699 resultados para Squatter sovereignty.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Appendix (33 p.) contains: Acts passed at the second session of the Fourteenth Congress.--Senators ... whose seats will become vacant 1819, 1821, 1823.--The proceedings of a session specially called on Tuesday, March 4th, 1817, including also the inaugural addresses of President James Monroe and Vice-President Daniel D. Thompkins.
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"Senators of the United States, whose seats will be vacated 1809, 1811, 1813": 1 .
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Appendix (7, [1] p.): Acts passed at the first session of the Ninth Congress.--Senators whose seats will be vacant March 1807, 1809, 1811.
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Appendix (p. [279]-284): Acts passed at the first session of the Seventh Congress.--Senators of the United States whose seats will be vacated March 1803, March 1805, March, 1807.
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"Senators ... whose seats will be vacated; 1817, 1819, 1821" and "Appendix" containing the acts passed: p. [533]-545.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Also published with title: Western scenes ; or, Life on the prairie.
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Vita.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-05
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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.
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Race is fundamental in shaping the development of Australian law just as it has played its part in other former colonies, such as the United States, where a body of critical race theory has been established on the basis of this premise. Drawing on this theory I argue that the possessive logic of patriarchal white sovereignty works ideologically to naturalise the nation as a white possession by informing and circulating a coherent set of meanings about white possession as part of common sense knowledge and socially produced conventions in the High Court's Yorta Yorta decision.