992 resultados para Allemand, Jean-Joseph (1772-1836) -- Portraits
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Signatur des Originals: S 36/G01044
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Sign.: [ ]9, *4, [parágrafo-2parágrafo]8, 3[parágrafo]6, A-Q8, R-T4
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Sign. : A-F2, G6
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Precede al tít.: Jesus, Maria y Joseph
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La h. pleg. corresponde al arbol genealógico de la familia Ruíz y Rocamora
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fasc.3 (1900)
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Title from fly leaf 1.
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From the Introduction. Transatlantic relations have undergone significant changes within the past twenty-five years. During the Cold War era, the United States and Western Europe were bound together by a perceived common threat from the Soviet Union. Consequently, economic issues commanded less attention than security issues. After the Cold War ended, economic issues were thought to be the glue that would hold the transatlantic relationship together. Much attention was given for several years to fostering economic cooperation through the development of intergovernmental initiatives. After the terrorist incidents of September 11, 2001 in the United States, and the subsequent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, security issues again came to the forefront of the relationship. However, in contrast to the earlier era that was mainly characterized by close cooperation, disagreements between the United States and major countries of Western Europe about how to deal with the terrorist threat created severe strains in the relationship. By 2003, the third year of the George W Bush administration, transatlantic political relations had reached perhaps their lowest point since World War II. They have gradually improved since then, but with a significant setback from Wikileaks revelations, and even more serious strains resulting from the revelations by Edward Snowden concerning United States surveillance activities. Security issues have come to the forefront also in connection with regional unrest in the Middle East, EU nations’ dependence on Russian oil and gas, and Russian intrusions into Ukraine.
United States-EU Economic Relations. Jean Monnet/Robert Schuman Paper Series Vol. 14 No. 6, May 2014
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The United States and the countries comprising the European Union have dominated the global economy during the past seventy years. However, momentous change is underway. China will soon be the largest economy in the world, and other countries of the developing world are rapidly increasing in economic importance. Meanwhile, the European Union is experiencing slow growth and the United States is struggling with serious economic problems. This paper considers how the transatlantic economic relationship is likely to be affected by these circumstances, and how the US and the EU can best work together to facilitate smooth transitions in the global economy.
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A major issue in the ongoing Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) negotiations is investor-state dispute resolution as it relates to foreign investments. The United States would like to have strong investor protections similar to those of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) included in the TTIP agreement. Civil society groups on both sides of the Atlantic object to binding arbitration of investment disputes, fearing that arbitration awards could endanger environmental and other types of regulations. This paper examines the experience with investor-state dispute resolution under NAFTA to determine whether judgments rendered in these cases have had adverse effects.
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Steere in center. Left corner torn off image.
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"Second printing, April, 1928."
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David Graham Phillips: the greatest American novelist.--Eleonora Duse.--Henri Barbusse.--Lord Bryce.--George Russell (A.E.)--Mrs. Humphry Ward.--Eugene V. Debs.--Charles Schwab: the master of Bethlehem.--Prince Peter Kropotkin.--Paul Bourget.--Thomas Hardy.--Ehrlich of "606".--Louis Sullivan: a great architect.--Eugene Fromentin: the painter writer.--Sir Herbert Tree.--Flaubert and his letters.--Hatred in art: Leon Bloy.--Three generations of Morgans.--The brothers de Goncourt and realism.--Lord Hartington.--Ambassador Bernstorff.--A talk with A.E. Housman.--Paul Deschanel.--Frederic Harrison: the last of the Victorians.--Annie Besant: rebel and reformer.--John Churton Collins.--Hyndman, the communist.--Horace Traubel.--Joseph Caillaux.
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Bibliography: pages [335]-342.
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Barbier, A.A. Ouvrages anonymes,