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1

Eisenbeis, Robert A. Agency problems and goal conflicts. [Atlanta, Ga.]: Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, 2004.

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2

McCreless, Mike. Agency conflicts among social investors. Cambridge, Mass: John F. Kennedy School of Government, 2010.

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3

Albuquerque, Rui. Agency conflicts, investment, and asset pricing. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007.

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4

Albuquerque, Rui. Agency conflicts, investment, and asset pricing. Cambridge, Mass: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007.

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5

Gan, Yingjin Hila. Agency conflicts, asset substitution, and securitization. Cambridge, Mass: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2006.

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6

Chakravarty, Sugato. Can competition between brokers mitigate agency conflicts with their customers. [New York, N.Y.]: Federal Reserve Bank of New York, 1997.

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7

Fulghieri, Paolo. Synergies and internal agency conflicts: The double-edged sword of mergers. Fontainebleau: INSEAD, 1997.

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8

Fulghieri, P. Synergies and internal agency conflicts: The double-edged sword of mergers. France: INSEAD, 1997.

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9

United States. Congress. House. Committee on Economic and Educational Opportunities. Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. Hearing, conflicts and inconsistencies in workplace regulations: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations of the Committee on Economic and Educational Opportunities , House of Representatives, One Hundred Fourth Congress, first session, hearing held in Washington, DC, April 4, 1995. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1995.

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10

Reconciling Indonesia: Grassroots agency for peace. New York, NY: Routledge, 2009.

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11

Conflict policy and advertising agency-client relations: The problem of competing clients sharing a common agency. Hanover, MA: Now Publishers, 2012.

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12

G, Euclides Jaime. Problemas de la representación en el derecho internacional privado. [Bogotá?: s.n., 1989.

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13

Baldi, Roberto. Il contratto di agenzia: La concessione di vendita, il franchising. 7th ed. Milano: A. Giuffrè, 2001.

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14

Office, General Accounting. Operation Desert Storm: Limits on the role and performance of B-52 bombers in conventional conflicts : report to Congressional requesters. Washington, D.C: U.S. General Accounting Office, 1993.

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15

Bellis, Saverio De. L'intermediazione in diritto internazionale privato. Bari: Cacucci, 2005.

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16

Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress), ed. Conflict of interest. New York: Silhouette Books, 2003.

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17

T.M.C. Asser Instituut., ed. Agency in private international law: The Hague Convention on the Law Applicable to Agency. Dordrecht: M. Nijhoff, 1995.

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18

Art and visibility in migratory culture: Conflict resistance, and agency. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2011.

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19

Laurent, Baregu Mwesiga, and SAPES Trust, eds. The conflict matrix and research agenda. Mount Pleasant, Harare, Zimbabwe: SAPPHO Books, 2000.

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20

Knöchlein, Gerhard. Stellvertretung und Insichgeschäft: Die Gestaltung der Zulässigkeit im deutschen, österreichischen und schweizerischen Zivil- und Gesellschaftsrecht : das Insichgeschäft im Spannungsfeld zwischen den Interessen auf Schutz des Vertretenen und des Rechtsverkehrs an Sicherheit. Wien: Manz, 1994.

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21

Die rechtsgeschäftliche und organschaftliche Stellvertretung und deren kollisionsrechtliche Einordnung: Deutschland und England im Vergleich. Frankfurt am Main: P. Lang, 2004.

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22

Venrooy, Gerd J. van. Die Anknüpfung der Kaufmannseigenschaft im deutschen internationalen Privatrecht. Heidelberg: R.v. Decker & C.F. Müller, 1985.

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23

Conflict and arms control: An uncertain agenda. London: Routledge, 2018.

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24

R, Viotti Paul, ed. Conflict and arms control: An uncertain agenda. Boulder: Westview Press, 1986.

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25

Ramcharan, Bertrand, and Robin Ramcharan. Conflict Prevention in the UN´s Agenda 2030. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-36510-3.

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26

Hakena, Helen. NGOs and Post-Conflict Recovery: The Leitana Nehan Women?s Development Agency, Bougainville. Canberra: ANU Press, 2006.

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27

Maendeleo ya Wanawake (Organization : Nairobi, Kenya), ed. Women & conflict: Strengthening the agenda for peacebuilding in Kenya. Nairobi, Kenya: Maendeleo Ya Wanawake Organisation, 2011.

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28

Bryden, Alan. Shaping a security governance agenda in post-conflict peacebuilding. Geneva: Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces, 2005.

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29

1939-, Wiarda Howard J., ed. On the agenda: Current issues and conflicts in U.S. foreign policy. Glenview, Ill: Scott, Foresman/Little, Brown Higher Education, 1990.

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30

Tessier, Catherine, Laurent Chaudron, and Heinz Jürgen Müller. Conflicting agents: Conflict management in multi-agent systems. New York: Kluwer Academic, 2002.

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31

Kiblinger, William P., ed. Human Conflict from Neanderthals to the Samburu: Structure and Agency in Webs of Violence. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-46824-8.

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32

Milano, Elías Jaua. Venezuela Siglo XXI: Transformación, conflicto y agenda para el porvenir. Caracas: Editorial Trinchera, 2021.

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33

Hybrid forms of peace: From everyday agency to post-liberalism. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.

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34

Walker, Rebecca. Conflicts of Interest in Business and the Professionals: Law and Compliace. Not Avail, 2007.

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35

Patterson, Eric. Victory and the Ending of Conflicts. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198801825.003.0007.

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Scholars and political leaders have recently grown increasingly uncomfortable with terms like victory and ‘unconditional surrender’. One reason for this becomes clear when reconsidering the concept of ‘victory’ in terms of ethics and policy in times of war. The just war tradition emphasizes limits and restraint in the conduct of war but also highlights state agency, the rule of law, and appropriate war aims in its historic tenets of right authority, just cause, and right intention. Indeed, the establishment of order and justice are legitimate war aims. Should we not also consider them exemplars, or markers, of just victory? This chapter discusses debates over how conflicts end that have made ‘victory’ problematic and evaluates how just war principles—including jus post bellum principles—help define a moral post-conflict situation that is not just peace, but may perhaps be called ‘victory’ as well.
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36

US GOVERNMENT. Hearing, conflicts and inconsistencies in workplace regulations: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations of the Committee on Economic ... held in Washington, DC, April 4, 1995. For sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., Congressional Sales Office, 1995.

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37

Government contractors: Selected agencies' efforts to identify organizational conflicts of interest : report to congressional committees. Washington, D.C. (P.O. Box 37050, Washington 20013): U.S. General Accounting Office, 1995.

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38

Callard, Agnes. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Conflict. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190639488.003.0004.

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In an “extrinsic” conflict, an agent’s desires pull her toward incompatible actions. As a matter of contingent fact, nothing she does will get her everything she wants. Intrinsically conflicted agents are conflicted at the level of value, and this means that the conflict fractures the agent’s evaluative point of view: in order to get the appeal of one of the things she wants fully in view, she must step out of the point of view from which the other appears attractive. For this reason, the conflict cannot be resolved by deliberation as to which side is better overall. Harry Frankfurt is wrong to think that such conflicts are resolved by identifying with one side and externalizing the other. In fact, they cannot be resolved by any single, momentary act of the will: it takes time to work one’s way into a point of view. We resolve intrinsic conflicts by aspiring.
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39

Henning, C. Randall. Lessons and Conclusions. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198801801.003.0012.

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The concluding chapter draws on the seven program cases to answer questions that were posed at the outset of the study. It explains in particular the choice of the institutional mix for countries’ financial rescues: Euro-area member states wished to involve the IMF because their preferences diverged from those of the European Commission. Regime complexity is thus the consequence of states’ strategies to control agency drift. The choice of the institutions also inhered in the diversity of preferences among member states and in unanimous decision-making within the euro area. This argument, unlike other explanations, helps to explain why Germany adhered to the IMF despite sharp substantive conflicts on particular points of program design and why heated conflicts among the institutions did not lead to the demise of the troika. The chapter also recommends institutional reforms to prepare for the next crisis and proposes an agenda for future research on regime complexity.
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40

Callard, Caroline. Spectralities in the Renaissance. Translated by Trista Selous. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198849476.001.0001.

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A major contribution of this work is to characterize the ‘spectral moment’ of early modernity. Two developments in the sixteenth century characterize this moment in particular: the presence of ghosts as an autonomous rhetorical commonplace freed from the confines of theology or votive literature, and the striking epistemological promotion of ghosts as objects of a knowledge legitimised by natural philosophy. By highlighting the ‘spectral moment’ of early modernity, Spectralities in the Renaissance foregrounds the agency of ghosts particularly in property disputes over haunted houses as they were tried before civil courts in Paris, Tours and Bordeaux. Ghosts in these cases did not simply appear as products of their dire and distressing times but rather they had an active role in the resolution of conflicts. Conflicts over haunted houses occurred within both communities (Protestant and Catholic) and families at a time of civil war. And they involved both lay and religious powers, who strove sometimes to confirm their jurisdiction over these affairs and sometimes to thwart the actions of spectral agents. The chronology of this book’s enquiry stops on the brink of trials for superstition conducted against ghosts, by the middle of the seventeenth century. At that precise moment ghosts lost their agency in justice and their very existential substance. A concluding chapter considers the consequences of this pragmatic history of ghosts for the Enlightenment and beyond.
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41

Ing, Michael D. K. Irresolvable Value Conflicts in a Conflictual World. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190679118.003.0006.

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This chapter reveals that early Confucians saw irresolvable value conflicts as real possibilities. It starts with an overview of the ways in which contemporary scholars have described Confucianism in terms of harmony and the lack of tragedy. It then challenges these narratives by looking at several vignettes that depict moral agents confronting irresolvable value conflicts. This chapter also analyzes the notion of tragedy in an early Confucian worldview to show that early Confucians did not see values as necessarily conflicting with each other, although they accepted the possibility of tragic conflict. This means that early Confucians recognized the complexities of life such that even the highly skilled moral agent (i.e., a sage) could encounter a situation where the values at stake were incapable of being harmonized, but, at the same time, the Confucian moral agent did not see the world as necessitating conflict. The Confucian conflictual world is one of possible incongruity, where minor value conflicts may even be inevitable given the complexities of life, but values in the abstract sense are not thought to be in conflict in and of themselves. In this light, deep value conflicts such as those discussed in this chapter may rarely occur, but the fact that they can occur, and that they can occur for even the most profound people, is significant in forecasting the sentiments people have about the world they live in.
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42

Zarkov, Dubravka. From Women and War to Gender and Conflict? Edited by Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, Naomi Cahn, Dina Francesca Haynes, and Nahla Valji. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199300983.013.3.

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This chapter charts a brief history of the conceptual tools used to understand gender relations with respect to wars and armed conflicts. The chapter begins by summarizing some of the dominant theories of second wave feminism, including radical feminism, liberal feminism, black, lesbian and Third World feminism. It explores critiques of feminist theory, as well as the roles of equality and agency in feminist studies on women and war, the tensions between Western feminism and feminism outside of the West, and the impact of a constructivist analytical lens on feminist scholarship. It depicts how specific violent conflicts influenced feminist thinking in the 1990s and the early 2000s, tracing a genealogy from genocide in Rwanda and the war in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to 9/11 and the War on Terror.
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43

Okasha, Samir. Genes and Groups as Agents. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198815082.003.0003.

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In some applications of agential thinking in evolutionary biology, genes and groups, rather than individuals, are the entities that are treated as agents with goals. The genes-as-agents concept is applicable only in cases of intra-genomic conflict, where it helps to make sense of the phenotypic consequences of such conflict. The groups-as-agents concept is applicable only when groups are adapted units, and where within-group conflict is either absent or suppressed; for otherwise the unity-of-purpose constraint on agency will not be satisfied. The idea of group agency has also arisen in social science, where the discussion closely parallels the biological discussion. In both cases, the critical issue is how individuals’ interests can be aligned with that of their group. One such alignment mechanism is the veil-of-ignorance, which deprives individuals of the information needed to pursue their self-interest at the group’s expense.
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44

Bräuchler, Birgit. Reconciling Indonesia: Grassroots Agency for Peace. Taylor & Francis Group, 2009.

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45

Bräuchler, Birgit. Reconciling Indonesia: Grassroots Agency for Peace. Taylor & Francis Group, 2009.

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46

Bräuchler, Birgit. Reconciling Indonesia: Grassroots Agency for Peace. Taylor & Francis Group, 2009.

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47

Wilkes, Annette. Honour, Mana, and Agency in Polynesian-European Conflict. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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48

Wilkes, Annette. Honour, Mana, and Agency in Polynesian-European Conflict. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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49

Honour Mana and Agency in Polynesian-European Conflict. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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50

Wilkes, Annette. Honour, Mana, and Agency in Polynesian-European Conflict. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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