIVES
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Comprend : Histoire contenant un abrégé de la vie, moeurs et vertus du roy... Charles IX... ; La Prinse du Comte de Montgommery, dedans le chasteau de Donfron, par monsieur de Matignon, lieutenant en la basse Normandie, en l'absence du Duc de Bouillon, le Ieudy XXVII de May, mil cinq cens soixante et quatorze. A Paris, pour Nicolas du Mont demeurant auprès le Collège de Reims 1574 ; Arrest contre Geoffroy Vallée. 8 février 1574. (Extrait des Registres du Parlement) ; Discours de la mort et exécution de Gabriel Comte de Montgommery, par arrest de la Court, pour les conspirations et menées par luy commises, contre le Roy et son estat, qui fut à Paris, le vingsixième de Iuing, 1574. A Paris, par Michel Buffet... 1574 ; Choses notables et qui semblent digne de l'histoire, advenues aux premiers troubles et qui peuvent estre adjoustées aux discours qui en on esté escrits ; Histoire de Charles IX ; Le Tumulte de Bassigni... ; Discours de la famine de Sancerre. Mars 1573 ; Lettre... au roy, 27 septembre 1572 ; Des mines d'argent trouvées en France, ouvrage et police d'icelles... ; Ordonnances... sur la discipline militaire
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Alan S. Milward was an economic historian who developed an implicit theory ofhistorical change. His interpretation which was neither liberal nor Marxist positedthat social, political, and economic change, for it to be sustainable, had to be agradual process rather than one resulting from a sudden, cataclysmicrevolutionary event occurring in one sector of the economy or society. Benignchange depended much less on natural resource endowment or technologicaldevelopments than on the ability of state institutions to respond to changingpolitical demands from within each society. State bureaucracies were fundamentalto formulating those political demands and advising politicians of ways to meetthem. Since each society was different there was no single model of developmentto be adopted or which could be imposed successfully by one nation-state onothers, either through force or through foreign aid programs. Nor coulddevelopment be promoted simply by copying the model of a more successfuleconomy. Each nation-state had to find its own response to the political demandsarising from within its society. Integration occurred when a number of nation states shared similar political objectives which they could not meet individuallybut could meet collectively. It was not simply the result of their increasinginterdependence. It was how and whether nation-states responded to thesedomestic demands which determined the nature of historical change.
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The Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model is a continuation of nearly 30 years of modeling efforts conducted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Agricultural Research Service. SWAT has gained international acceptance as a robust interdisciplinary watershed modeling tool, as evidenced by international SWAT conferences, hundreds of SWAT-related papers presented at numerous scientific meetings, and dozens of articles published in peer-reviewed journals. The model has also been adopted as part of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s BASINS (Better Assessment Science Integrating Point & Nonpoint Sources) software package and is being used by many U.S. federal and state agencies, including the USDA within the Conservation Effects Assessment Project. At present, over 250 peer-reviewed, published articles have been identified that report SWAT applications, reviews of SWAT components, or other research that includes SWAT. Many of these peer-reviewed articles are summarized here according to relevant application categories such as streamflow calibration and related hydrologic analyses, climate change impacts on hydrology, pollutant load assessments, comparisons with other models, and sensitivity analyses and calibration techniques. Strengths and weaknesses of the model are presented, and recommended research needs for SWAT are provided.
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Archive of meeting agendas and minutes for 2003 for the DAS-General Services Enterprise Customer Council.
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Archive of meeting agendas and minutes for 2004 for the DAS-General Services Enterprise Customer Council.
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Archive of meeting agendas and minutes for 2005 for the DAS-General Services Enterprise Customer Council.
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Archive of meeting agendas and minutes for 2004 for the DAS-Human Resources Enterprise Customer Council.
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Archive of meeting agendas and minutes for 2005 for the DAS-Human Resources Enterprise Customer Council.
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Archive of meeting agendas and minutes for 2004 for the DAS-I/3 Customer Council.
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Archive of meeting agendas and minutes for 2005 for the DAS-I/3 Customer Council.
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Using historical data for all Swiss cantons from 1890 to 2000, we estimate the causal effect of direct democracy on government spending. The main innovation in this paper is that we use fixed effects to control for unobserved heterogeneity and instrumental variables to address the potential endogeneity of institutions. We find that the budget referendum and lower costs to launch a voter initiative are effective tools in reducing canton level spending. However, we find no evidence that the budget referendum results in more decentralized government or a larger local government. Our instrumental variable estimates suggest that a mandatory budget referendum reduces the size of canton spending between 13 and 19 percent. A 1 percent lower signature requirement for the initiative reduces canton spending by up to 2 percent.
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Enregistrement : Paris, Université de Paris, La Sorbonne, 10-01-1912
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Enregistrement : Paris, Université de Paris, La Sorbonne, 03-01-1912
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This article examines the debt history of two contenders for European hegemony: 16th-centurySpain and 18th-century Britain. We analyze their fiscal behavior using measures of overborrowingand fiscal policy functions. Our results suggest that stringency was not key for Britain ssuccess in avoiding default. Instead, fiscal repression allowed the United Kingdom to borrowat below-market rates, thereby outspending its continental rivals.
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