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1

The Czech Republic before the new millennium: Politics, parties and gender. Boulder [Colo.]: East European Monographs, 2003.

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2

American Bar Association. Central and East European Law Initiative. Analysis of the law about political parties and political movements of the Czech Republic. Washington, D.C: American Bar Association, 1993.

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3

Glenn, John K. International actors and democratization: US assistance to new political parties in the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Badia Fiesolana, San Domenico: European University Institute, Department of Political and Social Sciences, 1999.

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4

Elected affinities: Democracy and party competition in Slovakia and the Czech Republic. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 2006.

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5

Hanley, Sean. The new right in the new Europe: Czech transformation and right-wing politics, 1989-2006. New York, NY: Routledge, 2007.

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6

Hanley, Seán. The new right in the new Europe: Czech transformation and right-wing politics, 1989-2006. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2008.

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7

Republic, Czech. Consideration of reports submitted by states parties under article 18 of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women: Third periodic report of states parties : Czech Republic. [New York]: United Nations, 2004.

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8

Intellectuals and the Communist idea: The search for a new way in Czech lands from 1890 to 1938. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2010.

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9

Pavel, Čepický, and Prusíková Eva 1926-1994, eds. Dopisy Evě. Praha: Torst, 2003.

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10

Vostal, Jaroslav J. Health effects on particulate matter in ambient air: Proceedings of an international conference sponsored by the Air & Waste Management Association and the Czech Medical Association J.E. Purkyne, Prague, Czech Republic, April 23-25, 1997. Pittsburgh, PA: The Associations, 1998.

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11

Nekula, Marek. System der Partikeln im Deutschen und Tschechischen: Unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Abtönungspartikeln. Tübingen: Niemeyer, 1996.

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12

International Symposium on Air Pollution by Particulates (1995 Prague, Czech Republic). APP Prague, October '95: Proceedings of papers presented in Prague, October 4-6, 1995 : International Symposium on Air Pollution by Particulates, Prague, 4-6 October, 1995, Czech Republic. Edited by Tomas Josef and Stone Ian. Prague: Czech Geological Survey., 1996.

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13

Prague, Czech Republic) SPIE Optics +. Optoelectronics (2011. Laser acceleration of electrons, protons, and ions: And medical applications of laser-generated secondary sources of radiation and particles : 18-20 April 2011, Prague, Czech Republic. Bellingham, Washington: SPIE, 2011.

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14

The devil's wall: The nationalist youth mission of Heinz Rutha. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 2012.

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15

Wörter im Grenzbereich von Lexikon und Grammatik im Serbokroatischen. München, Germany: Lincom Europa, 2001.

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16

Kordić, Snježana. Riječi na granici punoznačnosti. Zagreb, Croatia: Hrvatska sveučilišna naklada, 2002.

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17

Dana, Schweigelová. 10 Czech Republic. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198808589.003.0010.

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This chapter provides an overview of the legal framework of set-off in the Czech Republic both outside and within the context of insolvency. In the Czech Republic, set-off rights are regulated exclusively by statutory law. General regulations on set-off arrangements are laid down in Sections 1982–1991 of the Czech Civil Code. Other laws relevant to set-off are the Business Corporations Act, the Capital Markets Act, the Financial Collateral Act, and the Act on Insolvency. The chapter first examines set-off between solvent parties, taking into account general regulations, specific regulations under the Business Corporations Act, contractual set-off involving multiple parties, and special regulatory regimes governing set-off in the Czech Republic. It then considers set-off between insolvent parties before concluding with an analysis of set-off issues arising in the cross-border context.
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18

(Editor), Kay Lawson, Andrea Rommele (Editor), and Georgi Karasimeonov (Editor), eds. Cleavages, Parties, and Voters: Studies from Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Romania (Political Parties in Context). Praeger Publishers, 1999.

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19

Kay, Lawson, Römmele Andrea 1967-, and Karasimeonov Georgi, eds. Cleavages, parties, and voters: Studies from Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Romania. Westport, Conn: Praeger, 1999.

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20

Kelly, T. Mills. Without Remorse: Czech National Socialism in Late-Habsburg Austria (East European Monographs). East European Monographs, 2006.

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21

Kopecky, Petr. Parliaments in the Czech and Slovak Republics: Party Competition and Parliamentary Institutionalization. Ashgate Publishing, 2001.

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22

The New Right in the New Europe: Czech Transformation and Right-Wing Politics, 19892006 (Basees/Routledge Series on Russian and East European Studies). Routledge, 2007.

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23

Chmelar, Kristina. Nichts Als Die Wahrheit: Eine Diskursanalytische Studie Zur Geschichtspolitik der Tschechischen Buergerlich-Demokratischen Partei. Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, Peter, 2013.

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24

Chmelar, Kristina. Nichts Als Die Wahrheit: Eine Diskursanalytische Studie Zur Geschichtspolitik der Tschechischen Buergerlich-Demokratischen Partei. Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, Peter, 2012.

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25

Bergman, Torbjörn, Gabriella Ilonszki, and Wolfgang C. Müller, eds. Coalition Governance in Central Eastern Europe. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198844372.001.0001.

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Coalitions among political parties govern most of Europe’s parliamentary democracies. Traditionally, the study of coalition politics has been focused on Western Europe. Coalition governance in Central Eastern Europe brings the study of the full coalition life-cycle to a region that has undergone tremendous political transformation, but which has not been studied from this perspective. The volume covers Bulgaria, Estonia, the Czech Republic, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia. It provides information and analyses of the cycle, from pre-electoral alliances to coalition formation and portfolio distribution, governing in coalitions, the stages that eventually lead to a government termination, and the electoral performance of coalition parties. In Central Eastern Europe, few single-party cabinets form and there have been only a few early elections. The evidence provided shows that coalition partners in the region write formal agreements (coalition agreements) to an extent that is similar to the patterns that we find in Western Europe, but also that they adhere less closely to these contracts. While the research on Western Europe tends to stress that coalition partners emphasize coalition compromise and mutual supervision, there is more evidence of ‘ministerial government’ by individual ministers and ministries. There are also a few coalition governance systems that are heavily dominated by the prime minister. No previous study has covered the full coalition life-cycle in all of the ten countries with as much detail. Systematic information is presented in 10 figures and in more than one hundred tables.
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26

), Kowalczyk Krzysztof (1971, and Tomczak Łukasz (1969 ), eds. Czechy, Polska, Ukraina: Partie i systemy partyjne : stan i perspektywy. Toruń: Wydawnictwo Adam Marszałek, 2007.

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27

Karakoç, Ekrem. Inequality After the Transition. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198826927.001.0001.

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This book provides empirical evidence showing that most new democracies either maintain the level of income inequality they inherited or even increase it over time. It then asks why new democracies do not generate income equality. Unlike previous studies, it directly analyzes the relationship between inequality and democracy by focusing on the trajectory of inequality after the transition to democracy. It challenges basic premises in the democratization–inequality studies and offers a new theory. It investigates the roots of change in social policy programs in Poland and the Czech Republic in Postcommunist Europe and Turkey and Spain in Southern Europe. It traces the origins and development of social policy, from the formation of nation-states to the present, and considers how different political regimes, whether totalitarian; post-totalitarian; or authoritarian, designed welfare policies to prioritize civil servants and the working classes in formal sectors at the expense of the majority poor, including the working poor in informal sectors. It then demonstrates how these legacies perpetuate and widen disparities in access to welfare policies, and thus income inequality in countries where low mobilization by the poor and unstable party systems prevail. It adopts a multimethod approach in which it uses large-N multivariate analysis, paired case studies, and process-tracing method. It employs interviews with Polish, Czech, Turkish, and Spanish union leaders; bureaucrats and business people while also conducting an original survey in Turkey to dissect the linkage between organized groups and parties.
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28

Trnka, Susanna. Traversing. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501749223.001.0001.

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This book is about our ways of seeing, experiencing, and moving through the world and how they shape the kinds of people we become. Drawing from concepts developed by two phenomenological philosophers, Martin Heidegger and Jan Patočka, and putting them in conversation with ethnographic analysis of the lives of contemporary Czechs, the book examines how embodiment is crucial for understanding our being-in-the-world. In particular, the book scrutinizes three kinds of movements we make as embodied actors in the world: how we move through time and space, be it by walking along city streets, gliding across the dance floor, or clicking our way through digital landscapes; how we move toward and away from one another, as erotic partners, family members, or fearful, ethnic “others”; and how we move toward ourselves and the earth we live on. Above all, the book focuses on tracing the ways in which the body and motion are fundamental to our lived experience of the world, so we can develop a better understanding of the empirical details of Czech society and what they can reveal to us about the human condition.
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29

Willumsen, David M. Perceptions of Party Unity in the Visegrád Countries. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198805434.003.0005.

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This chapter analyses the four Visegrád countries (the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia) in the early 1990s, as a least-likely case of party influence on legislators. First measuring incentives to defect based on policy preferences, it is found that these are relatively low, but, as expected, substantially greater than in the Nordic case, and certainly greater than the observed unity. Analysing attitudes to unity, it is found that, as in the Nordic countries, unity is driven by legislators’ understanding that their long-term goals are best served by belonging to a united parliamentary party. Further analysing legislators’ answers to survey questions regarding the costs and benefits of belonging to a parliamentary party, it shows that legislators focus on the collective goods that being in a parliamentary party brings, and are much less interested in the more individualistic benefits, even in a setting very unfavourable to strong parties.
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30

Balcerzak, Adam P., and Ilona Pietryka, eds. 11th International Conference on Applied Economics Contemporary Issues in Economy. Institute of Economic Research, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24136/eep.abs.2021.1.

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The book contains abstracts submitted to 11th International Conference on Applied Economics Contemporary Issues in Economy, Poland 17-18 June 2021. The conference was organized by Institute of Economic Research (Poland), Polish Economic Society Branch in Toruń (Poland), Faculty of Economic Sciences, University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn (Poland) in partnership with: Brno University of Technology (Czech Republic), “Constantin Brancusi” University of Targu-Jiu, Center of Fundamental and Applied Economic Studies (Romania), Lobachevsky State University of Nizhni Novgorod, Institute of Economics and Entrepreneurship (Russian Federation), Lviv Polytechnic National University (Ukraine), Pablo de Olavide University (Spain), Tomas Bata University in Zlín, Faculty of Economics and Management (Czech Republic), University of Economics in Bratislava, Faculty of Economic Informatics (Slovakia), University of Entrepreneurship and Law (Czech Republic), University of Zilina, Faculty of Operation and Economics of Transport and Communication (Slovakia), VilniusTech University, Faculty of Business Management (Lithuania), Vytautas Magnus University, Faculty of Economics and Management (Lithuania). European Regional Science Association. Polish Section, Slovak Society for Operations Research were scientific institutional partners of the conference. The conference was especially addressed to economist from all European Union countries and Eastern Europe. Main conference tracks included: a) economics and finance b) quantitative methods d) entrepreneurship and management.
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31

Tullio, Scovazzi. 6 Responsibility, 6.4 Admissibility of the Application by Vlastimir and Borka Banković, Živana Stojanović, Mirjana Stoimenovski, Dragana Koksimović, and Dragan Suković against Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Turkey, and the United Kingdom , European Court of Human Rights, Grand Chamber Decision, [2001]. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198743620.003.0032.

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The Bankovic case is one of few cases in which the European Court of Human Rights took a position that, without an acceptable explanation, restricts the application of rights granted by the European Convention on Human Rights. The application was submitted by individuals who put forward that in 1999 seventeen states parties violated art. 2 (right to life) of the Convention by bombing by aircraft the television and radio station in Belgrade. As a consequence of this NATO directed operation sixteen civilians were killed and another sixteen were seriously injured. The Court found that it had no jurisdiction to entertain the case, as at that time Yugoslavia was not a party to the Convention. The Court gave a too restrictive interpretation of the word ‘jurisdiction’ to basically conclude that the Convention applies only within the territory of states parties. The Bankovic decision has been contradicted by subsequent judgments.
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32

Rinas, Karsten. Die Abtonungspartikeln Doch Und Ja: Semantik, Idiomatisierung, Kombinationen, Tschechische Aquivalente (Europaische Hochschulschriften: Reihe 21, Linguistik). Peter Lang Publishing, 2006.

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33

(Editor), J. Adam, P. Bydzovsky (Editor), and J. Mares (Editor), eds. Mesons and Light Nuclei: 8th Conference, Prague, Czech Republic, 2-6 July 2001 (AIP Conference Proceedings). American Institute of Physics, 2001.

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34

Aleksandrova, Anna K., ed. Essays on the Political history of the Countries of Central and south-Eastern Europe. From the Late Twentieth to the Early Twenty-First Centuries. Nestor-Istoriia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2712-8342.2020.1.

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This collective monograph is a comprehensive study of the causes, evolution and outcomes of complex processes in the contemporary history of the countries of Central and South-Eastern Europe, and aims in particular to identify common and special characteristics in their socio-economic and political development. The authors base their work on documentary evidence; both published and unpublished archival materials reveal the specifics of the development of the political landscapes in these countries. They highlight models combining both European and nationally oriented (and even nationalist) components of the political spheres of particular countries; identify markers which allow the stage of completion (or incompletion) of the establishment of a new political system to be estimated; and present analyses of the processes of internal political struggle, which has often taken on ruthless forms. The analysis of regional and country-specific documentary materials illustrates that the gap in the development of the region with “old Europe” in general has not yet been overcome: in the post-Socialist period, the situation of the region being “ownerless” and “abandoned”, characteristic of the period between the two world wars, is reoccurring. The authors conclude that during the period from the late twentieth to the early twenty-first centuries, the region was quite clearly divided into two parts: Central (the Visegrad Four) and South-Eastern (the Balkans) Europe. The authors explore the prevailing trends in the political development of Hungary and Poland related to the leadership of nationally and religiously oriented parties; in the Czech Republic and Slovakia the pendulum-like change in power of the left and right-wing parties; and in Bulgaria and Romania the domestic political processes permanently in crisis. The authors pay special attention to the contradictory nature of the political evolution of the states that emerged in the space of the former Yugoslavia. For the first time, Greece and Turkey are included in the context of a regional-wide study. The contributors present optimal or resembling transformational models, which can serve as a prototype for shaping the political landscape of other countries in the world. The monograph substantiates the urgency of the new approach needed to study the history and current state of the region and its countries, taking into account the challenges of the time, which require strengthening national and state identity. The research also offered prognostic characteristics of transformational changes in the region, the Visegrad Four, and the Balkans.
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35

1957-, Adam J., ed. Mesons and light nuclei '98: Proceedings of the 7th conference, Prague-Průhonice, Czech Republic, 31 August-4 September 1998. Singapore: World Scientific, 1999.

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36

Underhill, James W., Mariarosaria Gianninoto, and Mariarosaria Gianninoto. Migrating Meanings. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9780748696949.001.0001.

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Exploring the roots of four keywords for our times: Europe, the citizen, the individual, and the people, Mariarosaria Gianninoto’s and James Underhill’s Migrating Meanings (2019) takes a broad view of conceptualization by taking on board various forms of English, (Scottish, American, and English), as well as other European languages (German, French, Spanish & Czech), and incorporating in-depth contemporary and historical accounts of Mandarin Chinese. The corpus-based research leads the authors to conclude that the English keywords are European concepts with roots in French and parallel traditions in German. But what happens to Chinese words when they come into contact with migrating meanings from Europe? How are existing concepts like the people transformed? This book goes beyond the cold analysis of concepts to scrutinize the keywords that move people and get them excited about individual rights and personal destinies. With economic, political and cultural globalisation, our world is inseparable from the fates of other nations and peoples. But how far can we trust English to provide us with a reliable lingua franca to speak about our world? If our keywords reflect our cultures and form parts of specific cultural and historical narratives, they may well trace the paths we take together into the future. This book helps us to understand how other languages are adapting to English words, and how their worldviews resist ‘anglo-concepts’ through their own traditions, stories and worldviews.
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37

Cornwall, Mark. Devil's Wall. Harvard University Press, 2012.

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