Academic literature on the topic 'Commonwealth of Dominica'

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Journal articles on the topic "Commonwealth of Dominica"

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Gibbs, Jason. "Hylaeus (Hylaeana) dominicalis, a new species and the first colletid bee recorded from Dominica, Lesser Antilles." Journal of Melittology, no. 93 (February 21, 2020): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/jom.vi93.12054.

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A new species of colletid bee, Hylaeus (Hylaeana) dominicalis Gibbs, new species, is described and figured from the Commonwealth of Dominica. The new species can be distinguished from consubgeneric species in the Caribbean Islands based on the integumental coloration, facial fovea, and pubescence. A list of all known Hylaeus from the Caribbean Islands is provided.
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Christian, Colmore S. "Conceptualization and Realization of a National Trail in a Small Island-Nation: The Commonwealth of Dominica’s Experience." Tourism and Hospitality 2, no. 1 (January 30, 2021): 79–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp2010005.

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The island-nation of Dominica, 790 km2 in area, is located approximately 1126.5 km Southeast of Florida, USA. In the mid-1990s, Dominica embarked on developing the 183.5 km Waitukubuli National Trail (WNT), the first and only national trail model in the Eastern Caribbean. The 14-segment WNT, officially opened in May 2013, passes through some of the island’s most diverse landscapes. WNT was designed to link as many rural communities as possible and promote ecotourism and community socioeconomic development. Rehabilitation work continues on the WNT and the rest of Dominica, following the devastation caused by Hurricane Maria of 2017. This article, based primarily on a limited questionnaire survey, selected interviews, and literature review, explored the research question ‘What were the challenges faced by a small-island nation in the development of a National Trail? Five specific research objectives focused on the conceptualization, implementation challenges, partnerships fostered, national and sub-regional significance, and future outlook of the Trail were considered. Questionnaire respondents identified the island’s topography and negotiations with private landowners as significant trail construction challenges. A 100% of survey respondents anticipate that reliable funding to support timely maintenance would likely be a critical future issue. Some respondents identified marketing, public engagement, and visitor safety as potential issues. Face-to-face interviews found strong support for the WNT. The interviewees were confident that Dominica would realize sustainable socioeconomic benefits from the Trail. The article concludes with lessons learned and proposes strategies and research themes to ensure the Trail’s sustainability.
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Sommaruga, Cornelio. "Recognition of the Dominica Red Cross Society." International Review of the Red Cross 29, no. 269 (April 1989): 145–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020860400072429.

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We have the honour to inform you of the official recognition of the Dominica Red Cross Society by the International Committee of the Red Cross. This recognition, which took effect on 15 March 1989, brings to 148 the number of National Societies members of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement.The new Society applied for recognition by the International Committee of the Red Cross on 13 December 1988. In support of its application it forwarded various documents, including a report on its activities, the text of its Statutes and a copy of governmental decree No. 5/83 adopted by the House of Assembly on 7 March 1983, signed by the President of the Commonwealth of Dominica on 25 March 1983 and published in the Official Gazette on 7 April 1983. This attests that the Dominica Red Cross Society is recognized by the Government as a voluntary aid society auxiliary to the public authorities in accordance with the provisions of the First Geneva Convention of 1949.
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Emma Gaalaas Mullaney. "Carib Territory: Indigenous Access to Land in the Commonwealth of Dominica." Journal of Latin American Geography 8, no. 2 (2009): 71–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/lag.0.0062.

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Wall-Bassett, E. D., and M. E. Kunkel. "Food Security Status and Household Resources in the Commonwealth of Dominica." Journal of the American Dietetic Association 108, no. 9 (September 2008): A108. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jada.2008.06.320.

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Nugent, Alison D., and Rosimar Rios-Berrios. "Factors Leading to Extreme Precipitation on Dominica from Tropical Storm Erika (2015)." Monthly Weather Review 146, no. 2 (February 1, 2018): 525–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/mwr-d-17-0242.1.

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Abstract Tropical cyclones are generally characterized by strong rotating winds, and yet, the associated rainfall can be equally destructive. Tropical Storm Erika (2015) is an example of such a cyclone whose heavy rainfall south of the storm center was responsible for significant loss of life and property. Tropical Storm Erika was a weak tropical storm in a sheared environment that passed through the Lesser Antilles on 27 August 2015. Radar and rain gauges measured at least a half meter of rainfall on the Commonwealth of Dominica in about 5 h. In this study, an analysis of several observational datasets showed that the combination of a sheared environment, dry northern sector, and mesovortex contributed to the significant storm precipitation. The sheared environment affected the storm structure, causing it to weaken, but also organized convection and precipitation in the region that passed over Dominica. Furthermore, a mesovortex embedded within the storm persisted over Dominica, leading to enhanced rainfall totals. Understanding the factors leading to heavy rainfall for this case is important for future prediction of similar weak, sheared tropical storms passing near mountainous islands.
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Weis, Kristin, Catherine Chambers, and Patrick J. Holladay. "Social-ecological resilience and community-based tourism in the commonwealth of Dominica." Tourism Geographies 23, no. 3 (February 7, 2021): 458–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616688.2021.1878267.

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Sulton, Machel. "A Martinique Anole (Anolis roquet) Captured at Longhouse, Portsmouth, Commonwealth of Dominica." Reptiles & Amphibians 27, no. 2 (November 30, 2020): 333–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/randa.v27i2.14494.

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Christian, Colmore S., Michael P. Zamore, and Adolphus E. Christian. "Parrot conservation in a small island-nation: Case of the Commonwealth of Dominica." Human Ecology 22, no. 4 (December 1994): 495–504. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02169390.

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Pemberton, Carlisle A., Emaline Harris-Charles, and Hazel Patterson-Andrews. "Cultural bias in contingent valuation of copper mining in the Commonwealth of Dominica." Ecological Economics 70, no. 1 (November 2010): 19–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2010.03.014.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Commonwealth of Dominica"

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Fargey, Kyle Ross. "Multilateral environmental agreements in the context of sustainable development for the Commonwealth of Dominica, eastern Caribbean." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2001. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp04/MQ56124.pdf.

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Welch, Barbara Marian. "Institutional structures as a factor in land-use decisions : the impact of banana growers' associations in French and Commonwealth islands in the eastern Caribbean." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1989. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.261429.

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Cuffy, Violet Vyline. ""From womb to tomb" A comprehensive analysis of tourism education and training in the commonwealth of Dominica." Thesis, University of Surrey, 2010. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.521722.

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Laidlow, Leandra D. "GENDER DIFFERENCES IN MATHEMATICS ACHIEVEMENT: AN ANALYSIS OF THE 2003 COMMON ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS IN THE COMMONWEALTH OF DOMINICA." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2004. http://www.ohiolink.edu/etd/view.cgi?ohiou1103056911.

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Thompson, Christopher Ryals. "The Community-Based Homestay Project: A Case Study in Small-Scale Sustainable Tourism Development in the Commonwealth of Dominica." Oxford, Ohio : Miami University, 2010. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=miami1278175581.

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Wright, Regina Louise. "Women's work in tourism and agriculture, towards an understanding of food security in the Commonwealth of Dominica, West Indies." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2000. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp05/mq53044.pdf.

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Jean-Jacques, Gérard. "Power relations and good governance : a social network analysis of the evolution of the integrity in public office act in the Commonwealth of Dominica." Doctoral thesis, Université Laval, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/26874.

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La Banque mondiale propose la bonne gouvernance comme la stratégie visant à corriger les maux de la mauvaise gouvernance et de faciliter le développement dans les pays en développement (Carayannis, Pirzadeh, Popescu & 2012; & Hilyard Wilks 1998; Leftwich 1993; Banque mondiale, 1989). Dans cette perspective, la réforme institutionnelle et une arène de la politique publique plus inclusive sont deux stratégies critiques qui visent à établir la bonne gouvernance, selon la Banque et d'autres institutions de Bretton Woods. Le problème, c’est que beaucoup de ces pays en voie de développement ne possèdent pas l'architecture institutionnelle préalable à ces nouvelles mesures. Cette thèse étudie et explique comment un état en voie de développement, le Commonwealth de la Dominique, s’est lancé dans un projet de loi visant l'intégrité dans la fonction publique. Cette loi, la Loi sur l'intégrité dans la fonction publique (IPO) a été adoptée en 2003 et mis en œuvre en 2008. Cette thèse analyse les relations de pouvoir entre les acteurs dominants autour de évolution de la loi et donc, elle emploie une combinaison de technique de l'analyse des réseaux sociaux et de la recherche qualitative pour répondre à la question principale: Pourquoi l'État a-t-il développé et mis en œuvre la conception actuelle de la IPO (2003)? Cette question est d'autant plus significative quand nous considérons que contrairement à la recherche existante sur le sujet, l'IPO dominiquaise diverge considérablement dans la structure du l'IPO type idéal. Nous affirmons que les acteurs "rationnels, " conscients de leur position structurelle dans un réseau d'acteurs, ont utilisé leurs ressources de pouvoir pour façonner l'institution afin qu'elle serve leurs intérêts et ceux et leurs alliés. De plus, nous émettons l'hypothèse que: d'abord, le choix d'une agence spécialisée contre la corruption et la conception ultérieure de cette institution reflètent les préférences des acteurs dominants qui ont participé à la création de ladite institution et la seconde, notre hypothèse rivale, les caractéristiques des modèles alternatifs d'institutions de l'intégrité publique sont celles des acteurs non dominants. Nos résultats sont mitigés. Le jeu de pouvoir a été limité à un petit groupe d’acteurs dominants qui ont cherché à utiliser la création de la loi pour assurer leur légitimité et la survie politique. Sans surprise, aucun acteur n’a avancé un modèle alternatif. Nous avons conclu donc que la loi est la conséquence d’un jeu de pouvoir partisan. Cette recherche répond à la pénurie de recherche sur la conception des institutions de l'intégrité publique, qui semblent privilégier en grande partie un biais organisationnel et structurel. De plus, en étudiant le sujet du point de vue des relations de pouvoir (le pouvoir, lui-même, vu sous l’angle actanciel et structurel), la thèse apporte de la rigueur conceptuelle, méthodologique, et analytique au discours sur la création de ces institutions par l’étude de leur genèse des perspectives tant actancielles que structurelles. En outre, les résultats renforcent notre capacité de prédire quand et avec quelle intensité un acteur déploierait ses ressources de pouvoir.
The World Bank proposes good governance as the strategy to correcting the evils of bad governance and to facilitate development in developing states (Carayannis, Pirzadeh, & Popescu 2012; Hilyard & Wilks 1998; Leftwich 1993; World Bank 1989). From this perspective, institutional reform and a more inclusive public policy arena are two critical strategies that will likely lead to good governance, according to the Bank and other Bretton Woods institutions. The problem is that many of these states do not have the pre-requisite institutional architecture to accommodate such measures. This thesis studies and discusses how one developing state, the Commonwealth of Dominica, approached the development of an institution to oversee integrity in public office. This Act, the Integrity in Public Office Act (IPO) was passed in 2003 and implemented in 2008. The focus in the thesis is on power relations among dominant actors surrounding the IPO consequently, it employs a combination of social network analysis and qualitative research techniques to answer the principal question: Why did the state develop and implement the current design of the IPO (2003)? This question is all the more significant when we consider that contrary to existing research on the subject, the Dominican IPO diverges considerably in structure from the ideal-type IPO. We argue that “rational” actors, cognizant of their structural position in a network of actors, have used their power resources to shape the institution so that it serves them and their allies. We hypothesized that: First, the choice of a specialised anti-corruption agency and the subsequent design of that agency reflect the preferences of the dominant actors who were involved in the creation of the IPO and second, our rival hypothesis, the characteristics of alternative options and models of public integrity institutions are those of the non-dominant actors. Our results are mixed. Power play was limited among a small group of dominant actors who sought to use the creation of the Act as an opportunity for political legitimacy and survival. Not surprisingly, there was no alternative model advanced. We concluded therefore that the Act resulted from a purely partisan agenda. This research responds to the paucity of studies on the design of institutions of public integrity, which largely seem to have an organisational and structural bias. In addition, by embracing the topic from the perspective of power relations, the thesis adds conceptual, methodological, and analytical rigour to discourses on the creation of such institutions by studying their evolution from both agential and structural perspectives. Finally, the results offer us an opportunity to predict when and in what intensity actors will deploy their power resources.
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Bocking, Kim. "Community-based Tourism in the Commonwealth of Dominica: A Livelihoods Perspective." Thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10012/5186.

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Community-based tourism (CBT) has become an important facet in the quest for sustainable tourism. CBT is a term that has been subjected to different interpretations in the academic literature. In the field, CBT continues to be supported as an approach to improve the livelihoods of local people in communities participating in tourism. With growing interest in the sustainable livelihoods approach to development, tourism researchers have begun to examine tourism as a livelihood strategy. However, there remain few case studies that have connected the sustainable livelihoods approach and tourism. More specifically, there is limited empirical evidence exploring community-based tourism as a livelihood strategy for rural communities. This research employed an exploratory mixed methods approach to investigate community-based tourism from a livelihoods perspective. The case of the Commonwealth of Dominica was examined to address the following objectives: i) to assess the approach to the development of community-based tourism on the island of Dominica; ii) to analyze residents’ perceptions of the impacts that tourism has on their community from a livelihoods perspective; and iii) to evaluate the degree of success (or failure) of community-based tourism development in Dominica. The research findings revealed that community-based tourism is a valued component of Dominica’s national tourism strategy. Since the early nineties, community involvement has been an implicit policy in the tourism development process. More recently, government-funded initiatives have provided assistance to communities across the island to develop, implement, and market community tourism products. Additionally, this research suggests that the livelihood asset pentagon presented in the Sustainable Livelihoods Framework for Tourism (Shen, Hughey, and Simmons, 2008) is an effective organizational tool for assessing the impact of tourism on communities. Future research should be directed at applying the Sustainable Livelihoods Framework for Tourism in more diverse contexts to ensure its validity and applicability. Furthermore, there is a need to develop a comprehensive Community-based Tourism Framework to assist in the monitoring and evaluation of community-based tourism projects in the field. The main conclusion drawn from this study is that the island of Dominica is on a successful path for developing community-based tourism and it has the potential to yield a number of ‘best practice’ scenarios for the Caribbean region and the globe a like.
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Rose, Deidre. "Morality plays : popular theatre for AIDS awareness in the Commonwealth of Dominica." 2005. http://link.library.utoronto.ca/eir/EIRdetail.cfm?Resources__ID=370750&T=F.

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Fargey, Kyle Ross. "Multilateral environmental agreements in the context of sustainable development for the Commonwealth of Dominica, eastern Caribbean." 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2647.

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How is a small island developing state, such as Dominica, able to implement the multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) to which it becomes a signatory? The purpose of my research was to examine the activities of the Government of Dominica's newly established Environmental Coordinating Unit of the Ministry of Agriculture and the Environment to implement the multilateral environmental agreements (MEA). The first objective involved analyzing how Dominica attempts to fulfill the mandates of becoming a signatory to the growing number of multilateral environmental agreements. In particular, three MEA case studies were selected: (1) Climate Change, (2) Ozone Depletion, and (3) Biodiversity Conservation. My research involved performing work with Dominica's Environmental Unit in order to meet the mandates of each of these international treaties. The second objective of my research entai ed juxtaposing the experiences, opportunities and impacts from the three seemingly disparate MEA case studies, and providing commentary upon improved MEA implementation from a sustainable development perspective in Dominica, and more generally in other less developed nations. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
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Books on the topic "Commonwealth of Dominica"

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Charles, Alphonso P. Commonwealth of Dominica: The Dominica Oversea Nationals Association and me. London: Alphonso Charles Publishers, 2008.

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Dominica Export and Import Agency. Agricultural trade information booklet for the Commonwealth of Dominica. Roseau: DEXIA, 1993.

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Cassell, Augustus Livingston. Improving land registration as part of moves towards an integrated land information system for the Commonwealth of Dominica. London: PEL, 1991.

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Affairs, Canada Dept of External. Social security: Agreement on social security between the Government of Canada and the Government of the Commonwealth of Dominica. S.l: s.n, 1990.

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Dominica. National Telecommunications Regulatory Commission. Determination notice: On the recommendation of the Eastern Caribbean Telecommunications Authority ("ECTEL") to approve or disapprove a price cap plan for Cable & Wireless (West Indies) Limited ("C&W") in the Commonwealth of Dominica. [Roseau, Dominica?]: National Telecommunications Regulatory Commission, 2005.

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Dominica. National Telecommunications Regulatory Commission. Determination notice: On the recommendation of the Eastern Caribbean Telecommunications Authority ("ECTEL") to approve or disapprove a price cap plan for Cable & Wireless (West Indies) Limited ("C&W") in the Commonwealth of Dominica. [Roseau, Dominica?]: National Telecommunications Regulatory Commission, 2005.

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Dominica. National Telecommunications Regulatory Commission. Determination notice: On the recommendation of the Eastern Caribbean Telecommunications Authority ("ECTEL") to approve or disapprove a price cap plan for Cable & Wireless (West Indies) Limited ("C&W") in the Commonwealth of Dominica. [Roseau, Dominica?]: National Telecommunications Regulatory Commission, 2005.

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Trade, Canada Dept of Foreign Affairs and International. Development co-operation : general agreement between the Government of Canada and the Government of the Commonwealth of Dominica on development co-operation (with Annexes), Roseau, September 25, 1987, in force July 22, 1997 =: Coopération au développement : accord général entre le gouvernement du Canada le le gouvernement du Commonwealth de la Dominique sur la coopération au développement (avec Annexes), Roseau, le 25 septembre 1987, en vigueur le 22 juillet 1997. Ottawa, Ont: Minister of Public Works and Government Services Canada = Ministre des travaux publics et services gouvernementaux Canada, 1998.

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Labour market information bulletin: Commonwealth of Dominica. [Dominica?]: [s.n.], 1990.

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Planning as development management: Case of Commonwealth of Dominica. [Dominica]: [s.n.], 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Commonwealth of Dominica"

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Andrade, John. "Commonwealth of Dominica." In World Police & Paramilitary Forces, 57. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-07782-3_47.

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McIntyre, W. David. "Dominion Status and the 1926 Declaration." In A Guide to the Contemporary Commonwealth, 11–16. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781403900951_3.

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"No. 42528. Commonwealth of Dominica." In United Nations Treaty Series, 325–27. UN, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.18356/2690e9c0-en-fr.

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Lubin, Ian, and Luanne Serieux-Lubin. "The Commonwealth of Dominica: Education for Economic Development." In Education in the Commonwealth Caribbean and Netherlands Antilles, 166–82. Bloomsbury Publishing Inc, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781472593467.ch-010.

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"Balancing the System: Humoral Medicine and Food in the Commonwealth of Dominica." In Eating and Healing, 219–34. CRC Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781482293616-17.

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"A Report On The Status Of The Herpetofauna Of The Commonwealth Of Dominica, West Indies." In Conservation of Caribbean Island Herpetofaunas Volume 2: Regional Accounts of the West Indies, 149–66. BRILL, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004194083.i-439.57.

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Bulmer, W. Elliot. "The Crown, Prime Minister and Government." In Westminster and the World, 111–34. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781529200621.003.0007.

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This chapter reviews the earliest Westminster Model constitutions that took unambiguously monarchical forms, namely those of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa. It talks about the power that was vested in the Crown, which was an integral part of the legislature even in the post-war era. It also mentions former colonies that became independent from the British Empire and did not cease to be part of 'Her Majesty's dominions' as they continued as Commonwealth realms with the functions of the Head of State being performed by a Governor-General nominally appointed by the Queen. The chapter explains how Ireland and Burma retained Westminster Model constitutions in republican guise, with a ceremonial figurehead president that take over the functions that would normally be performed by a Governor-General. It identifies Bangladesh, Dominica, India, Ireland, Malta, Samoa, and Trinidad & Tobago as current examples of Westminster Model republics.
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"Status vis-à-vis the Host State of a Diplomatic Envoy to the United Nations (Commonwealth of Dominica v. Switzerland)." In The World Court Reference Guide and Case-Law Digest, 539–41. Brill | Nijhoff, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004261891_046.

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Brett, Annabel S. "Travelling the borderline." In Changes of State. Princeton University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691141930.003.0002.

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This chapter looks at Francisco de Vitoria and his Dominican colleagues at the Spanish School of Salamanca in the middle of the sixteenth century. They are famous for their reconstitution and redeployment of Thomas Aquinas's theory of natural law to address the new problems of the sixteenth century, problems that beset Spain along with the rest of Europe: the power of the crown both within its own commonwealth and in relation to other commonwealths, and these powers both within Europe and overseas. For the School's most celebrated member, Francisco de Vitoria, natural law is the law of reason by which all human beings are naturally governed—the law of humanity as such—and, for him as for Aquinas, it ultimately determines the legitimacy of any subsequent human institutions and laws. The chapter also considers Domingo de Soto's The deliberation in the cause of the poor, which was published in 1545.
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Lavin, Deborah. "An Irish Dominion in an International Commonwealth." In From Empire to International Commonwealth, 204–26. Oxford University Press, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198126164.003.0010.

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Conference papers on the topic "Commonwealth of Dominica"

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Kilpatrick, Shelby K. "An updated checklist of the bees of the Commonwealth of Dominica (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Anthophila)." In 2016 International Congress of Entomology. Entomological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1603/ice.2016.110399.

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Graf, Andrew J. "A survey ofOdontomachus(Hymenoptera: Formicidae) and general observations of nesting preferences in the Commonwealth of Dominica in the West Indies." In 2016 International Congress of Entomology. Entomological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1603/ice.2016.117464.

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Reports on the topic "Commonwealth of Dominica"

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Kukushkina, Nataliya. Political administrative map of the Commonwealth of Dominica. Edited by Nikolay Komedchikov and Aleksandr Khropov. Entsiklopediya, May 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.15356/dm2015-12-12-7.

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