738 resultados para Celts in Asia.
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Includes bibliographical references.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Vols. 17-20 were issued each in 2 pts., which in v. 18-20 have separate t.p.; in v. 18 the parts are separately paged, and the t.p. for pt. 2 reads "Asiatic researches. Transactions of the Physical class of the Asiatic Society of Bengal."
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Ex copy has ownership stamp on t.p.: W.C. Fowler.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bibliographical footnotes.
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Hearings held Apr. 15-Aug. 13, 1970.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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v. 1. Russia, Tartary, and Turkey (pt. 1, section 1.) --v. 2. Greece, Egypt, and the Holy Land (pt. 2, section 1.) -- v. 3-4. Greece, Egypt, and the Holy Land (pt. 2, section 2.)
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"Bibliographical appendix": p. [61]-62.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"This study has been made with the cooperation of the Secretariat of the Institute of Pacific relations and constitutes a report in its International research series."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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It is commonly assumed that processes associated with globalisation are affecting the sovereignty of states. While the extent and implications of such processes may be debatable, globalisation presents even the most powerful states with new challenges to their autonomy and authority. In Southeast Asia, where the principle of sovereignty has been a crucial and jealously guarded part of regional governance structures, globalisation is an especially acute challenge for national governments. This paper examines the theoretical and policy implications of globalisation in Southeast Asia and argues that not only is globalisation threatening to unravel existing governmental practices in Southeast Asia, but that as a consequence we also need to re-think the way we understand core theoretical principles like sovereignty.