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1

Doyle, W. "Daily Life during the French Revolution." French Studies 62, no. 3 (July 1, 2008): 343. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/fs/knn003.

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Cody, Francis. "Daily Wires and Daily Blossoms: Cultivating Regimes of Circulation in Tamil India's Newspaper Revolution." Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 19, no. 2 (December 2009): 286–309. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-1395.2009.01035.x.

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3

Weber, Harold, C. John Sommerville, and Joad Raymond. "The News Revolution in England: Cultural Dynamics of Daily Information." American Historical Review 103, no. 5 (December 1998): 1589. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2650009.

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Robson, Ann. "The News Revolution in England: Cultural Dynamics of Daily Information." History: Reviews of New Books 25, no. 4 (July 1997): 159. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03612759.1997.9952887.

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Raymond, Joad, and C. John Sommerville. "The News Revolution in England: Cultural Dynamics of Daily Information." Albion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies 30, no. 2 (1998): 297. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4053554.

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종숙민. "South China-South Seas、The Taiwan Daily、Taiwan Sekimin、Xinhai Revolution." Journal of Seokdang Academy ll, no. 52 (March 2012): 111–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.17842/jsa.2012..52.111.

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7

Munteanu, Paula, and Laurențiu Ciornei. "The impact of business digitization on the three pillars of sustainable development." Proceedings of the International Conference on Business Excellence 14, no. 1 (July 1, 2020): 343–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/picbe-2020-0033.

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AbstractThe world is currently facing great challenges generated by the fourth industrial revolution. If the first three major industrial revolutions took place over several centuries, the current revolution, in full swing, is characterized by an alert rhythm, having an exponential evolution, rather than a linear one. Many specialists consider that this is a continuation of the third industrial revolution, started in the sixties of the last century, but the permanent need to adapt and change the business models that characterize daily life determines us to appreciate that they represent the elements of a new, unusual revolution, which will greatly change the face of humanity. Digital technology will bring about essential changes in business, social organization and even current governance models. In this sense, we will approach the digitization of the business from the perspective of the three pillars, social, economic and environment, to conclude to what extent, this new and last revolution adheres to the principles of sustainable development. In this study, we aim to analyze the economic links between the digitization of business and sustainable development in Romania, through an econometric analysis. The results of the econometric analysis will determine to what extent the defining elements of sustainable development will be influenced by this phenomenon. Furthermore, we would like undeline that the fourth industrial revolution, by digitizing business, will affect the three pillars of sustainable development, without mitigation measures which the decision makers should consider, amplifying the phenomenon of social inequity, deepening economic imbalances as a result of the polarization of economic activities, concentrated only in certain regions and irreparably affecting the environment and natural balance, becoming a danger to biodiversity conservation.
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Suh, Sungeun. "Fashion Everydayness as a Cultural Revolution in Social Media Platforms—Focus on Fashion Instagrammers." Sustainability 12, no. 5 (March 5, 2020): 1979. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12051979.

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This study qualitatively analyzes the phenomenon of fashion everydayness as a cultural revolution in the digital space as everyday life continues to expand into digital platforms. The analysis proceeded in four perspectives based on Lefebvre’s theoretical framework: the festivalization of everyday life, the artification of everyday life, the holistic stylization of everyday life, and cultural revolution as a daily practice. Instagram, the case for this study and the most popular image-centric social network, leads the digital aesthetics paradigm through creative acts that weave fashion into the daily life of the individual. The study focuses on three fashion mega-influencers whose successful careers began with blogs documenting their daily lives. The analysis showed that Instagram, as a social platform, is a creative space for sharing everyday life with its appropriation of time and space. In there, fashion visualizes the look of the everyday beyond the boundaries of time and space. In practice, it suggests a digital cultural revolution: a composite lifestyle expressive of various tastes and styles—a vital medium to inspire and sustain fashion everydayness. This has implications that the information and communication technology of the digital age created a new cultural space and that daily visualization through fashion will eventually produce sustainable cultural contents.
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Selim, Samah. "Literature and Revolution." International Journal of Middle East Studies 43, no. 3 (July 26, 2011): 385–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020743811000456.

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The three-week uprising in Egypt that ended with the removal of Husni Mubarak on February 11 happened to coincide with the section of my spring course syllabus on the Egyptian novel from Najib Mahfuz to Ahmed Alaidy. As was the case for many of my colleagues and their students, the rapid and awe-inspiring events unfolding daily before us pushed purely academic concerns to the margins of class discussion. This tidal wave of revolutionary politics erupting into the classroom forced me to the realization that my larger syllabus was not simply some neutral or systematic survey of half a century's worth of Arabic literature. I began to think about the largely invisible dystopic intellectual and historical paradigms through which modern Arabic literature is often framed, at least in the United States. The nahḍa/naksa narrative, which compelled many of us to read Arab cultural history of the 20th century as a story of brief “awakening” followed by irredeemable decline and corruption, is clearly no longer tenable in the wake of February 11. This same narrative underpinned the highly self-conscious postmodernism that began to emerge in Egypt in the 1990s and that reached its apogee a couple of decades later at the end of the 2000s, a postmodernism that was celebrated (though by no means universally) as the true beginning of literary modernity and the emancipation of the subject from the dead weight of a past ideological age.
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Knott, Nigel. "A tale of two dentures." Faculty Dental Journal 7, no. 2 (April 2016): 68–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1308/rcsfdj.2016.68.

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While many dentists and their patients have gained enormous benefits from the digital revolution that is transforming our daily lives, the benefits in surgery may not be quite so obvious. Yet. We are nevertheless on the threshold of a dramatic manufacturing revolution in which digitised technology and additive manufacturing have the potential to transform prosthodontics in general and the lives of toothless patients in particular.
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Gómez-Galvarriato, Aurora, and Gabriela Recio. "The Indispensable Service of Banks: Commercial Transactions, Industry, and Banking in Revolutionary Mexico." Enterprise & Society 8, no. 1 (March 2007): 68–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1467222700008788.

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Revolutions have important social, political, and economic consequences with which entrepreneurs have to cope to keep their businesses going. This may involve high transaction costs due to the violence that emerges as a result of armed conflicts. In this article we examine the effect that the Mexican Revolution (1910-1920) had on the banking sector and ultimately on bank clients, since revolutionary policies forced most banks to close their doors from 1915 to 1921. By focusing on a major textile firm, the Compañía Industrial Veracruzana, S.A., we observe that companies used nonchartered banks, which spread in the absence of government regulation, and foreign financial institutions, so that daily business operations could continue amidst the revolutionary upheavals.
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12

Finley, Thomas K. "The Democratization of Artificial Intelligence: One Library’s Approach." Information Technology and Libraries 38, no. 1 (March 18, 2019): 8–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.6017/ital.v38i1.10974.

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This article argues that the current technological revolution that is happening in Artificial Intelligence is not just about its prevalence in daily life, but the real revolution is about the emergence of AI tools that may help to democratize its use. Lowering the barrier to a technology that is perceived more as science fiction than accessible for mass utilization. A Public Library shares its approach in leveraging available tools to enable AI education for all.
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Krotenko, T. Yu, and M. B. Zhernakova. "MANAGER’S COMPETENCIES OF THE DIGITAL REVOLUTION ERA." Vestnik Universiteta, no. 5 (June 10, 2019): 23–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.26425/1816-4277-2019-5-23-26.

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The society is steadily moving towards digitalization. To implement the transformations planned for most sectors of the economy, the well-functioning of the already formulated managerial competencies is required. At the same time, it is difficult to imagine a “step into the future” without additional efforts in this direction. According to the authors, there is an urgent need to develop new “profiles of success” − cross-professional complexes of knowledge and skills, and then – their optimal implementation in the daily activities of specialists. Competencies evolve quickly, therefore, each manager is required additional responsibility-to monitor the effectiveness of their competencies and update them in accordance with the requirements of time.
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Isa, Khairunesa, Nurliyana Rosni, and Sarala Thulasi Palpanadan. "MALAYSIAN UNIVERSITY STUDENTS’ PERCEPTIONS AND KNOWLEDGE LEVEL OF INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION 4.0." Academy of Education Journal 12, no. 2 (July 1, 2021): 169–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.47200/aoej.v12i2.571.

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Nowadays, humans live in a world of industrial revolution 4.0 that leads to many changes in daily life including in the context of employment and education. In order to endure the changes that exist, various challenges have to be faced and this situation requires sufficient preparation for youngsters especially students as they are the backbone of the country's development. Thus, this study was conducted to the examine students' perceptions of industrial revolution 4.0 and the level of students' knowledge in terms of the revolution. This quantitative study using survey technique was carried out on 173 students from three clusters of Malaysian public universities which were the research university, Focus University and comprehensive university. The findings showed that student perception and level of knowledge on industrial revolution 4.0 were low. However, the respondents were found to be willing to improve their knowledge and other skills related to the Industrial Revolution 4.0 demand. The findings were hoped to motivate the academic system to enhance their strategy and approach to prepare students towards industrial revolution needs
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Schlienger, M. Eric. "Popcorn, Diffraction and the Computer Revolution." Microscopy Today 2, no. 9 (December 1994): 3–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1551929500067584.

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As is the case with many other aspects of our lives here in the twilight years of the twentieth century, the computer is having an evermore pervasive role in the daily endeavors of the electron microscopist. And as I contemplate the little button on the microwave that allows me to burn popcorn the exact same way, time after time, I am led to wonder “where is it all going?”…the technology that is. I know where the burnt popcorn will end up. Whether we like it or not, the computer is a tool that can drastically improve our productivity, and typically such productivity gains occur precisely within those tasks where mistakes are the most likely to creep in, to wit: the mundane and repetitive.As an example, consider the task of indexing a diffraction pattern for a known crystal. In the far distant and superstitious past of the mid to late 1960's, this task required all sorts of strange alchemy.
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16

Verhoeven, Gerrit. "Fashionably late? Time, work and the industrious revolution in early modern Antwerp (1585–1795)." Continuity and Change 35, no. 3 (December 2020): 255–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0268416020000260.

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AbstractDrawing evidence from the proceedings of the Antwerp hoogere Vierschaer (the local criminal court), the article challenges some key features from Jan de Vries’ hypothesis of the Industrious Revolution. Mesmerised by an endless variety of fashionable and exotic consumer goods, eighteenth-century people would have slashed their leisure time in a variety of ways. Labour input would have been forced up on a daily, weekly and annual base. However, time-budget analysis of Antwerp labour rhythms evidences a much more complex picture, which does not really hint at an industrious revolution but rather reveals invariable industriousness.
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Kolіastruk, Olha, and Oleksandr Koliastruk. "Soviet Political Rituals and Daily Practices." Scientific Papers of the Vinnytsia Mykhailo Kotsyiubynskyi State Pedagogical University. Series: History, no. 34 (2020): 69–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.31652/2411-2143-2020-34-69-74.

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The purpose of this article is the analysis of the Soviet political rituals and daily practices that developed under their influence. The methodology of the research is based on the general and special historical methods of cognition of the past involving the methods of socio-cultural and political anthropology. The scientific novelty of the paper consists in the fact that the role of various Soviet political rituals in establishing of the norms and practices of the Soviet daily life has been analyzed for the first time and the influence of the Soviet ritual culture in the Soviet regime strengthening has been found. Mass calendar holidays-rituals (October Revolution Day, Workers’ Solidarity Day) not only marked a new era in the history, but also leveled the sacredness of the Christian cycle (Christmas – Easter). Evolution of the formal organization of the Soviet ritual (from staging-imitation through carnivalization to monumental narrativization) and improvement of its semantic content (nomination – sacralization – monumentalization – memorialization) have been traced. From the beginning, festive commemoration was meant to form the Soviet identity, design the collective past and set the framework of collective memory. Official rituals gradually penetrated into the daily life (family and friendly holiday feasts, house cleaning, novelties purchase and greeting cards). Conclusions. From the beginning, the Soviet rituals were a reliable ideological weapon, an instrument of the communist indoctrination of the country’s population. Political rituals played a major role in legitimization of the Bolsheviks power, became an effective means of communication with society, enabled its consolidation within the framework of the Soviet political canon, minimized the social conflicts, leveled open dissatisfaction with the governmental authorities and assisted in the formation of ideological unanimity. Along with repressive methods, the Soviet political rituals served to create new political reality, enabled its acceptance by the masses of people, formed consciousness, encouraged relevant political actions and practices of the daily life.
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Mertzanis, Charilaos, and Noha Allam. "Political Instability and Herding Behaviour: Evidence from Egypt’s Stock Market." Journal of Emerging Market Finance 17, no. 1 (February 23, 2018): 29–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0972652717748087.

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This article examines the existence of herding behaviour in the Egyptian stock market during the 2011 revolution period. Using daily and monthly data, we test for the existence of herding for the whole period, as well as for the pre- and post-revolution phases. For the whole period, our results fail to provide evidence of herding behaviour in the Egyptian stock market, but do provide evidence of adverse herding behaviour that exhibits non-linearity. The results also fail to provide evidence of herding behaviour during bull and bear markets, and show that herding behaviour is a short-lived phenomenon. When the pre- and post-revolution phases are considered separately, the results provide evidence of weak adverse herding for both phases and of adverse herding in bullish markets, but they are inconclusive regarding bearish markets. JEL Classification: G10, G15
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19

Larson, Katherine A. "Cheap, fast, good: the Roman glassblowing revolution reconsidered." Journal of Roman Archaeology 32 (2019): 7–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1047759419000035.

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Among the most dramatic changes in ancient material culture was the widespread adoption of glass vessels for tableware and storage during the 1st c. B.C. and 1st c. A.D. As shown by the quantity of glass finds from occupation sites of the Imperial era, glassware was much more prominent in daily life than it had been previously. This shift occurred concurrently with the widespread adoption of glassblowing. This change in consumer behavior points to a complex process of experimentation, development, and gradual adaptation on the part of both producers and consumers. The transition from centuries-old technologies of core-forming, casting and sagging to blowing required a complete reconfiguration of every stage of glass production, from the increased supply of raw material to the development of new tools and workshop space, and in the training of craftsmen.
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20

Painter, Corinne. "Revolutionary perspectives: German Jewish women and 1918–19." Journal of European Studies 51, no. 2 (May 31, 2021): 93–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00472441211010899.

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In November 1918, revolution swept across Germany: it led to the end of the war, the abdication of the Kaiser and a new parliamentary democracy. While leading figures of the revolution, such as Ernst Toller, Rosa Luxemburg and Kurt Eisner, have been the subject of much scholarly interest, less research has been conducted into the motivations and aims of the rank and file, a group which included many women. Women played key roles as revolutionaries: by spreading the revolutionary message, working in its administration or participating in direct action on the streets. By choosing to become a revolutionary, individuals risked imprisonment or even death. For German Jewish women, who faced anti-Semitism in their daily lives, the risk was even greater. This article focuses on these forgotten female revolutionaries to uncover their roles, aims and motivations, and to contribute to a heterogeneous understanding of the revolution.
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Alvarez, Miguel Angel Perez. "Is there intelligence in artificial intelligence?" ACM SIGCAS Computers and Society 49, no. 3 (January 22, 2021): 18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3447913.3447925.

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I remember reading in my distant youth an FCE book called Artificial Intelligence and the adolescent excitement for the realization of the promises of a world full of automatons serving in all spheres of daily life seemed to be realized. That was the early eighties and the world was not convulsing in the midst of a dizzying technological revolution.
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Hartanto, Dody, Puguh Wahyu Prasetyo, Ika Maryani, Ega Asnatasia Maharani, Intan Puspitasari, Diah Asta Putri, Oktira Roka Aji, and Wachid Eko Purwanto. "Developing digital module for human literacy and technology literacy." International Journal on Education Insight 1, no. 1 (April 25, 2020): 29. http://dx.doi.org/10.12928/ijei.v1i1.2086.

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In the era of industrial revolution 4.0, many human activities depend on the gadget and the internet connection. We can observe the daily activities of human life right now. When they wake up in the morning, they usually start by using their handphones or gadget. This condition motivates educators to build a digital module in order to use the positive point of view of the Industry Revolution 4.0 era. In this chance, the researchers develop two topics that are very important for human life in Industry Revolution 4.0, whicht are, human literacy and technology literacy. Both of the topics were derived into two-courses. The course of development of students (Perkembangan Peserta Didik) will be representing the human literacy topics and the course of introduction to Biotechnology (pengantar bioteknologi) will be representing the technology literacy topic. The research is research and development. Furthermore, the products of this research are flipbooks that were uploaded on the Learning Management System managed by Universitas Ahmad Dahlan.
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Saeed, Aziz Thabit. "Foreign Terms in the Daily Arabic Discourse of Arab University Students." TranscUlturAl: A Journal of Translation and Cultural Studies 11, no. 1 (August 6, 2019): 67–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.21992/tc29454.

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This study investigates the presence of foreign terms, especially communication-oriented ones, in the daily Arabic discourse of University students. Data in the study were culled from 70 university students in two stages. Data obtained from the first stage of elicitation were made into a survey that comprises foreign terms together with their Arabic counterparts. The second stage involved distributing the survey to 50 freshman University students at the AOU, Kuwait. The students were to select the terms that they use in their daily Arabic communication, i.e., Arabic or English. The findings of the analysis reveal that the English terms emerged as the vividly dominant code of communication in Arabic conversations as far as the terms in the study are concerned. The paper delineates the results of the analysis. The implications of this research will be important in the area of Arabicization and the role of the Arabic language Academies in maximizing their efforts toward Arabicization in this age of technological revolution. Key words: Arabic, foreign words, English, equivalents.
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Dave, Nomi. "Becoming militant: embodying the Guinean revolution and Guinea–China relations." Africa 90, no. 4 (August 2020): 721–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0001972020000297.

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AbstractThis article considers the role of embodied experience in promoting revolutionary ideology in Guinea. The Republic of Guinea has long held close ties with China, and in the 1960s and 1970s the country pursued its own Cultural Revolution. While Chinese songs and aesthetics had little direct artistic influence, the Guinean state embraced Maoist ideals of social and self-transformation and discipline. Such ideals were translated into daily life through the regulation of bodies, including practices of dance, movement and physical gesture that sought to create revolutionary subjects. I show here how embodied practices, including the circulation of dancers and official delegations, cultivated Guinea's relationship with China; and how practices of movement and dance were inwardly experienced within Guinea during its own Cultural Revolution. In so doing, I address some of the contradictions of the Revolution and of Guinea–China relations. While the regime pursued its goals through violence and brutality, former revolutionary subjects today remember the moment for both its pain and its pleasures – for the hardships the body had to endure and for the nationalist pride that many still feel today.
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Alonso, Consuelo, Samuel Fernández-Salinero, and Gabriela Topa. "The Impact of Both Individual and Collaborative Job Crafting on Spanish Teachers’ Well-Being." Education Sciences 9, no. 2 (April 10, 2019): 74. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/educsci9020074.

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Current changes in social structures and political-economic systems directly affect teachers’ job performance. Among others, these changes include changes in communication and information technologies, the scientific revolution, changes in the structure of populations, the revolution of social relations, economic and political transformations, and revolutions in labor relations and leisure time. These changes all seem to have promoted educational revolutions, which encourage the development of autonomous individuals who are capable of making critical judgments, ready to dialogue and cooperate in problem solving, and who seek alternatives aimed at building a better society. Thus, teachers suffer daily from the impact of continual changes that affect the way they do their work. According to the job-demands resources model, each job environment has its own characteristics that can be grouped into two dimensions: job demands and job resources. However, the relationship between job demands and resources has serious implications for individuals’ lives and psychological well-being. While work provides us with the means to survive, develop social relationships, and experience control over our lives, an excess of demands and a shortage of resources to cope with them would adversely affect personal well-being. Hence, individuals can perform behaviors through job crafting to balance this relationship between demands and resources at work. Job crafting is a proactive behavior of the worker who improves his own working conditions in order to achieve a more meaningful and satisfactory job. This phenomenon allows individuals to play a certain role by “creating” their own job, changing the conditions in which they perform their tasks. In this study, 146 teachers participated to investigate the relationships between both individual and collaborative job crafting behaviors, on the one hand, and job satisfaction, work engagement, and teaching performance, on the other.
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Humphries, Jane, and Jacob Weisdorf. "The Wages of Women in England, 1260–1850." Journal of Economic History 75, no. 2 (June 2015): 405–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022050715000662.

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This paper presents two wage-series for unskilled English women workers 1260–1850, one based on daily wages and one on the daily remuneration implied in annual contracts. The series are compared with each other and with evidence for men, informing several debates. Our findings suggest first that women servants did not share the post-Black Death “golden age” and so offer little support for a “girl-powered” economic breakthrough; and second that during the industrial revolution, women who were unable to work long hours lost ground relative to men and to women who could work full-time and fell increasingly adrift from any “High Wage Economy.”
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Mironov, Dmitry, Herman Gaivoronskiy, Anastasiy Pobegailo, and Maiy Teliak. "Working out Universal Mechatronics Mobile Base." Applied Mechanics and Materials 844 (July 2016): 142–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.844.142.

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The mankind is on a threshold of the next industrial revolution which will entail distribution and use of more and more flexible, reasonable, sensitive and effective robots at factory, in establishment and in all other areas of our daily life. This fact in a combination to sharper comprehension of safety issues of the person promoted occurrence of need for a lot of handling robots.
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Supriyono, Supriyono. "Teachers' Profesionalism and Challenges in Industrial Revolution Era 4.0." Social, Humanities, and Educational Studies (SHEs): Conference Series 2, no. 1 (December 19, 2019): 195. http://dx.doi.org/10.20961/shes.v2i1.37645.

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This paper discusses the concept of teachers' profesaionalism and challenges in facing the industrial revolution era 4.0. In this case, teachers have a very important role at schools in utilizing various learning approaches. The traditional learning (teacher-centered) approach long implemented for years has now been considered out of date that student-centered learning replaces the approach. The teachers' role has recently shifted that teachers now become the facilitators for their learners. These shifting learning approach has become an inevitabity to anticipate that a concret action is greatly required. Educational world should be able to manage itself by making some renewals and innovations related to the management system, curriculum, Human Resource Competence Development, culture, working ethics, and facilities. This study uses references related to the nature of teachers' profesionalism, industrial revolution 4.0, and various challenges. Concrete actions need to be well prepared as well as creatively, dynamically, and innovatively made. Thus, it can be concluded that teachers should be able to maintain their professionalism in performing their daily duties and obligations.
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Herndon, Keith L., and Brandon Szuminsky. "NRJ Book Review: The Decline of the Daily Newspaper: How an American Institution Lost the Online Revolution." Newspaper Research Journal 33, no. 4 (September 2012): 117–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/073953291203300410.

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علاونة, حاتم, and عامر فايز. "تغطية الصحافة الفلسطينية اليومية لثورة 25 يناير المصرية = Palestinian Daily Press Coverage of 25 January Egyptian Revolution." Dirasat Human and Social Sciences 41, no. 1 (2014): 98–127. http://dx.doi.org/10.12816/0018558.

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Li, Sha-sha, and Jun-sik Son. "The Chinese Government's Korea Awareness through the reports of People's Daily during the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976)." Institute of History and Culture Hankuk University of Foreign Studies 79 (August 30, 2021): 325–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.18347/hufshis.2021.79.325.

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Ben-Abdallah, Philippe, and Svend-Age Biehs. "Thermotronics: Towards Nanocircuits to Manage Radiative Heat Flux." Zeitschrift für Naturforschung A 72, no. 2 (February 1, 2017): 151–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/zna-2016-0358.

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AbstractThe control of electric currents in solids is at the origin of the modern electronics revolution that has driven our daily life since the second half of 20th century. Surprisingly, to date, there is no thermal analogue for a control of heat flux. Here, we summarise the very last developments carried out in this direction to control heat exchanges by radiation both in near and far-field in complex architecture networks.
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BAUER, KEITH A. "Home-Based Telemedicine: A Survey of Ethical Issues." Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 10, no. 2 (March 8, 2001): 137–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963180101002043.

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In the past decade, digital technology, fiber optics, cellular phones, satellite television, home computers, and the Internet have substantially transformed business, education, and leisure practices. These technologies are becoming so integrated into our daily routines that their ubiquity often goes unnoticed. We are, nonetheless, in the midst of a telecommunications revolution, and the healthcare industry is becoming a major player. The burgeoning field of home-based telemedicine is evidence of this.
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Milkie, Melissa A., Dana Wray, and Irene Boeckmann. "Gendered Pressures: Divergent Experiences Linked to Housework Time Among Partnered Men and Women." Journal of Comparative Family Studies 52, no. 2 (June 2021): 147–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/jcfs-52-2-002.

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In Western countries, men’s and women’s unpaid labor time has converged in recent decades, promising gender equality. Nevertheless, a stubborn gap remains. We extend our understanding of the “stalled revolution” by examining gender differences not only in hours but in everyday experiences linked to housework time. We argue that the felt pressures linked to household tasks are a key gendered quality associated with daily domestic work, particularly given the cultural weight and responsibility of housework for women. With time diaries from the 2015 Canadian General Social Survey (GSS), we examine housework time among different-sex partnered women and men aged 25–64 years (N = 6,850). We assess whether more housework time is associated with time pressures—feeling rushed, stressed, trapped, and unaccomplished in one’s daily goals—and whether this differs by gender. As expected, women do more housework than men; and more daily housework is generally associated with greater pressures. Results show a gender divergence in the relationship between hours and two forms of pressure. For women, housework time is associated with feeling stressed, whereas for men it is not. In contrast, housework time is associated with feeling unaccomplished more so for men than for women. Thus, in addition to gender differences in the amount of time spent on unpaid work, there is an experiential gender gap. The association of more housework time with feeling unaccomplished for men but not women portends a continued cultural mismatch between masculinity and domestic labor. Examining divergent qualities of domestic labor engagement extends knowledge of the stalled gender revolution.
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CBE, Dan Goyder. "The New UK Competition Act: Reform or Revolution?" Cambridge Yearbook of European Legal Studies 2 (1999): 149–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1528887000003347.

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One of the most notable changes in the forty years since I left Cambridge at the end of my Law Tripos has been the growth in importance of a number of legal subjects previously either totally unknown, known but disregarded, or of interest only to an enthusiastic minority. Competition law certainly fell into one of these categories, not then being taught as a separate subject or even perhaps referred to by any lecturer, except on occasion in the context of “contracts in restraint of trade”. But now the subject has truly come of age and, like some other important commercial law topics which have deservedly earned a place within the regular syllabus of the L.L.M, finds itself referred to constantly not only in academic and professional literature but in the media. Its influence on our daily lives as citizens and consumers means that it is often the subject of headline reports (not always accurate) quite apart from its economic and political significance in the regional, national, European and world context. For example, to mention only one or two current issues, we have had the court case brought by the Office of Fair Trading against the Premier League challenging its collective sale to BSkyB of the television rights to Premier League football matches, and, major changes proposed in the UK defence industries as a result of the proposed acquisition by British Aerospace of the GEC defence businesses.
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36

Gärdebo, Johan, and Daniel Löwenborg. "Smallholding Travel in the Agrarian Revolution: Using a Farmer Diary to Map Spatio-temporal Patterns in Late Nineteenth Century Sweden." International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing 10, no. 2 (October 2016): 179–204. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2016.0169.

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This article is an exploratory study using a smallholding diary and GIS to project the spatio-temporal pattern of a smallholding's travel in late nineteenth century Sweden. Through time-series of smallholding's daily diary notes, we develop an understanding for how smallholders adjusted to and participated in Swedish government policy, which resulted in the process termed ‘agrarian revolution’. Between 1872–1892, Tomtas Smallholding altered its spatio-temporal patterns from seasonal travels to production according to market demands and along new lines of transportation like railways. While the smallholding also used railways to visit distant places, it was primarily their produce that travelled further unto international markets. This also influenced the smallholding demography, from an extended household towards a nuclear family. As market demands shifted from subsistence to dairy products, the smallholding contracted primarily female farm servants due to their specialisation in milking.
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Erita, Yeni, Silvi Hevria, Rifda Eliyasni, and Wirda Wirda. "BLENDED CONSTRUCTIVE LEARNING MODEL FOR FACING THE FOURTH INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION." JURNAL PAJAR (Pendidikan dan Pengajaran) 4, no. 4 (July 22, 2020): 680. http://dx.doi.org/10.33578/pjr.v4i4.8013.

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The appropriate learning approach used in this digital era (industry 4.0) is blended learning (on-line). This research started from analyzing the needs of teachers and students and then designed a new model that fitted the desired needs both teachers and students. After designing the model, it was implemented then evaluated the results of the process that has been carried out. The purpose of this research was to see an appropriate model dealing with the fourth industrial revolution. The method used in this research was a quantitative descriptive method using descriptive statistical data analysis with the percentage formula. The results obtained in this study on practicality obtained very practical results, while the effectiveness of the results obtained experienced a very significant increase from 44.7 to 85.3 in terms of style understanding, the second material from 33.33 to 80 on various styles (muscle force, electric force, magnetic force, gravitational force and frictional force), and on the material the benefits of that force in daily life from 29.2 to 83.33.
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38

Quinn, Terry, and Jean Kovalevsky. "The development of modern metrology and its role today." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences 363, no. 1834 (July 28, 2005): 2307–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2005.1642.

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Modern metrology is the result of more than 200 years of development that began with the creation of the decimal metric system at the time of the French Revolution and the beginning, at about the same time, of mass production using interchangeable parts. This article traces these developments and describes how world metrology is organized today and gives examples of applications of metrology showing how it concerns us all in many aspects of our daily life.
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39

WUTHRICH, CLOTILDE. "Cuba in the shadow of change. Daily life in the twilight of the revolution by Weinreb, Amelia Rosenberg." Social Anthropology 19, no. 1 (January 25, 2011): 133–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8676.2010.00142_20.x.

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40

ARMENGOL, ROBERTO I. "Cuba in the Shadow of Change: Daily Life in the Twilight of the Revolution by Amelia Rosenberg Weinreb." American Ethnologist 38, no. 4 (November 2011): 835–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-1425.2011.01339_17.x.

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41

Sudarsih, Sri. "Pentingnya Konsep Diri Dalam Mensikapi Revolusi Jepang." KIRYOKU 3, no. 4 (December 12, 2019): 233. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/kiryoku.v3i4.233-238.

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Japan is a developed country that still upholds fundamental values which are then used as a basis for attitude and daily behavior. This research aims to examine the self-concept in responding to the Japanese revolution. This research is qualitative in philosophy. The method used is description and interpretation. The right self-concept becomes the main capital to be able to identify various national problems. The concept of self is something important in responding to the revolution of society in Japan. This appears in an open attitude to accept the reality of himself and other nations so that they are willing to learn in total to other more advanced nations. The result is that Japanese society has risen faster in its self-confidence and can catch up, moving ahead of developing more modern western nations. All this happened because all the officials until the people have a national commitment.
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42

Dalgat, Elmira M., Madina I. Abdulaeva, and Burkutbay G. Ayagan. "POWER AND DAGESTANI SOCIETY IN THE YEARS WORLD WAR I: EVERYDAY PRACTICES." History, Archeology and Ethnography of the Caucasus 16, no. 3 (November 1, 2020): 581–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.32653/ch163581-597.

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The article deals with the little-studied problems of relations and interaction between the regional authorities and Dagestani society against the background of the events of the First world war, which made its severe adjustments to the daily life of society. The relevance of the topic is not in doubt in connection with the realities of today, when the crisis of power and society in a number of countries led to the so-called "color revolutions". Historical experience of social disasters allows us to model and predict the future. An interdisciplinary approach to the study of social, political, and economic aspects of the worldview of various segments of the population, their psychological perception of war and their attitude to power allowed us to show the real historical reality. The rejection of the ideology that considered the First world war solely as a forerunner of the revolution, the involvement of memoir literature, the work of foreign researchers, the identification and display of the personal factor made the main focus of research in favor of social anthropology.The daily life of the population of the Dagestan region, as one of the outskirts of tsarist Russia during the First world war, carried General Imperial features, but at the same time had its own specifics. The laws of wartime left an imprint on the daily life of the population of all Russia. However, the available material shows that the crisis phenomena that covered the frontline territory with the beginning of the war in the Dagestan region appeared only by 1916. In the first two years, the regional authorities managed to contain the prices of food and basic necessities. The analysis of the ratio of regional and national history revealed other distinctive features of daily life of Dagestani society, caused by the lack of universal military service for mountaineers, the remoteness of the region from the front line, the presence of a strong traditionalist core that prevents the marginalization of society.
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Yasmine, Shafira Elnanda. "Arab Spring: Islam dalam gerakan sosial dan demokrasi Timur Tengah." Masyarakat, Kebudayaan dan Politik 28, no. 2 (April 1, 2016): 106. http://dx.doi.org/10.20473/mkp.v28i22015.106-113.

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Social movement during Arab Spring has lead to political uprising in Middle East. Started from Tunisia, the revolt spread to neighboring states such as Egypt, Libya, also Syiria. Influenced by religion and strong Islamic tradition, protestors demand the presence of democracy within political system which had held autocracy as ruling system for decades. It is commonly assumed that democracy and Islam were mostly incompatible, moreover in a state whose Islamic values has deeply rooted in the daily life of its people. This article focuses in the usage of Islamic values within global civil society movement in Arab Spring. Theory of Islam and Ideology were applied to analyze the phenomena. Having view the revolution generally, this research found that Arab Spring is required as a phase which led Islam into particular flexibility level towards democracy and brought democratization into the Arab world. This article resulted in the conclusion that trigger a revolution not because of religious affairs, the demonstrators were joined not one hundred percent Muslim, and the issues that required not related to the religious life of the community, but Islam is either the value or the practice of worship, can not be separated in the organization of the masses during the revolution.
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Kurniawan, Irvan Arif, Dede Yusman, and Indri Okshana Aprilia. "Utilization of Blockchain Technology Revolution in Electronic ID Card Data Integrity." Aptisi Transactions on Management (ATM) 5, no. 2 (April 17, 2021): 137–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.33050/atm.v5i2.1530.

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KTP is a proof of identification issued by the implementing agency that applies throughout the territory of the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia. The existence of KTP is recognized as very important in daily life because it is used in all activities or any series of administrative transactions. Field studies found the number of cases of Asphalt ID cards (original but fake) used as a means of media fraud. Because ID cards are very easy to falsify this makes it difficult to identify cases of data misappropriation. The focus of the research was the utilization of Blockchain, by applying distributed consensus and cryptography in improving the administration management system of KTP to identify the existence of fake IDs and double data. The research method used is descriptive analysis method and literature study. By implementing the decentralization and cryptographic system owned by Blockchain, it is expected to minimize the occurrence of identity misappropriation, as well as be able to be a technology capable of contributing to the success of aspects of state administration governance systems.
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45

Davis, Deborah. "Chinese Social Welfare: Policies and Outcomes." China Quarterly 119 (September 1989): 577–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741000022943.

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China in the 1980s is in the midst of a social revolution as far–reaching as either Land Reform or the early years of the Cultural Revolution. After four decades of championing the superiority of state monopolies and the evils of private ownership, the leaders of the Politburo have decollectivized agriculture, advocated commodification of land values, encouraged private trade and investment, and explicitly agreed that it is good if a few get rich first. Rural citizens in particular have responded with alacrity to this privatization of work and the retreat of the Party and the state from the daily management of agriculture. The household farm has become the basic unit of production for the first time since 1952, and private entrepreneurs have transformed the structure of rural commerce and manufacturing. Average incomes in rural areas trebled in the decade after 1977 and the economic gap between rural and urban citizens noticeably narrowed.
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46

Weitz, Eric D. "Weimar Germany and its Histories." Central European History 43, no. 4 (December 2010): 581–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008938910000713.

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Years later, after the catastrophes of the Third Reich and World War II, Arnold Zweig remembered how he had returned home from another disaster, World War I. “With what hopes had we come back from the war!” he wrote. Zweig recalled not just the catastrophe of total war, but also the élan of revolution. Like a demon, he threw himself into politics, then into his writing. “I have big works, wild works, great well-formed, monumental works in my head!,” he wrote to his friend Helene Weyl in April 1919. “I want to write! Everything that I have done up until now is just a preamble.” And it was not to be “normal” writing. The times were of galloping stallions and wide-open furrows, and talent was everywhere. War and revolution had drawn people out of the confining security of bourgeois life. “The times have once again placed adventure in the center of daily life, making possible once more the great novel and the great story.”
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47

Imad, Abdul Ghani. "Islamists between revolution and the state: an epilogue." Contemporary Arab Affairs 7, no. 2 (April 1, 2014): 283–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17550912.2014.917818.

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The problematic addressed in this article is the challenge initiated by the Arab revolutions to reform the Arab political system in such a way as to facilitate the incorporation of ‘democracy’ at the core of its structure. Given the profound repercussions, this issue has become the most serious matter facing the forces of change in the Arab world today; meanwhile, it forms the most prominent challenge and the most difficult test confronting Islamists. The Islamist phenomenon is not an alien implant that descended upon us from another planet beyond the social context or manifestations of history. Thus it cannot but be an expression of political, cultural, and social needs and crises. Over the years this phenomenon has presented, through its discourse, an ideological logic that falls within the context of ‘advocacy’; however, today Islamists find themselves in office, and in a new context that requires them to produce a new type of discourse that pertains to the context of a ‘state’. Political participation ‘tames’ ideology and pushes political actors to rationalize their discourse in the face of daily political realities and the necessity of achievement. The logic of advocacy differs from that of the state: in the case of advocacy, ideology represents an enriching asset, whereas in the case of the state, it constitutes a heavy burden. This is one reason why so much discourse exists within religious jurisprudence related to interest or necessity or balancing outcomes. This article forms an epilogue to the series of articles on religion and the state published in previous issues of this journal. It adopts the methodologies of ‘discourse analysis’ and ‘case studies’ in an attempt to examine the arguments presented by Islamists under pressure from the opposition. It analyses the experiences, and the constraints, that inhibit the production of a ‘model’, and monitors the development of the discourse, its structure, and transformations between advocacy, revolution and the state.
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Krecz, Péter, Andrea Herneczky, József Csernák, and Aranka Baranyi. "The impact of automation and robotics on motivation." Acta Carolus Robertus 11, no. 1 (July 23, 2021): 41–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.33032/acr.2574.

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Special attention should be paid to the human factors that influence the competitiveness of companies when analysing the correlations of economic processes. It is no longer controversial today that human capital is an important and crucial factor in a company's performance. The efficient, effective contribution of human resources to an organization's success depends to a large extent on how it can ensure employees' motivation in the long run. Robotics and automation are gaining more and more ground nowadays. In our study we explore how employee motivation is influenced by the rapid and widespread use of robotics. The industrial revolution that is still going on today is bringing enormous changes. The industrial revolutions that happened earlier in history have fundamentally changed the lives of people and have always posed serious challenges to various economic actors. Changes have had a dual impact in the past. On the one hand, industrial production has resulted in a change in the economy and, on the other hand, a huge change in the social structure. In recent years, mechanization has seemed extreme, but this phase must be seen today as a natural part of daily life.
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49

Jeribi, Ahmed, Mohamed Fakhfekh, and Anis Jarboui. "Tunisian revolution and stock market volatility: evidence from FIEGARCH model." Managerial Finance 41, no. 10 (October 12, 2015): 1112–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/mf-12-2014-0310.

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Purpose – Previously elaborated research works, dealing with the political uncertainty effect on stock market, have been primarily concerned with such political events as terrorist attacks, elections, wars, natural catastrophes and financial crashes. Such little research has been concerned with civil uprisings and revolutionary movements, as crucial sources of political uncertainty. The purpose of this paper is to study the impact of political uncertainty (resulting from the Tunisian Revolution) on the volatility of major sectorial stock indices in the Tunisian Stock Exchange (TSE). Design/methodology/approach – The authors apply the fractionally integrated exponential generalized autoregressive conditional heteroscedasticity model (FIEGARCH), which helps maintain a direct shock-persistence as well as a shock asymmetric volatility measurement. This model is applied to the daily returns relevant to nine sectorial stock indices and to the Tunisian benchmark index (TUNINDEX) with respect to three sub-periods (before, during and follows the Tunisian Revolution). Findings – The reached findings suggest that the shock impact throughout the Revolution period on construction, industries, consumer services, financial services, financial companies indices’ sectorial and the TUNINDEX return volatilities have proven to be permanent, while its persistence on the other indices has been discovered to be transitory. In addition, the achieved results appear to reveal a low leverage effect on all indices. This result seems to be very important since the Tunisian Revolution turns out to have a very important effect on the TSE. Originality/value – The paper’s empirical contribution lies in using the FIEGARCH approach to model the Tunisian sectorial indices’ volatility dynamics, persistence degree and leverage effect. This contribution goes a long way in helping regulators and international investors to further recognize the extent to which political instability does participate in affecting the TSE.
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Thompson, Victoria E. "Daily Life During the French Revolution. By James M. Anderson. (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2007. Pp. xx, 268. $49.95.)." Historian 71, no. 4 (December 1, 2009): 880–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-6563.2009.00252_39.x.

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