Academic literature on the topic 'Indian Council of World Affairs'

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Journal articles on the topic "Indian Council of World Affairs"

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Rawat, Shashi, Rajesh Kumar, and Sudhir Tyagi. "Use of social media in Indian Council of World Affairs (ICWA) library: A case study." Gyankosh- The Journal of Library and Information Management 10, no. 2 (2019): 125. http://dx.doi.org/10.5958/2249-3182.2019.00013.3.

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Van Goor, J. "India and the Indonesian Archipelago from the Generale Missiven der VOC (Dutch East India Company)." Itinerario 16, no. 2 (1992): 23–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0165115300022117.

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Regularly, with the ships coming with the monsoon, the Governor-General and the councillors at Batavia received information from their subordinates from all over Asia. The Council of the Indies consisted of older members of the Company's bureaucracy, men who had served in several posts before being nominated to this ultimate position of honour. Together in council they constituted the best informed body on Asian affairs, in the East, as well as in the West. As a body they were responsible for the formulation of the generate missiven, the general letters in which the Heren Zeventien (Gentlemen Seventeen) were briefed on the state of affairs. The missiven had to be signed by all, dissent was not permissable. According to a a set pattern, all factories were dealt with in the same fashion. Any member of the council in principle would have been able to make an overview of the differing areas in which the Company was active. If any, they seem to have been the people able to make a comparison of the Indian subcontinent and the Indonesian archipelago. The following is an attempt to show what insights might have been expected from an interview with an elder servant of the ‘honourable Company’.
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Carr-Stewart, Sheila, Jim Marshall, and Larry Steeves. "Inequity of Education Financial Resources: A case study of First Nations school funding compared to provincial school funding in Saskatchewan." Articles 46, no. 3 (2012): 363–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1009171ar.

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In a review of First Nations band-managed school policies, the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (2002) noted what had been devolved was “the specific operation of the school. What was not devolved was an [education] system which would support the school” (p. 5) delivery of quality educational programming for First Nations’ students. The purpose of this paper is to compare available second level services and funding levels provided in schools operated by a Tribal Council and a provincial school division. Differences in service levels and funding, the authors argue, must be addressed if equitable services and enhanced learning experiences are to be available to all students regardless of school type attended.
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Sharma, Anil Kumar, and Kilambi Pundarikakshudu. "Regulatory Aspects of Traditional Indian Medicines (TIM) in India and in International Purview." Journal of AOAC INTERNATIONAL 102, no. 4 (2019): 993–1002. http://dx.doi.org/10.5740/jaoacint.18-0379.

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Abstract Background: Regulatory affairs play a crucial role in the pharmaceutical industry and are incorporated in all stages of drug development. Objective: Approval criteria practices were developed as a resolution of the government’s desire to create policies to protect public health by controlling the safety and efficacy of merchandise in areas including pharmaceuticals, complementary color medicines, veterinary medicines, medical devices, and even food products and cosmetics. Method: Herbal health products are in practices in all parts of the world under either their legal system’s or expert council’s or agencies’ guides. They include botanicals, health supplements, health foods, complimentary medicines, traditional medicines or following pathies like Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha, and Homeopathy. The requisite parameters for registration or recognition of products by various major global regulatory agencies were reviewed, and compiled under purview. Results: In India, licensing these products is under the act provisions and the rules known as the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, whereas globally regulatory provisions follow the guidelines of developed countries like the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, European Medicines Agency, the Therapeutic Goods Act, or the World Health Organization’s regulations for herbal products. Conclusions: The present communication highlights the provisions of regulatory and/or licensing requirements related to corporates, product composition, specifications, quality parameters, manufacturing methodology, stability, safety, preclinical studies, clinical studies, etc. for herbal products and the respective guidelines at one site. Highlights: Ultimately, all regulatory agencies across the world highlight majorly the safety and thereafter the efficacy for any products under the category.
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JONES, JUSTIN. "‘Acting upon our Religion’: Muslim women's movements and the remodelling of Islamic practice in India." Modern Asian Studies 55, no. 1 (2020): 40–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x1900043x.

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AbstractIn the last 15 years, India has witnessed the expression of a variety of new non-conformist religious practices performed by Muslim women. A range of vibrant campaigns has been pioneered by Muslim women's associations, asserting women's claims to hold and lead congregational prayers, enter and manage mosques, visit shrines, officiate Muslim marriages, and issue shari‘ah-based legal decisions. This article explores the twin questions of why these experimental remodellings of women's Islamic observance and leadership have been so pronounced in the Indian context compared with much of the Islamic world, and furthermore, why Muslim women's rights activists have put such confessional matters at the centre of their work. Exploring a series of specific female-led assertions of religious agency centring upon mosques, shari‘ah councils, and a Sufi shrine, the article argues that India's variant of ‘secularism’, which has normalized the state's non-intervention in religious institutions and laws, has given women the freedom to embark upon overhauls of Islamic conventions denied to their counterparts elsewhere. Simultaneously, this same framework for handling religious questions has historically given intra-community and clerical voices particular influence in regulating Muslim community affairs and family laws, compelling activists to seek women's empowerment in individual and local community contexts to further their objectives, including through the assertion of experimental forms of religious conduct.
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Malakhov, Vadim. "Is it possible to develop science without international cooperation? Review of the RIAC report “Novye gorizonty nauchnoi diplomatii v Rossii” [New Horizons of Science Diplomacy in Russia]." Science Management: Theory And Practice 3, no. 1 (2021): 235–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.19181/smtp.2021.3.1.14.

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The review is devoted to the analysis of the report of the Russian International Affairs Council “New Horizons for Science Diplomacy in Russia”. Published in December 2020, the report focuses on the problems and prospects of development of science diplomacy in Russia. The report presents an analysis of the experience of using science diplomacy in Western countries (the USA, Great Britain and France), and presents a summary of domestic experience in this area. Given the poor study of the phenomenon of science diplomacy in Russia, the authors of the report provide a detailed overview of the situation in Russia and the world,expose the shortcomings of policy in this area with arguments, and, based on an analysis of global experience, offer a set of recommendations for the development of science diplomacy in modern Russia. At the same time, the report contains a number of gaps that require deeper analysis. Thus, there is no analysis of the experience of developing countries, such as China or India; the role of such a public authority as the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation in the implementation of science diplomacy in Russia is not studied enough; some of the authors’ proposals on the development of science diplomacy do not look well-reasoned.
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Wu, Der-yuan. "City Diplomacy, Multilateral Networks and the Role of Southeast Asia." Jurnal Global & Strategis 14, no. 1 (2020): 17. http://dx.doi.org/10.20473/jgs.14.1.2020.17-30.

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In the wake of globalization, cities have increasingly engaged in international affairs. Positioning as in-between administrative entities and to reconcile between competing national interests and universal objectives like the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), cities could demonstrate their agency in providing alternative pursuit of global development. In particular, while international affairs have in a way environmentalized, global environmentalism in turn has strongly urbanized in recent decades. Many cities along the coast, in Asia or broader world alike, are at the forefront of climate change impacts and would be vulnerable to any catastrophes such as the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004. After all, given the size of city economies, the material losses caused by climate-induced extreme weather can be tremendous. Thus, it is worthwhile to examine the role of Southeast Asian cities in international development in terms of their transnational networking. Moreover, the phenomenon that cities becoming active players in international affairs has been explored mostly in relation to North American, European or Western setting. Literature on cities’ transnational and multi-level engagement in the EU has been abundant. By contrast, there is very few researches focusing on the part of ASEAN in mainstream literature on city diplomacy or paradiplomacy. The primary purpose of this paper is thus to examine the state of play by Southeast Asian cities in some key multilateral networkings such as C40 Cities, International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI) and United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG).Keywords: city diplomacy, Southeast Asia, transnational networking, multilateral networkingKota-kota semakin terlibat dalam urusan internasional setelah globalisasi mulai muncul ke permukaan. Memposisikan sebagai entitas administratif di antara dan untuk merekonsiliasi antara kepentingan nasional yang bersaing dan tujuan universal seperti Tujuan Pembangunan Berkelanjutan PBB (SDGs), kota-kota dapat menunjukkan peran mereka dalam memberikan alternatif pengejaran pembangunan global. Lebih lanjut, ketika isu lingkungan telah mendominasi dunia internasional, para pemikir lingkungan global telah membuatnya menjadi lebih urban dalam beberapa dekade. Banyak kota di daerah pantai, baik di regional Asia ataupun di regional lainnya di dunia, berada dalam resiko tinggi akan perubahan iklim dan rentan terhadap bencana seperti tsunami, seperti yang terjadi di Samudra Hindia tahun 2004. Terlebih lagi, mengingat ukuran ekonomi kota, kerugian materiil disebabkan oleh cuaca ekstrem yang disebabkan oleh iklim cenderung cukup besar. Dengan demikian, ada baiknya untuk memeriksa peran kota-kota Asia Tenggara dalam pengembangan internasional dalam hal jaringan transnasional mereka. Selain itu, fenomena bahwa kota menjadi pemain aktif dalam urusan internasional telah dieksplorasi sebagian besar di kawasan Amerika Utara, Eropa atau Barat. Literatur tentang keterlibatan transnasional dan multi-level kota-kota di Uni Eropa telah berlimpah. Sebaliknya, masih sedikit penelitian yang berfokus pada bagian ASEAN dalam literatur arus utama tentang diplomasi kota atau paradiplomasi. Tujuan utama dari tulisan prospektif ini adalah untuk menguji keadaan permainan oleh kota-kota Asia Tenggara di beberapa jaringan multilateral utama seperti Kota C40, Dewan Internasional untuk Inisiatif Lingkungan Lokal (ICLEI) dan United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG).Kata-Kata Kunci: diplomasi antar kota, Asia Tenggara, jaringan transnasional, jaringan multilateral
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Flood, Peter F. "Second International Muskox Symposium/Deuxième symposium international sur le Boeuf musqué: Introduction." Canadian Journal of Zoology 67, no. 5 (1989): 1091. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/z89-153.

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Following the First International Muskox Symposium, held at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, in 1983, it was agreed that a second symposium should be held in Canada in 1987 under the general guidance of a committee composed of A. S. Blix, L. Königsson, J. E. Rowell, H. Thing, and R. G. White. This symposium, the Second International Muskox Symposium, took place at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, from 1 to 4 October 1987. It was attended by more than 70 people representing nine countries, including all of the circumpolar nations. The symposium covered all aspects of muskox biology ranging from the endocrinology of reproduction to paleontology. It also included a presentation on the takin (Budorcas taxicolor), regarded as the only close relative of the muskox. In all there were 32 papers, 24 posters, a workshop on the management of expanding muskox populations led by Dr. Graeme Caughley, and an informal evening discussion and display on the commercial use of muskoxen.The 14 papers included in this issue are those contributions to the symposium that represent completed original work that falls within the scope of the Canadian Journal of Zoology and is not in press elsewhere. Written accounts of other contributions to the symposium have been printed independently and are bound with reprints of the papers appearing here to form the Proceedings of the Second International Muskox Symposium. Copies of the proceedings may be purchased by writing to the above address.Grateful thanks are due to Janice Rowell, without whom muskoxen would never have become a focus of research in Saskatoon; there would then have been no reason to choose Saskatoon as the symposium site. John Blake, Ron Chaplin, Colleen Stevens, and Patti Wilk played an invaluable part in the local organization. Anne Gunn provided much essential advice and liaison with the Northwest Territories Wildlife Service, who were instrumental in organizing the workshop on expanding muskox populations. Financial support was generously provided by the Government of the Northwest Territories, the Northern Affairs Program of the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the City of Saskatoon, the University of Saskatchewan, and Gulf Oil Canada. A debt of gratitude is also owed to the Dean of the Western College of Veterinary Medicine, Dr. G. F. Hamilton, for his encouragement and for putting the facilities of the college at our disposal, and especially to Dr. John Tener who graciously acted as our honorary chairman and gave us a most stimulating opening address.
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Davis, Nathaniel. "The Number of Orthodox Churches before and after the Khrushchev Antireligious Drive." Slavic Review 50, no. 3 (1991): 612–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2499857.

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Glasnost has made available to scholars many of the postwar files of the Soviet Council for Religious Affairs. These files, covering the activities between World War II and 1966 of the Council for Russian Orthodox Church Affairs and the Council for the Affairs of Religious Cults, have been deposited in the Central Governmental Archives in Moscow. Five thin volumes of indexes refer to thousands of pages of material, including signed original documents, initialed carbons, and reports from individual inspectors and district commissioners. The materials appear to be genuine, even though they are not complete.
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Stefon, Frederick J., and Alison R. Bernstein. "American Indians and World War II: Toward a New Era in Indian Affairs." Journal of American History 79, no. 2 (1992): 717. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2080163.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Indian Council of World Affairs"

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Venosa, Robert Donato. ""Freedom Will Win—If Free Men Act!": Liberal Internationalism in an Illiberal Age, 1936-1956." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2020. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1588271691660565.

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Hussein, Ahmad. "Vägen till Beirut : Svenska handelsfrämjande åtgärder i Libanon 1920-1975." Doctoral thesis, Umeå universitet, Institutionen för geografi och ekonomisk historia, 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-61520.

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This thesis investigates Swedish trade promotion in Lebanon from 1920 to 1975. The aim is to increase knowledge about how actors in a small open western economy tried to develop their economic interests in an emerging market characterized by great uncertainty. Here, the promising economic outlook coincided with a high degree of political instability. The study analyzes the interactions between Swedish trade related authorities, organizations and companies in their efforts to develop Swedish business interests in Lebanon: a developing country in a conflict-affected area with potentially large and emerging markets, where the cultural distance to Sweden was significant. In this study a model, which is known as the Uppsala model, forms an analytical interpretative framework for studying the actions and strategies of the trade related authorities and organizations despite the model's specific perspective on the establishment process of firms abroad. Based on the taxonomy, which is the basis of this interpretative model, this interpretative framwork has been possible to apply because of the assumed interactions between trade related authorities/organizations and companies when establishing commercial presence in new markets. The assumption is that the trade related authorities and organizations enhance for companies in various ways, while there is an economic-political interest that the state strives to reach by encouraging companies to set up business in new markets. By using this model, the events have been systematized through a historical generalization and periodization of Swedish trade promotion and organization. Added with the type of knowledge development that has taken place. In this way, the role of authorities and organizations in trade promotion and organizational build-up abroad has been highlighted. The results show that Swedish trade promotion attempts and organization in Lebanon took place in close cooperation with Swedish trade related authorities and organizations through their information inflows. In practice the companies' needs for information and assistance were reflected in the work that has been exercised by the authorities and organizations. By playing an important role in information building, escalating network positions and at the same time providing the companies with specific information, the trade related authorities and organizations became key actors in the development of Swedish trade relations with Lebanon. The study concludes that new perspectives can be obtained by including trade related authorities and organizations when using the Uppsala model in future studies.<br>Denna avhandling studerar svenska handelsfrämjande åtgärder i Libanon 1920-1975. Syftet är att öka kunskapen om hur aktörer i en liten öppen västekonomi försökte utveckla sina ekonomiska intressen på en ny framväxande marknad präglad av stor osäkerhet, där lovande ekonomiska utsikter sammanföll med en hög grad av politisk instabilitet. I studien analyseras samspelet mellan svenska handelsrelaterade myndigheter, organisationer och företag i deras strävan att utveckla svenska handels- och affärsintressen i Libanon: ett land som betraktas här som ett utvecklingsland i ett konfliktdrabbat område med potentiellt stora och nya marknader med ett betydande kulturellt avstånd till Sverige. I studien utgör den så kallade Uppsalamodellen den analytiska tolkningsramen för att studera myndigheternas och intresseorganisationernas agerande och strategier, trots att modellens perspektiv bygger på företagens utlandsetablering. Med utgångspunkt i den taxonomi som är grunden i modellen har denna tolkningsram varit möjlig på grund av det samspel som antas finnas mellan företag och myndigheter, särskilt när det gäller etablerandet av en affärsmässig närvaro på en ny och osäker marknad. Antaganden är att myndigheterna på olika sätt underlättar för företagen, samtidigt som det finns ett statligt ekonomisk-politiskt intresse att få företag att etablera sig på nya marknader. Med hjälp av modellen har händelseförloppen systematiserats genom en historisk generalisering och periodisering av svenska handelsfrämjande åtgärder med avseende på organisation och den typ av kunskapsuppbyggnad som skett. Därmed belyses också myndigheternas och organisationernas roll vid företagsetableringar i utlandet. Resultaten visar att företagsetableringsförsöken och organisationen av svensk handel i Libanon skedde i nära samarbete mellan svenska myndigheter och organisationer genom utbyte av information. I praktiken avspeglades företagens behov av information och hjälp i myndigheternas och organisationernas arbete. I och med att myndigheterna/organisationerna deltog i informationsuppbyggnaden, skapandet av nätverkspositioner och samtidigt förmedlade information mellan företagen var dessa betingade som centrala aktörer vid etableringen av svenska handelsförbindelser med Libanon. Studiens slutsats är att nya perspektiv gällande företagsetableringar på utländska marknader kan erhållas genom att inkludera myndigheters och organisationers agerande vid tillämpningen av Uppsala modellen i framtida studier.
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Kinuthia, Wanyee. "“Accumulation by Dispossession” by the Global Extractive Industry: The Case of Canada." Thèse, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/30170.

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This thesis draws on David Harvey’s concept of “accumulation by dispossession” and an international political economy (IPE) approach centred on the institutional arrangements and power structures that privilege certain actors and values, in order to critique current capitalist practices of primitive accumulation by the global corporate extractive industry. The thesis examines how accumulation by dispossession by the global extractive industry is facilitated by the “free entry” or “free mining” principle. It does so by focusing on Canada as a leader in the global extractive industry and the spread of this country’s mining laws to other countries – in other words, the transnationalisation of norms in the global extractive industry – so as to maintain a consistent and familiar operating environment for Canadian extractive companies. The transnationalisation of norms is further promoted by key international institutions such as the World Bank, which is also the world’s largest development lender and also plays a key role in shaping the regulations that govern natural resource extraction. The thesis briefly investigates some Canadian examples of resource extraction projects, in order to demonstrate the weaknesses of Canadian mining laws, particularly the lack of protection of landowners’ rights under the free entry system and the subsequent need for “free, prior and informed consent” (FPIC). The thesis also considers some of the challenges to the adoption and implementation of the right to FPIC. These challenges include embedded institutional structures like the free entry mining system, international political economy (IPE) as shaped by international institutions and powerful corporations, as well as concerns regarding ‘local’ power structures or the legitimacy of representatives of communities affected by extractive projects. The thesis concludes that in order for Canada to be truly recognized as a leader in the global extractive industry, it must establish legal norms domestically to ensure that Canadian mining companies and residents can be held accountable when there is evidence of environmental and/or human rights violations associated with the activities of Canadian mining companies abroad. The thesis also concludes that Canada needs to address underlying structural issues such as the free entry mining system and implement FPIC, in order to curb “accumulation by dispossession” by the extractive industry, both domestically and abroad.
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Crossen, Jonathan. "Decolonization, Indigenous Internationalism, and the World Council of Indigenous Peoples." Thesis, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10012/8471.

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This dissertation investigates the history of the World Council of Indigenous Peoples (WCIP) and the broader movement of Indigenous internationalism. It argues that Indigenous internationalists were inspired by the process of decolonization, and used its logic to establish a new political identity. The foundation of the WCIP helped create a network of Indigenous peoples that expressed international solidarity between historically unconnected communities. The international efforts of Indigenous activists were encouraged both by personal experiences of international travel and post-secondary education, and by the general growth of international non-governmental organizations during the late twentieth century. The growing importance of international non-governmental organizations helped the WCIP secure funding from international developmental aid agencies, a factor which pushed the organization to increase its focus on apolitical economic development relative to the anti-colonial objectives which inspired its foundation. This dissertation examines how Indigenous international organizations became embroiled in the Cold War conflict in Latin America, and the difficulties this situation posed for both the WCIP and the International Indian Treaty Council. Finally, it examines how the prominence of the World Council faded, as major international bodies like the United Nations began to acknowledge the importance of Indigenous peoples, and as Indigenous organizations sought to participate directly in new international fora rather than contributing through the WCIP.
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Books on the topic "Indian Council of World Affairs"

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Gupta, Bhabani Sen. The Gorbachev factor in world affairs: An Indian interpretation. B.R. Pub. Corp., 1989.

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World Council of Churches. Commission of the Churches on International Affairs. The role of the World Council of Churches in international affairs. World Council of Churches, 1986.

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Mork, Kathryn. Internship report: International Visitors Program at the World Affairs Council of Seattle. Huxley College of the Environment, Western Washington University, 2004.

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American Indians and World War II: Toward a new era in Indian affairs. University of Oklahoma Press, 1991.

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Churches, World Council of, ed. Nairobi to Vancouver: The World Council of Churches and the world, 1975-87. Ethics and Public Policy Center, 1987.

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The UN veto in world affairs, 1946-1990: A complete record and case histories of the Security Council's veto. UNIFO, 1992.

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United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Indian Affairs (1993- ). Code talkers: Hearing before the Committee on Indian Affairs, United States Senate, One Hundred Eighth Congress, second session, on contributions of Native American code talkers in American military history, September 22, 2004, Washington, DC. U.S. G.P.O., 2004.

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Council, Minnesota Indian Affairs. Minnesota Indian Affairs Council report on American Indian adolescent chemical dependency program models, submitted to Cynthia Turnure, Director, Chemical Dependency Program Division, Department of Human Services. The Dept., 1991.

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Dalton, Richard. Winning peace in the Gulf: A long-term perspective : a report compiled for the Middle East Programme of the Royal Institute of International Affairs. Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1992.

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United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Indian Affairs (1993- ). Inter-Tribal Timber Council's Indian forest management assessement [sic] team report: Hearing before the Committee on Indian Affairs, United States Senate, One Hundred Eighth Congress, second session, on assessing the effectiveness and success of tribal forestry practices, March 30, 2004, Washington, DC. U.S. G.P.O., 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Indian Council of World Affairs"

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Balabantaray, Subhra Rajat, and Jayaram Singh Samal. "Indian Movies’ Impact on World Culture and Society." In The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Interest Groups, Lobbying and Public Affairs. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-13895-0_185-1.

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Moutselos, Michalis, and Georgia Mavrodi. "Diaspora Policies, Consular Services and Social Protection for Greek Citizens Abroad." In IMISCOE Research Series. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51245-3_13.

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Abstract The policies of the Greek state vis-à-vis Greek citizens residing abroad are better developed in some areas (pension, cultural/education policy), but very embryonic in others (social protection, family-related benefits). The institutions representing and aggregating the interests of the Greek diaspora, such as the General Secretariat for Greeks Abroad and the World Council of Hellenes abroad of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, reflect earlier periods of Greek migration during the post-war period, but meet less adequately the needs of recent migrants, especially following the post-2010 Greek economic crisis. At the same time, political parties continue to play an active role in the relationship between diaspora and the homeland. The policies of the Greek state, especially when exercised informally or with regard to cultural and educational programs, are also characterized by an emphasis on blood, language and religious ties, and are offshoots of a long-standing history of migration to Western Europe, North America and Australia. Possible developments, such as the long-overdue implementation of the right to vote from abroad, an official registrar for Greek citizens residing abroad, new programs of social protection in Greece and new economic incentives for return might change the diaspora policies of the Greek state in the next decades.
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Sharma, Chhaya. "Digital Initiatives of the Indian Council of World Affairs' Library." In Digital Libraries and Institutional Repositories. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-2463-3.ch007.

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This chapter attempts to unravel the journey of Sapru House library (Indian Council of World Library) from a passive manual traditional library to an active electronic library. This chapter provides insights into the traditional management of the resources and their service provision and examines the reasons for the digital initiatives and the how the challenges and obstructions were met and overridden. ICWA library is an academic library having a unique and matchless collection of bound newspapers (since1933), press clippings (since 1964) and rare books (between 1700-1900) constitute 70% of its total collection. Housing, storage, management, preservation, conservation, retrieval and dissemination were underlying reasons that inspired the author to transform this valued collection to a digital repository of knowledge. This chapter gives a detailed account of the conception of the digital initiations vis-à-vis the digital project, outlines, reports, discussions, presentations, approvals, sanctions, funding, execution, implementation and the outcome and realization of the dream.
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Sharma, Chhaya. "Digital Initiatives of the Indian Council of World Affairs' Library." In Advances in Library and Information Science. IGI Global, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-1653-8.ch012.

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This chapter attempts to unravel the journey of Sapru House library (Indian Council of World Library) from a passive manual traditional library to an active electronic library. This chapter provides insights into the traditional management of the resources and their service provision and examines the reasons for the digital initiatives and the how the challenges and obstructions were met and overridden. ICWA library is an academic library having a unique and matchless collection of bound newspapers (since1933), press clippings (since 1964) and rare books (between 1700-1900) constitute 70% of its total collection. Housing, storage, management, preservation, conservation, retrieval and dissemination were underlying reasons that inspired the author to transform this valued collection to a digital repository of knowledge. This chapter gives a detailed account of the conception of the digital initiations vis-à-vis the digital project, outlines, reports, discussions, presentations, approvals, sanctions, funding, execution, implementation and the outcome and realization of the dream.
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"Suez and Indian Ocean." In An Atlas of World Affairs. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203027257-42.

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"The external determinants of change in Indian foreign affairs, 1960s–90s." In India - From Regional to World Power. Routledge, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203390849-15.

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Barbato, Melanie. "Diplomatic Language in the Deepavali Messages of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue." In Modern Papal Diplomacy and Social Teaching in World Affairs. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429259289-9.

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Theobald, Brianna. "Our Crow Indian Hospital." In Reproduction on the Reservation. University of North Carolina Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469653167.003.0006.

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This chapter explores how members of the Crow Nation—especially women—navigated the various terminationist pressures of the post-World War II period. In these years, an influential group of policy makers pursued the dissolution of the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the termination of tribal members’ political status as “American Indian.” In practice, one of the most immediate threats was the reduction or elimination of reservation health services. The chapter reveals that the female members of a new Crow Health Committee emerged as leaders in the community’s effort to protect the reservation hospital and to reform the colonial institution to meet the evolving needs of Crow people. In regular meetings with medical officers in the newly created Indian Health Service, these women presented comprehensive health services, and particularly maternal and infant welfare, as a federal obligation and a matter of Indian treaty rights.
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Winter, Jerrold. "Opioids: God’s Own Medicine." In Our Love Affair with Drugs. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190051464.003.0006.

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Albert Schweitzer called pain “a more terrible lord of mankind than even death.” Thus, it is not surprising that humans have from the earliest times attempted to identify plants which might provide pain relief. The Odyssey by Homer provides a mythic account of the use of one such agent. . . . Then Helen, daughter of Zeus, took other counsel. Straightaway she cast into the wine of which they were drinking a drug to quit all pain and strife, and bring forgetfulness of every ill. Whoso should drink this down, when it is mingled in the bowl, would not in the course of that day let a tear fall down over his cheeks, no, not though his mother and father should lie there dead . . . Such cunning drugs had the daughter of Zeus, drugs of healing, which Polydamna, the wife of Thor, had given her, a woman of Egypt, for there the earth, the giver of grain, bears the greatest store of drugs . . . . . . More than a century ago, it was suggested by Oswald Schmiedeberg, a German scientist regarded by many as the father of modern pharmacology, that the drug to which Homer refers is opium for “no other natural product on the whole earth calls forth in man such a psychical blunting as the one described.” When today, in the fields of Afghanistan or Turkey or India, the seed capsule of the opium poppy, Papaver somniferum, is pierced, a milky fluid oozes from it which, when dried, is opium. Virginia Berridge, in her elegant history of opium in England, tells us that the effects of opium on the human mind have probably been known for about 6,000 years and that opium had an honored place in Greek, Roman, and Arabic medicine. I will not dwell on that ancient history but will instead jump ahead to the 17th century by which time opium had gained wide use in European medicine.
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Colden, Cadwallader. "The State of Affairs in New-York and Canada, at the Time of the Revolution in Great-Britain." In The History of the Five Indian Nations Depending on the Province of New-York in America. Cornell University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501713903.003.0007.

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This chapter details events in New York and Canada at the time of the English Revolution. The Revolution caused great divisions among parties in the province of New York, as it did in Britain. The governor and all the officers either fled or absconded; the gentlemen of the King's Council, and some of the most considerable or richest people, refused to join in the declaration that the people made, and the Administration, as a result, fell into different hands, who were more supportive of the Protestant interest. Canada was also in a dire condition: the country had been burnt and destroyed; their trade was at a standstill; and great numbers of people were slain, with the remainder in danger of perishing by famine, or by the sword of their enemies.
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Conference papers on the topic "Indian Council of World Affairs"

1

Singh, Jasjit. "INDIAN NUCLEAR DOCTRINE." In Proceedings of the Forty-Ninth Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812799647_0022.

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"STATEMENT OF THE PUGWASH COUNCIL." In Proceedings of the Forty-Eighth Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812810212_0001.

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3

ROTBLAT, JOSEPH. "STATEMENT OF THE PUGWASH COUNCIL." In Proceedings of the Forty-Ninth Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812799647_0001.

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4

Broms, Bengt. "THE PRESENT PLANS TO RESTRUCTURE THE SECURITY COUNCIL OF THE UNITED NATIONS." In Proceedings of the Forty-Ninth Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812799647_0062.

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"A Special Statement by The Council of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs – THE IMPASSE IN NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT." In Proceedings of the Forty-Eighth Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812810212_0002.

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Reports on the topic "Indian Council of World Affairs"

1

Banerjee, Dwaipayan, and Pooja Vasanth K. IIHS COVID-19 Response Plan. Indian Institute for Human Settlements, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24943/c19rp01.2021.

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This document comprises the contingency plan created for IIHS for the implementation of measures to mitigate risks and ensure emergency response preparedness in light of COVID- 19. IIHS has followed guidelines from the World Health Organization (WHO), Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and the State Government while formulating its COVID-19 response plan across all IIHS offices at Bengaluru, Chennai, Trichy, Delhi and Mumbai.
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