871 resultados para Country-by-Country Reporting
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Inside an envelope with several souvenir Iwo Jima postage stamps
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Imprint date from BM 25:859; Mansell 72:365.
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Shaw and Shoemaker 37960.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Concluding observations, by the editor": p. 273-376.
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Vol. 2, ed. by J. Leyland; v. 3, ed. by H. A. Tipping. v.2-3 illustrated from photographs by C. Latham.
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150 copies printed of which 36 were on large paper (29 x 23 cm.). Cf. Sabin, Bibl. Amer.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"The biographical part was written by Mr. Dibdin."--Lowndes, The bibliographer's manual of English literature.
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"United States Dept. of the Interior/Geological Survey."--Cover (p. 1)
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First and only edition of what appears to be the first English book fully illustrated with colored lithographed plates.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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In rural Australia in the early twenty-first century, telecommunications reform has seen the rise of local telecommunications as a new way to wire the country, delivering new technologies and meeting community needs and aspirations. 1his paper discusses the prospects for local telecommunications in light of a research project on online rural communities commissioned by the Telstra Consumer Consultative Council. Based on interviews conducted in three small towns in rural eastern Australia, the paper examines the role of community networking as a new force in telecommunications service delivery, posing questions for local and regional communications policy development.
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This paper investigates how social security interacts with growth and growth determinants (savings, human capital investment, and fertility). Our empirical investigation finds that the estimated coefficient on social security is significantly negative in the fertility equation, insignificant in the saving equation, and significantly positive in the growth and education equations. By contrast, the estimated coefficient on growth is insignificant in the social security equation. The results suggest that social security may indeed be conducive to growth through tipping the trade-off between the number and quality of children toward the latter.