Academic literature on the topic 'History from the middle'

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Journal articles on the topic "History from the middle"

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Daniels, Roger, and Victor R. Greene. "Ethnic History from the Middle Up." Reviews in American History 16, no. 3 (1988): 416. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2702275.

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Gerasimov, I., S. Glebov, A. Kaplunovski, M. Mogilner, and A. Semyonov. "From the Editors: Environmental History as Middle Ground." Ab Imperio 2008, no. 4 (2008): 19–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/imp.2008.0012.

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Satia, Priya. "Drones: A History from the British Middle East." Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development 5, no. 1 (2014): 1–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hum.2014.0002.

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Bang, Anne K. "From Middle Eastern to African to African Islamic history." Islamic Africa 7, no. 1 (2016): 111–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/21540993-00701004.

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Holmgren, Camille A., Julio L. Betancourt, Kate Aasen Rylander, et al. "Holocene Vegetation History from Fossil Rodent Middens near Arequipa, Peru." Quaternary Research 56, no. 2 (2001): 242–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/qres.2001.2262.

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AbstractRodent (Abrocoma, Lagidium, Phyllotis) middens collected from 2350 to 2750 m elevation near Arequipa, Peru (16°S), provide an ∼9600-yr vegetation history of the northern Atacama Desert, based on identification of >50 species of plant macrofossils. These midden floras show considerable stability throughout the Holocene, with slightly more mesophytic plant assemblages in the middle Holocene. Unlike the southwestern United States, rodent middens of mid-Holocene age are common. In the Arequipa area, the midden record does not reflect any effects of a mid-Holocene mega drought proposed from the extreme lowstand (100 m below modern levels, >6000 to 3500 yr B.P.) of Lake Titicaca, only 200 km east of Arequipa. This is perhaps not surprising, given other evidence for wetter summers on the Pacific slope of the Andes during the middle Holocene as well as the poor correlation of summer rainfall among modern weather stations in the central Andes-Atacama Desert. The apparent difference in paleoclimatic reconstructions suggests that it is premature to relate changes observed during the Holocene to changes in El Niño Southern Oscillation modes.
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DE BLOIS, Fr. "The Middle-Persian Inscription from Constantinople." Studia Iranica 19, no. 2 (1990): 209–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.2143/si.19.2.2014455.

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Marcus, E. S. "The Middle Kingdom Egyptian Pottery from Middle Bronze Age IIa Tel Ifshar." Ägypten und Levante 18 (2009): 203–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1553/aeundl18s203.

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Yusupova, Zare A. "Kurdish poets: from the history of Kurdish literary studies." Письменные памятники Востока 18, no. 1 (2021): 29–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.17816/wmo63137.

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The article presents an account of the history of Kurdish literary studies (based on sources available to the author). The literature, discussed in this work, covers the period from the late Middle ages to the middle of the 20th c. The article gives an extent survey of the researches on Kurdish literature which exists in various dialects. It also defines the tasks for the studies of the Kurdish literature.
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Amaral, A., I. Ferraz, and M. Mota. "A journey across perversions history – from Middle Age to DSM." European Psychiatry 33, S1 (2016): S588. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.2186.

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IntroductionPsychiatry's viewpoint of sexual deviance has waved between the normal and the pathological. “Normal” is not determined by nature but by the values of a specific society.AimsTo review the main landmarks in paraphilias history and the importance of social and cultural dimensions to it.MethodsPubMed database was searched using the keywords perversion, sexual deviance, paraphilia, culture and society.ResultsThroughout Middle Age and Renaissance any sexual act that differed from the natural/divine law was considered a vice. Unnatural vices (masturbation, sodomy, bestiality) were the most severely punished, as they could not result in conception. In 1886, Krafft-Ebing stated perversions were functional diseases of the sexual instinct caused by “hereditary taintedness” in the family pedigree and worsened by excessive masturbation. Proper perversions were sadism, masochism, antipathic sexuality (homosexuality, transvestism, transsexuality) and fetishism. Later, Havelock Ellis and Hirschfeld claimed sexual interest in the population followed a statistical norm, opposed the idea that masturbation led to diseases and demanded the decriminalization of homosexuality. Freud believed the “perverse disposition” to be universal in the childhood giving rise to healthy and pathological adult behaviors. In 1950's, Albert Kinsey surprised America when he proved many supposedly deviant sexual practices were quite common. The first Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (1952) was mainly psychoanalytic. Later, by 1973, homosexuality was removed from classifications. Recently, DSM-5 distinguishes between paraphilias and paraphilic disorders.ConclusionA progress in the paraphilic instincts’ acceptance has occurred. We hypothesize, in the future, paraphilias will follow homosexuality out of the diseases’ classifications.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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Eum, Ikran. "Family History in the Middle East." American Journal of Islam and Society 21, no. 4 (2004): 126–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v21i4.1760.

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The study of families and their histories opens up a cross-disciplinary dialogueamong anthropologists, historians, and other social scientists, includingarea specialists. The content of Doumani’s edited book, Family Historyin the Middle East: Household, Property, and Gender, falls convincinglyinto such disciplines as history, anthropology, Middle East studies,women’s/gender studies, and Islamic studies, since the collection of articlesprovides various indepth case studies drawn both from Islam and frompolitical, economic, legal, and social perspectives.The anthology’s main theme suggests that the family is an entity that,along with the progression of history, evolves continuously. By reconstructingthe family histories of elites and ordinary people in the Middle East fromthe seventeenth to the early twentieth century, the book challenges prevailingassumptions about the monolithic “traditional” Middle Eastern familytype. Instead, it argues cogently that the structure and boundaries of thesefamilies have always been flexible and dynamic.The book is divided into four sections that explore issues concerningthe family from the perspective of politics, economics, and law. In the firstsection, “Family and Household,” Philippe Fargues, Tomoki Okawara, andMary Ann Fay analyze the structure of the nineteenth-century family andhousehold and illustrate how its formation was influenced by changes in the ...
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "History from the middle"

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Baca-Winters, Keenan. "From Rome to Iran| Identity and Xusro II." Thesis, University of California, Irvine, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3717048.

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<p> The Roman-Sasanian War of the seventh century CE was the last conflict of late antiquity. <i>&Scaron;ahan&scaron;ah</i> Xusr&omacr; II nearly conquered the Roman Empire. James Howard-Johnston has studied the war extensively. Walter Kaegi has produced a biography of Xusr&omacr; II's opponent, Heraclius, while Geoffrey Greatrex and Touraj Daryaee have written articles focusing on Xusr&omacr; II. Scholars, however, have not attempted a major study of him. This dissertation seeks not only to understand how different authors depicted Xusr&omacr; II but to understand the man's personality. </p><p> Roman authors who witnessed the war sought to highlight only the negative aspects of Xusr&omacr; II. He was, according to the Romans, an enemy of God. Fear of Xusr&omacr; II was the basis for these depictions. Pseudo-Seb&emacr;os, an Armenian historian, depicted Xusr&omacr; II as an arrogant, blasphemous ruler. Pseudo-Seb&emacr;os, however, did not write anything positive about the Romans, either, because both the Romans and Sasanians wanted to control Armenia. </p><p> Christians living under Xusr&omacr; II's rulership also seemed to despise him. They portray Xusr&omacr; II as wicked because, in an attempt to punish them, he did not let allow them to elect a ruler. A careful reading of these sources, however, suggests these authors were aware of how Xusr&omacr; II took care of Christians in his realm. Finally, Arab and Persian sources differ in their portrayals of Xusr&omacr; II because both groups, although both Muslim, were competing for legitimacy in the post-Islamic conquest of Iran, due to ethnic tensions. Arab authors emphasized Xusr&omacr; II's faults. Persian authors, on the other hand, presented his good qualities. </p><p> Ultimately, all of these different depictions of Xusr&omacr; II demonstrate that he possessed a fierce will and embraced a vision of how to rule. Xusr&omacr; II wanted to conquer the Romans and extend his domain and be remembered forever. Xusr&omacr; II's drive might have made him seem arrogant to the authors studied in this dissertation, and they depicted him accordingly. We should not, however, lose sight of the man he truly was: a man who dared to dream.</p>
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Kettle, Louise. "Learning from history in British overseas security : case studies from intervention in the Middle East." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 2015. http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/30575/.

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Recent problematic military interventions, as part of the Global War on Terror, have led to widespread criticism that British policy-makers have failed to learn lessons from history. At the same time as the accusations of not learning, the British government has repeatedly claimed that lessons have been learned, particularly from the disastrous war in Iraq. This thesis investigates these contradicting claims by analysing learning from the past in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Ministry of Defence and the Intelligence Community across four case studies of British military intervention in the Middle East; 1958 in Jordan, 1961 in Kuwait, the 1990-1991 Gulf War and 2003-2009 Iraq War. It provides a fresh analysis of these highly significant events, using previously undisclosed documents, offers an assessment of learning processes and concludes by recommending practical suggestions for the improvement of learning from history in the future.
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Milwright, Marcus. "Trade and patronage in Middle Islamic Jordan : the ceramics from Karak castle." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.285037.

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Anderson, Charles W. "From Petition to Confrontation| The Palestinian National Movement and the Rise of Mass Politics, 1929-1939." Thesis, New York University, 2014. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3602635.

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<p> This dissertation provides a history from below of Palestinian national movement and Arab society during the tumultuous decade of the 1930s. It argues that the influence and authority of the small group of factionalized and disunited notable politicians that are conventionally understood to have monopolized the leadership of the national struggle during the era of British Mandatory rule has been greatly overstated. This is especially so for the restive and rebellious middle period of the Mandate (1929-1939), during which the movement turned from a conciliatory and quietist strategy of gentlemanly diplomacy preferred by elite politicians to confrontation, mass mobilization and armed struggle, culminating in "the Great Revolt" (1936-1939), a prolonged anti-colonial rebellion against both British rule and the Zionist project it sponsored. By examining the political practices, organizing, self-understanding, and leadership capacities of "youth" and peasants, the dissertation explicates the eclipse of elite preeminence within the national movement and the rise of the new, horizontally-organized social forces that reshaped and radicalized Palestinian politics in the 1930s. </p><p> The dissertation first explores the proliferation of youth associations in the early 1930s and illuminates how the rise of youth as an assertive, ambitious, and politically frustrated element had profound ramifications for the tactics, strategy, and trajectory of the national movement. The narrative then turns to track the decomposition of the Arab rural order from the late Ottoman era to 1936, paying particular attention to the crisis of the countryside under the British, who fecklessly intensified pre-existing tendencies towards peasant destitution, bankruptcy, and dispossession, thereby helping to create a disaffected class of uprooted ex-peasants. The final section analyzes the Great Revolt, focusing on the critical roles of youth, peasants, and workers in initiating and propelling it and on the popular and revolutionary institutions that organized and sustained it against great odds for over three years. This section also interrogates British counterinsurgency, highlighting the role of specific forms of colonial violence, especially collective punishments, in ending the rebellion, and with it the ascent of popular forces within the national movement.</p>
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Ahmed, Hussam Eldin. "From Nahda to exile: a story of the Shawam in Egypt in the early twentieth century." Thesis, McGill University, 2011. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=104839.

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After important intellectual contributions to the Arab Nahda, the Syro-Lebanese of Egypt (the Shawam) underwent a far-reaching process of French acculturation. This process culminated in their cultural alienation from mainstream Egyptian society, and became a major reason for their departure from Nasserite Egypt in the sixties. Unlike previous narratives dealing with the history of the Shawam in Egypt, which underscored static identitarian choices as the driving force behind their cultural alienation, my thesis situates their adoption of French language and culture in the wider context of the Egyptian francophonie. This relatively unknown francophonie thrived in pre-revolutionary Egypt and was fully embraced by Egypt's urban cosmopolitan society. Despite the British occupation, French was the language of culture, finance, the press, justice and administration until the regime change. Using a more context-based approach, this thesis explores details of daily practices and experiences to discern the conditions in which the Shawam made their choices. I turn to their educational policies and appropriation of Egypt's prestigious French schools to assess the role played by these schools in their deep French acculturation. I also examine the vibrant francophone literary circles and salons, which flourished in Cairo during the interwar period, where they were particularly visible. Shawam intellectuals had not disappeared from Egyptian intellectual life, but had limited their activity to the much smaller, and much more powerful, francophone one. I contend that their cultural alienation was not the result of an innate separateness between Egyptians and them, but was contingent on historical factors, pertaining both to the community and its land of adoption.<br>Après leur collaboration précieuse au projet de la Nahda arabe, les Syro-Libanais d'Egypte (les chawâms) se sont tournés de plus en plus vers la langue et la culture françaises. Cette adoption démesurée de la langue française au détriment de la langue arabe a engendré leur éloignement culturel de la grande majorité de la société égyptienne. Elle devient même une raison principale de leur exode de l'Egypte dans les années 1960. Si la plupart des récits historiques ayant abordé le sujet des chawâms d'Egypte trouvent dans l'identité de ceux-ci (différents de par leur origine et leur religion) l'explication ultime de ce phénomène, je constate que cette hypothèse demande d'être nuancée. Je propose de mettre leur aliénation dans le plus grand cadre de la francophonie égyptienne, mal connue même aujourd'hui. Pendant un siècle et demi et malgré l'occupation britannique, le français demeurait la langue de la culture, les finances, la presse, la justice et l'administration, jusque' au changement de régime et la crise de Suez. Pour ce faire, j'étudie en grand détail les expériences et les pratiques de tous les jours pour mieux discerner les circonstances dans lesquelles les chawâms ont fait leurs choix culturels. J'examine leurs politiques de scolarisation et leur appropriation des écoles françaises prestigieuses ayant joué un rôle principal dans cette acculturation. De surcroit, ce mémoire analyse de très près les cercles et les salons littéraires francophones du Caire durant l'entre-deux-guerres, où les chawâms étaient actifs et pleinement visibles. Loin d'avoir disparu de la vie intellectuelle égyptienne, ils avaient approprié la scène francophone, plus restreinte mais très puissante. Je soutiens que plusieurs agents historiques, liés à la fois à l'Egypte et aux chawâms, ont contribué à cette aliénation culturelle.
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Davis, Nathaniel Alexander. "HISTORY FROM THE MIDDLE: THE STUDENT INTERPRETERS CORPS AND IMAGINED AMERICAN ECONOMIC IMPERIALISM IN CHINA, 1902-1941." OpenSIUC, 2017. https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/dissertations/1351.

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The project of American economic imperialism in China during the first half of the twentieth century was first and foremost an imagined enterprise. This dissertation examines the role of the Student Interpreters Corps (SIC) in this endeavor. Studying language-trained intermediaries, this treatment is a first step towards studying history with an approach that is neither top-down nor bottom-up but rather middle-outward. Examining hitherto neglected personnel records and State Department correspondence, this study reveals the SIC as part of an imagined but unsuccessful program of economic imperialism. Although effective in garnering American business interest and support for Foreign Service reform and expansion, efforts to entice American merchants and companies to enter Asian markets (particularly in China) failed to yield a coherent, successful trade empire. However, the largely unstated goal of increased American power was achieved as the result of a bureaucratic imperative for specialization, professionalization, and institutional expansion set in motion during the establishment of the SIC. Examining the evolving roles and views of SIC-trained intermediaries, this dissertation finds that while the imagined trade empire failed to materialize, the SIC contributed to a developing American perception of China that envisioned increasingly greater American intervention in East Asia. In this millieu, a “Peking” order emerged by the mid-1920s that became influential in American East Asia policy towards the eve of Word War II that saw China as vital to American interests. Established as precursor of American economic empire in China, the SIC was instrumental in shifting discourse away from economic empire towards an interventionist American Orientalism. Trade expansion rhetoric waned and Orientalist language solidified as Japanese aggression became more blatant and the ascendance of Communism in China ever more certain. Highlighting the bureaucratic intermediaries as new method of studying history, this study indicates that the project of American economic imperialism was largely imagined, but one that transformed to accommodate evolving visions of expanding American power in East Asia. These conclusions offer new challenges to and opportunities for scholars of American foreign relations.
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Maxson, Brian Jeffrey. "Book Review of Merchant Writers: Florentine memoirs from the Middle Ages and Renaissance." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2016. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/2681.

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Bays, Jonathan. "From fire-proof house to middle power : narrative, identity and Canadian foreign policy, 1939-1956." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.312625.

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Mitter, Sreemati. "A History of Money in Palestine: From the 1900s to the Present." Thesis, Harvard University, 2014. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:11308.

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Schriwer, Charlotte. ""From water every living thing" : water mills, irrigation and agriculture in the Bilād al-Shām : perspectives on history, architecture, landscape and society, 1100-1850 AD." Thesis, University of St Andrews, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/7080.

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This work explores the role of the watermill in the history and society of Jordan, Syria and Cyprus from the 12th to the 19th century. Previous studies in this area have been limited, and have usually assumed the watermills in the Levant to date from the Ottoman period. This work aims to suggest that many of the mills still extant today in fact date from an earlier period. A review of the historical documentation and archaeological material is the main background of this study, while an examination of the watermills themselves aims to provide a permanent record of these before they disappear due to rural and urban development. A review of available reference material regarding the role of the mill in Levantine economy and society from the medieval to late Ottoman periods emphasises the importance of the watermill in rural and urban areas of the Levant in a historical period of fluctuating economic stability. The reference material consists mainly of historical accounts by travellers and chroniclers, legal documents such as treaties, charters and waqf documents, as well as archaeological, environmental and socioeconomic studies of the Levant from the medieval to the early modem period. The broad nature of this study aims to form a basis for future research with a more detailed focus in these disciplines.
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Books on the topic "History from the middle"

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Immigration from the Middle East. Mason Crest Publishers, 2004.

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Monarchy: From the Middle Ages to modernity. HarperPress, 2007.

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Starkey, David. Monarchy: From the Middle Ages to modernity. HarperPress, 2006.

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Noble, Thomas F. X. From Roman Provinces to Barbarian Kingdoms. Routledge, 2005.

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Hays, Swope Belle McKinney, ed. Genealogical data abstracted from History of Middle Spring Presbyterian Church, Middle Spring, Pennsylvania, 1738-1900. Heritage Books, 1992.

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Nancy: From the middle ages to the 21st century. Editions Serpenoise, 2005.

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Johnston, Andrew James. Performing the Middle Ages from 'Beowulf' to 'Othello'. Brepols Publishers, 2008.

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Performing the Middle Ages from 'Beowulf' to 'Othello'. Brepols Publishers, 2008.

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Rose, Williams. From Rome to Reformation: European history for the new millennium. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, 2009.

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Rose, Williams. From Rome to Reformation: European history for the new millennium. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "History from the middle"

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Claus, Peter, and John Marriott. "From the Middle Ages to the Early Modern." In History. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315684673-4.

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Wierenga, Edward. "Middle knowledge and evil." In The History of Evil From the Mid-Twentieth Century to Today. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351139601-7.

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Tucker, Ernest. "Making New Nations from Imperial Regions." In The Middle East in Modern World History. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351031707-12.

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Tucker, Ernest. "From Six-Day War to October War." In The Middle East in Modern World History. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351031707-18.

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Tucker, Ernest. "From “New Order” to “Re-Ordering”: the Tanzimat." In The Middle East in Modern World History. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351031707-5.

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Holmes, Mary Anne, and David K. Watkins. "Middle and Late Cretaceous History of the Indian Ocean." In Synthesis of Results from Scientific Drilling in the Indian Ocean. American Geophysical Union, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/gm070p0225.

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Cleveland, William L., and Martin Bunton. "Israel and the Palestinians from 1948 to the 1970s." In A History of the Modern Middle East. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429495502-21.

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Phillips, Ursula. "Polish Women Authors: From the Middle Ages until 1800." In A History of Central European Women’s Writing. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780333985151_2.

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O’Boyle, Cherie. "From Greek Philosophy to the Middle Ages: What and How Do We Believe?" In History of Psychology. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003141518-2.

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Colish, Marcia L. "Re-envisioning the Middle Ages: A View from Intellectual History." In Arizona Studies in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Brepols Publishers, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.asmar-eb.4.00004.

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Conference papers on the topic "History from the middle"

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Uddin, Shahab, Jimmy D. Dolan, Ricardo A. Chona, et al. "Lessons Learned from the First Openhole Horizontal Well Water Shutoff Job Using Two New Polymer Systems - A Case History from Wafra Ratawi Field, Kuwait." In Middle East Oil Show. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/81447-ms.

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Medhat, Sanad, and Waheed Arshad. "An Effective Means to Control Lost Circulation in Flowing HPHT Wells- Case History from East Med Sea Area." In Middle East Oil Show. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/81413-ms.

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Al-Ajmi, Hadi Saad Hussain, Abdullah Al-Ajmi, Khalid Eid Al-Ajmi, et al. "Drilling and Completion Fluids Design for Horizontal Well Drilling - Case History from Raudhatein Field." In SPE Middle East Oil and Gas Show and Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/164177-ms.

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Sotomayor, Ghery. "Drilling and Completion Fluids Design for Horizontal Well Drilling – Case History from Raudhatein Field." In AAPG/EAGE Tight Reservoirs in the Middle East Workshop. EAGE Publications BV, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.20131818.

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Venkatachalapathy, R., and G. Shanmugavalli. "Middle Cenomanian to Middle Turonian Planktic Foraminiferal Assemblages from Scattered Outcrops in the Karai - Kulakkalnattam Area, Uttattur Group, Southern India." In Proceedings of XXIII Indian Colloquium on Micropaleontalogy and Stratigraphy and International Symposium on Global Bioevents in Earth's History. Geological Society of India, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.17491/cgsi/2013/63318.

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Myts, Victor, and Sergey Solovyev. "Population of the Taman Peninsula in the Middle Ages (materials from excavations of 2016)." In Field session of the Institute for History of Material Culture Russian Academy of Sciences. Institute for the History of Material Culture Russian Academy of Sciences, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31600/978-5-907053-11-3-2018-8-97-122.

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Peringod, Chandran, Sharifa Moh'd Al-Ruheili, Zeljko Kerecin, Kartik Sonti, and Tor Sukkestad. "Successful Auto gaslift using intelligent completion boosted oil production - A case history from Petroleum Development Oman." In SPE/IADC Middle East Drilling Technology Conference and Exhibition. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/148474-ms.

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Maili, Eduard, David Hoffman, and Feras Al-Tawash. "Framework Model Building in Highly Complex Structures Utilizing Multi-Azimuth 3D Seismic Data: Case History from Bahrain Field." In SPE Middle East Oil and Gas Show and Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/164428-ms.

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Samir, Ahmed, and Osama Ahmed Wafik El Bakly. "Custom Designed Water-based Mud Systems Help Minimize Hole Washouts in High Temperature Wells- Case History from Western Desert, Egypt." In SPE/IADC Middle East Drilling and Technology Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/108292-ms.

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Khater, Mohammed R., Shahab Uddin, Jamal A. Al-Rubaiyea, Ashish R. Rai, and Naz Gazi. "Isolation of a Horizontal Hole Section in an Openhole Well Using a NonDamaging Temporary Gel Plug to Facilitate Hydrocarbon Production from the Remaining Lateral Section - A Case History from Kuwait." In SPE/IADC Middle East Drilling Technology Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/72291-ms.

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Reports on the topic "History from the middle"

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Scurlock, Dan. From the Rio to the Sierra: An environmental history of the Middle Rio Grande Basin. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.2737/rmrs-gtr-5.

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Jennings, John M. Modern African, Asian, Latin American, and Middle Eastern Military History: A Bibliography of English-Language Books and Articles Published From 1960-2013. Defense Technical Information Center, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada597440.

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Lazonick, William, Philip Moss, and Joshua Weitz. The Unmaking of the Black Blue-Collar Middle Class. Institute for New Economic Thinking Working Paper Series, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36687/inetwp159.

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In the decade after the Civil Rights Act of 1964, African Americans made historic gains in accessing employment opportunities in racially integrated workplaces in U.S. business firms and government agencies. In the previous working papers in this series, we have shown that in the 1960s and 1970s, Blacks without college degrees were gaining access to the American middle class by moving into well-paid unionized jobs in capital-intensive mass production industries. At that time, major U.S. companies paid these blue-collar workers middle-class wages, offered stable employment, and provided employees with health and retirement benefits. Of particular importance to Blacks was the opening up to them of unionized semiskilled operative and skilled craft jobs, for which in a number of industries, and particularly those in the automobile and electronic manufacturing sectors, there was strong demand. In addition, by the end of the 1970s, buoyed by affirmative action and the growth of public-service employment, Blacks were experiencing upward mobility through employment in government agencies at local, state, and federal levels as well as in civil-society organizations, largely funded by government, to operate social and community development programs aimed at urban areas where Blacks lived. By the end of the 1970s, there was an emergent blue-collar Black middle class in the United States. Most of these workers had no more than high-school educations but had sufficient earnings and benefits to provide their families with economic security, including realistic expectations that their children would have the opportunity to move up the economic ladder to join the ranks of the college-educated white-collar middle class. That is what had happened for whites in the post-World War II decades, and given the momentum provided by the dominant position of the United States in global manufacturing and the nation’s equal employment opportunity legislation, there was every reason to believe that Blacks would experience intergenerational upward mobility along a similar education-and-employment career path. That did not happen. Overall, the 1980s and 1990s were decades of economic growth in the United States. For the emerging blue-collar Black middle class, however, the experience was of job loss, economic insecurity, and downward mobility. As the twentieth century ended and the twenty-first century began, moreover, it became apparent that this downward spiral was not confined to Blacks. Whites with only high-school educations also saw their blue-collar employment opportunities disappear, accompanied by lower wages, fewer benefits, and less security for those who continued to find employment in these jobs. The distress experienced by white Americans with the decline of the blue-collar middle class follows the downward trajectory that has adversely affected the socioeconomic positions of the much more vulnerable blue-collar Black middle class from the early 1980s. In this paper, we document when, how, and why the unmaking of the blue-collar Black middle class occurred and intergenerational upward mobility of Blacks to the college-educated middle class was stifled. We focus on blue-collar layoffs and manufacturing-plant closings in an important sector for Black employment, the automobile industry from the early 1980s. We then document the adverse impact on Blacks that has occurred in government-sector employment in a financialized economy in which the dominant ideology is that concentration of income among the richest households promotes productive investment, with government spending only impeding that objective. Reduction of taxes primarily on the wealthy and the corporate sector, the ascendancy of political and economic beliefs that celebrate the efficiency and dynamism of “free market” business enterprise, and the denigration of the idea that government can solve social problems all combined to shrink government budgets, diminish regulatory enforcement, and scuttle initiatives that previously provided greater opportunity for African Americans in the government and civil-society sectors.
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Pérez Zambrano, Luis Manuel. Connections with the Past: Middle Ages in Colombian History Journals. Edicions de la Universitat de Lleida, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21001/itma.2017.11.04.

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Goetzmann, William. Bubble Investing: Learning from History. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w21693.

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Zeng, Honglei, Maher A. Alhossaini, Li Ding, Richard Fikes, and Deborah L. McGuinness. Computing Trust from Revision History. Defense Technical Information Center, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada454704.

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Wilson, Doyle. Post-middle Miocene Geologic History of the Tualatin Basin, Oregon with Hydrogeologic Implications. Portland State University Library, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.6595.

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Schnabel, Beverly. Central auditory processing in children with a history of chronic middle ear problems. Portland State University Library, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.2781.

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Francisco, Katie Elizabeth, and Sandra Starkey. Comfortable Elegance- Taking Cues from History. Iowa State University, Digital Repository, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/itaa_proceedings-180814-260.

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Copeland, M. J., W. G. Parkins, and G. S. Nowlan. A lower middle ordovician microfauna from Ottawa, Ontario. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/127716.

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