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Books on the topic 'Journaux belges'

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1

Corda, Giovanna. Journaux quotidiens belges de langue française en cours de parution à la Bibliothèque royale Albert 1er et dans les bibliothèques de Bruxelles et de la communauté de langue française de Belgique: Essai de catalogue collectif. Bruxelles: Commission belge de bibliographie, 1986.

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2

United Federation of Doll Clubs. Convention. Belles of Peachtree: Souvenir journal. Parkville, Mo: UFDC, 1985.

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3

A, Deutsch Lenna, ed. Mercer's belles: The journal of a reporter. Pullman, WA: Washington State University Press, 1992.

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4

Witte, Els. Le Moniteur belge, le gouvernement et le parlement pendant l'unionisme (1831-1845). [Bruxelles: Ministère de la justice, 1985.

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5

Joset, Camille J. Un jésuite dans la Résistance, le père Camille-Jean Joset: Témoignage historique sur le mouvement national belge et son journal clandestin La voix des Belges. [Brussels]: Didier Hatier, 1990.

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6

Les frasques de la Belle Époque: Les plus belles unes du Petit journal. Paris: Albin Michel, 2012.

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7

Les méconnus de Londres: Journal de guerre d'une Belge, 1940-1945. Bruxelles: Racine, 2006.

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8

Belle, Jean-Louis van. La déportation des ouvriers belges en Allemagne, 1914-1918: D'après le journal de Léon Frérot (Biesme). Bruxelles, Belgique: Éditions Safran, 2013.

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9

Cocteau, Jean. La belle et la bête: Journal d'un film. Paris: Éditions du Rocher, 1994.

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10

Bergen-Belsen 1945: A medical student's journal. London: Imperial College Press, 2014.

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11

Démocratie médiatique et représentation politique: Analyse comparative de quatre journaux télévisés : Radio-Canada, France 2, RTBF (Belgique) et TSR (Suisse). [Montréal]: Presses de l'Université de Montréal, 1999.

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12

Douxchamps, José. Les émigrés belges de 1794: Listes, suivies d'extraits inédits de lettres (1792-1793) de Julie Desandrouin, du Journal (1794-1795) de Jean-Jacques-A. de Stassart, et de tableaux de correspondance entre les calendriers grégorien et républicain. Wepion: J. Douxchamps, 1993.

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13

Poswick, Prosper. Un journal du Concile: Vatican II vu par un diplomate belge : notes personnelles de l'ambassadeur de Belgique près le Saint-Siège (1957-1968) et rapports au Ministère des affaires étrangères. Paris: F.-X. de Guibert, 2005.

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14

Poswick, Prosper. Un journal du concile: Vatican II vu par un diplomate belge : notes personnelles de l'ambassadeur de Belgique pres le saint-siege, 1957-1968, et rapports au ministere des affaires etrangeres. Paris: Guibert, 2005.

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15

Poswick, Prosper. Un journal du Concile: Vatican II vu par un diplomate belge : notes personnelles de l'ambassadeur de Belgique près le Saint-Siège (1957-1968) et rapports au Ministère des affaires étrangères. Paris: F.-X. de Guibert, 2005.

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16

Don, Allison, ed. Hell on Belle Isle: Diary of a Civil War POW : journal of Sgt. Jacob Osborn Coburn. Bryan, Ohio: Faded Banner Publications, 1997.

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17

Chandra, Saurabh, ed. SOCRATES (Vol 3, No 2 (2015): Issue- June). 3rd ed. India: SOCRATES : SCHOLARLY RESEARCH JOURNAL, 2015.

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18

Hensel, Paul R. Review of Available Data Sets. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190846626.013.418.

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The International Studies Association’s (ISA) Scientific Study of International Processes (SSIP) section is dedicated to the systematic analysis of empirical data covering the entire range of international political questions. Drawing on the canons of scientific inquiry, SSIP seeks to support and promote replicable research in terms of the clarity of a theoretical argument and/or the testing of hypotheses. Journals that have been most likely to publish SSIP-related research include the top three general journals in the field of political science: the American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, and Journal of Politics. A number of more specialized journals frequently publish research of interest to the SSIP community, such as Conflict Management and Peace Science, International Interactions, International Organization, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, and Journal of Peace Research. Together, these journals published a total of 1,024 qualifying articles between 2003 and 2010. These articles cover a wide range of topics, from armed conflict and conflict management to terrorism, international political economy, economic development or growth, monetary policy, foreign aid, sanctions, human rights and repression, international law, international organizations/institutions, and foreign policy attitudes and beliefs. Data users who are interested in conducting their own research must: choose the most appropriate data set(s), become familiar with what the data set includes and how its central concepts are measured, multipurpose data sources, investigate missing data, and assess robustness across multiple data sets.
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19

Anne Geddes Wrap Pack: Includes: Down in the Garden Journal (Canterbury Belles) & Anne Geddes. Cedco Pub, 2000.

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20

1 The Edinburgh Literary Journal January. The Edinburgh Literary Journal; Or Weekly Register Of Criticism And Belles Lettres: January To June, 1831. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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21

Wiles, Mary M. An Interview with Jacques Rivette*. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036651.003.0002.

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Café de la Bastille, Paris, June 1999 (Translated by Yolanda Broad and Mary Wiles.)MW:How did you come to make films?JR:It was Cocteau, le coupable [the guilty one].1 It was while reading Cocteau’s La belle et la bête [his journal written between 1945–1946 as he was filming ...
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22

De Jong, Bart A., David P. Kroon, and Oliver Schilke. The Future of Organizational Trust Research. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190630782.003.0010.

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This chapter contributes to defining a common research agenda on organizational trust, first by content-analyzing scholarly recommendations for future research published between 2007 and 2011 across 347 articles and 58 social science journals and second by reviewing the latest developments in trust research published between 2012 and 2015 across 111 articles and 31 top-tier management journals. This content analysis of scholarly recommendations yields an emergent organizing framework that offers systematic insight into the trust community’s beliefs about how the field should move forward, while the review of the latest developments in the field provide insight into whether these recommendations have recently been followed up on, or whether research has developed in previously unanticipated directions. The chapter concludes with suggestions on how individual researchers and the trust community as a whole can use and build on these findings to help advance the field.
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23

Tao, Tian. Chinese Intellectuals’ Discourse of International Law in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199670055.003.0016.

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This chapter focuses on the history of the period from the 1860s to the fall of the empire in 1911–12. The chapter details through minute analysis of books, journals, and the press, the extent to which the wider Chinese community distanced itself from any belief that Confucian values could be matched by Western international law that could have a simple ethical foundation. All that counted in international relations was military power, and the industrial strength which grounded it. Confucian ideals of world order, above all Kang Youwei’s, were too idealist. The other great intellectual of the turn of the century, Liang Qichao, believed that international law was a product of power.
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24

Weiner, Marli F., and Mazie Hough. The Political Body. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036996.003.0001.

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This book investigates how slaves experienced illness and the practice of medicine, as well as the ways in which physicians sought to understand race and sex, in the antebellum South. It shows that doctors who tried to define health and sickness for men and women, black and white, also had to contend with the realities of a slaveholding society. Slaveholders often defined slaves as healthy enough to work when the slaves considered themselves to be sick. At the same time, slaveholders wanted to protect their financial investment in the bodies of slaves and so had incentive to provide medical care for them. Slaves had their own beliefs about bodily differences and the causes of sickness as well as how to cure them, but their beliefs were seldom validated or their practices respected by slaveholders and doctors. In order to elucidate medical and lay perspectives on the political body in the antebellum old South, the book draws on evidence from a variety of sources, including medical journals and texts, physicians' diaries, and slave narratives and folklore for slaves.
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25

Teleportation!: A Journal Recording Your Visits to Magical Destinies. Words of Wizdom Intl Inc, 1996.

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26

Como, David R. Internal Revolutions. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199541911.003.0015.

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This chapter examines the private, manuscript writings of three parliamentarian laymen. It explores the ways in which the ideas and experiences of the 1640s were internalized by devoted supporters of the cause. The diaries of Nehemiah Wallington (a presbyterian) are read alongside the journal of Thomas Juxon and the letters of Cheney Culpeper (supporters of the “independent” political coalition). The chapter demonstrates that Juxon and Culpeper were united by a series of political opinions—skepticism about monarchy and the House of Lords, belief in transnational, divinely sanctioned political change, and acceptance of a degree of religious toleration—which set them apart from Wallington and help to explain the revolutionary trajectory that parliamentarian politics assumed from 1645. Indeed, some of the more radical ideas eventually expressed by political theorists in print were being canvassed in private by ordinary supporters of parliament’s cause before they were projected into the public sphere.
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27

Llewellyn, Matthew P., and John Gleaves. The Anatomy of Olympic Amateurism. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040351.003.0002.

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This chapter traces the origins and development of amateurism, from the plans to revive the Olympic Games of classical Greek antiquity in 1894 through its global diffusion. Though often misattributed to ancient Greece, amateurism was a distinctly modern invention born in Great Britain during the latter half of the nineteenth century. A holistic and loosely articulated set of ideas, beliefs, and practices, amateurism is commonly defined as being “about doing things for the love of them, doing them without reward or material gain or doing them unprofessionally.” The amateur played the game for the game's sake, disavowed gambling and professionalism, and competed in a composed, dignified manner. From its institutional seedbed in Victorian Britain, amateurism traveled the sporting globe, from the cosmopolitan Dominion cities of Cape Town, Sydney, and Toronto to distant British imperial outposts in sub-Saharan Africa, the Caribbean, Southeast Asia, and beyond. Like the spread of modern sports and games, the British diffused amateurism via a series of interrelated mechanisms: notably, the public schools, the economic and industrial system, the imperial British army, the evangelical and muscular Christianity movements, and a vast literary network of sporting journals, male adventure stories, and imperial tracts.
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28

Biberman, Jerry, and Mike Whitty. At Work: Spirituality Matters (Journal of Management, Spirituality & Religion). University of Scranton Press, 2007.

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29

Pierre, Schmitt. 7 Immunity, 7.1 Manderlier v Organisation des Nations Unies and Etat Belge ( Ministre des Affaires Etrangères ), Tribunal Civil de Bruxelles, 11 May 1966, Journal des Tribunaux, 10 December 1966, No. 4553, 121. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198743620.003.0040.

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This 1966 case constitutes one of the first cases in which UN immunity from jurisdiction was challenged. Apart from the question whether the UN had legal personality under domestic law, all other arguments raised by the plaintiff in this case—seeking to restrict UN immunity from jurisdiction—are still debated nowadays before domestic jurisdictions. The Brussels Civil Tribunal notably examined whether the UN’s immunity was conditional upon the latter’s respect of art. VIII, Section 29 of the Convention on Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations, whether the immunity could be rejected in favour of a human rights argument based on the right of access to justice, and whether it could only be invoked in relation to actions or situations that were necessary for the UN to achieve its goals. Finally, it assessed the existence of a waiver in this particular case.
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30

Ledger-Lomas, Michael. Queen Victoria. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198753551.001.0001.

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This book evokes the pervasive importance of religion to Queen Victoria’s life but also that life’s centrality to the religion of Victorians around the globe. The first comprehensive exploration of Victoria’s religiosity, it shows how moments in her life—from her accession to her marriage and her successive bereavements—enlarged how she defined and lived her faith. It portrays a woman who had simple convictions but a complex identity that suited her multinational kingdom: a determined Anglican who preferred Presbyterian Scotland, an ardent Protestant who revered her husband’s Lutheran homeland but became sympathetic towards Roman Catholicism and Islam, a moralizing believer in the religion of the home who scorned Sabbatarianism. Drawing on a systematic reading of her journals and an extensive selection of manuscripts from British and German archives, it sheds new light not just on Victoria’s private beliefs but also on her activity as a monarch, who wielded her powers energetically in questions of church and state. Unlike a conventional biography, this book interweaves its account of Victoria’s life with a panoramic survey of what religious communities made of it. Drawing on sermons, newspapers, and other sources from around the British world, it shows how different churches and world religions expressed an emotional identification with their Queen and Empress, turning her into an embodiment of their different and often rival conceptions of what her Empire ought to be. The result is a biography of a Queen which also argues that monarchy and religion remained close allies in the nineteenth-century British world.
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31

Bradford, Karleen. Lionheart's Scribe: The Third Book of the Crusades. HarperCollins Publishers, 2000.

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32

Bradford, Karleen. Lionheart's Scribe: The Third Book of the Crusades. HarperCollins Publishers, 2000.

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