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1

Natural resources and conflict in Africa: The tragedy of endowment. Rochester, NY: Rochester Press, 2007.

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2

Alao, Abiodun. Natural resources and conflict in Africa: The tragedy of endowment. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2008.

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3

Associates, Maxwell Stamp. A review of Uganda's resource endowment and comparative advantage. Kampala, Uganda: Uganda Investment Authority, 1993.

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4

Perälä, Maiju. Persistence of underdevelopment: Does the type of natural resource endowment matter? Helsinki: United Nations University, World Institute for Development Economics Research, 2003.

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5

Wagner, William Joseph. The contractual reallocation of procreative resources and parental rights: The natural endowment critique. Aldershot: Dartmouth, 1995.

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6

The contractual reallocation of procreative resources and parental rights: The natural endowment critique. Aldershot: Dartmouth, 1995.

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7

The hand: Its mechanism and vital endowments as evincing design. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.

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8

Kohler, Robert E. Partners in science: Foundations and natural scientists, 1900-1945. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991.

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9

Easterly, William Russell. Tropics, germs, and crops: How endowments influence economic development. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2002.

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10

Conference on Culture in Sustainable Development: Investing in Cultural and Natural Endowments (1998 World Bank). Culture in sustainable development: Investing in cultural and natural endowments : proceedings of the Conference on Culture in Sustainable Development: Investing in Cultural and Natural Endowments held at the World Bank in Washington, D.C. on September 28-29, 1998. Edited by Serageldin Ismail 1944-, Martin-Brown Joan 1940-, World Bank, and Unesco. Washington, D.C: World Bank, 1999.

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Conference on Culture in Sustainable Development: Investing in Cultural and Natural Endowments (1998 World Bank). Culture in sustainable development: Investing in cultural and natural endowments : proceedings of the Conference on Culture in Sustainable Development: Investing in Cultural and Natural Endowments held at the World Bank in Washington, D.C. on September 28-29, 1998. Edited by Serageldin Ismail 1944-, Martin-Brown Joan 1940-, World Bank, and Unesco. Washington, D.C: World Bank, 1999.

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12

Committee, Washington (State) Legislature Joint Legislative Audit and Review. Follow-up: 1999 Department of Licensing performance audit. Olympia, WA: The Committee, 2001.

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13

Washington (State). Legislature. Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee. Follow-up: 2001 investing in the environment performance audit. Olympia, WA: The Committee, 2003.

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14

Washington (State). Legislature. Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee. Follow up: Higher education facilities preservation study. Olympia, WA: State of Washington Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee, 2003.

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Washington (State). Legislature. Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee. Follow-up: 1999 Department of Licensing performance audit. Olympia, WA: The Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee, 2001.

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16

Washington (State). Legislature. Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee. Follow up: 2001 investing in the environment performance audit. Olympia, WA: Joint Legislative Audit & Review Committee, 2004.

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17

Washington (State). Legislature. Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee. Follow-up: 2002 Study of the Washington Management Service. Olympia, WA: State of Washington Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee (JLARC), 2002.

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18

Committee, Washington (State) Legislature Joint Legislative Audit and Review. Follow-up: 2001 investing in the environment performance audit. [Olympia, WA] (506 16th Ave., SE, P.O. Box 40910, Olympia, 98501-2323): The Committee, 2001.

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19

Washington (State). Legislature. Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee. Follow-up: 2001 investing in the environment performance audit. Olympia, WA (506 16th Ave., SE, P.O. Box 40910, Olympia, 98501-2323): The Committee, 2001.

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20

Washington (State). Legislature. Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee. Follow up: 2001 investing in the environment performance audit. Olympia, WA: State of Washington Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee (JLARC), 2005.

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21

Washington (State). Legislature. Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee. Follow up: 2003 performance and outcome measure review : vocational rehabilitation services to injured workers. Olympia, WA: State of Washington Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee (JLARC), 2005.

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22

Washington (State). Legislature. Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee. Follow-up: 1998-2001 WorkFirst evaluations. Olympia, WA: State of Washington Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee, 2003.

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23

Committee, Washington (State) Legislature Joint Legislative Audit and Review. Follow-up: 2003 oversight and review of Washington's Pipeline Safety Office. Olympia, WA: Joint Legislature Audit and Review Committee, 2004.

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24

Washington (State). Legislature. Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee. Follow-up: 1998 workers' compensation performance audit. Olympia, WA (506 16th Ave., S.E., Olympia, 98501-2323): State of Washington, Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee, 2003.

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25

Committee, Washington (State) Legislature Joint Legislative Audit and Review. Follow-up: 2001 investing in the environment performance audit. Olympia, WA: The Committee, 2003.

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26

Natural Resources and Conflict in Africa: The Tragedy of Endowment. University of Rochester Press, 2015.

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27

New York's natural gas and oil resource endowment: Past, present, and potential. Albany, N.Y: New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, 2007.

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28

Wagner, William J. The Contractual Reallocation of Procreative Resources and Parental Rights: The Natural Endowment Critique (Medico-Legal Series). Dartmouth Publishing Group, 1996.

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29

Ndikumana, Léonce, and Mare Sarr. Capital flight and foreign direct investment in Africa: An investigation of the role of natural resource endowment. UNU-WIDER, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.35188/unu-wider/2016/101-7.

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30

Alao, Abiodun. Natural Resources and Conflict in Africa: The Tragedy of Endowment (Rochester Studies in African History and the Diaspora) (Rochester Studies in African History and the Diaspora). University of Rochester Press, 2007.

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31

Water Resources Research Institute (Pakistan), ed. Rural poverty and natural resources endowments Balochistan, Pakistan. Islamabad: Water Resources Research Institute, 2004.

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32

Water Resources Research Institute (Pakistan), ed. Rural poverty and natural resources endowments Balochistan, Pakistan. Islamabad: Water Resources Research Institute, 2004.

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33

A’Hearn, Brian, and Anthony J. Venables. Regional Disparities: Internal Geography and External Trade. Edited by Gianni Toniolo. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199936694.013.0021.

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This chapter explores the interactions between external trade and regional disparities in the Italian economy since unification. It argues that the advantage of the North was initially based on natural advantage (in particular the endowment of water, intensive in silk production). From 1880 onwards, the share of exports in GDP stagnated and then declined; domestic market access therefore became a key determinant of industrial location, inducing fast growing new sectors (especially engineering) to locate in regions with a large domestic market, i.e. in the North. From 1945 onwards, trade growth and European integration meant that foreign market access was the decisive factor; the North had the advantage of proximity to these markets
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34

Culture in sustainable development : investing in cultural and natural endowments. Banco Mundial, 1999.

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35

Hamilton, Kirk, and Cameron Hepburn. Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198803720.003.0001.

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While current economic discourse tends to focus on GDP and its growth, there is an older tradition in economics of assessing the wealth of a nation. This book builds on this tradition by defining the components of wealth (produced, natural, human, intellectual and institutional capital, and net foreign assets) and considers how the management of this portfolio can lead to increasing social welfare. Four factors have increased the salience of wealth: a financial crisis centred on the implosion of balance sheet positions, the subsequent emphasis on the distribution of wealth within societies, significant progress in the measurement of wealth, and concerns about the natural capital that is humanity’s common endowment. The chapters in this book span concepts, theory, and empirical work, including research on historic wealth creation and destruction, the economic characteristics of the components of wealth, and the means of managing wealth in order to sustain social welfare.
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36

Programme, United Nations Development, and World Resources Institute, eds. Natural endowments: Financing resource conservation for development ; international conservation financing project report. Washington, D.C., USA: World Resources Institute, 1989.

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37

Aubynn, Toni. Regulatory Structures and Challenges to Developmental Extractives. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198817369.003.0013.

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Ghana’s large natural resource endowment of various minerals as well as oil is well known. The country has been mining gold for over a century, ranking second in production in Africa, and has also undergone regulatory transformations resulting in significant improvement in the mining sector. This chapter seeks to share the experience of a regulator and offers some perspectives on the purpose, content, and challenges of the practical regulation of an extractives sector in a lower-middle-income economy. The chapter looks at both the design and content of a regulatory system and throws light on the practical challenges (technical and political) of implementation. In light of the increasing allure of resource nationalism in recent times, the chapter also takes a brief navigation into the manner in which relationships are established and maintained by the regulatory bodies with both large multinational and small artisanal mining operations.
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38

Babar, Zahra. Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190608873.003.0001.

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Over the past fifty years, the primary marker differentiating the developmental conditions amongst Middle Eastern states has been the natural endowment, or lack thereof, of petroleum resources. The difference in economic strength between neighboring states has had a profound impact on the dynamics of intra-regional migration. Migration has largely been from the less wealthy states of the Arab world to the small sheikhdoms of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). The particular demographic features and economic needs of the states of the GCC have facilitated this enduring pattern of regional migration. Despite the transition in the Gulf’s expatriate labor force to one that is now sourced mostly from South Asia, the continued employment opportunities provided to Arab migrants in the GCC are still of vital importance, particularly because the Middle East is once again in the throes of high levels of conflict. While the Gulf may not be amenable to hosting refugee populations from neighboring Arab states, the desire of Arab workers to find employment in the GCC can only have increased as a result of instability.
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39

Armstrong, Chris. Equality and Its Critics. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198702726.003.0003.

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What constraints does justice impose on our appropriation, or our holdings, of natural resources? This chapter examines several competing answers to that question. It rejects right-libertarian and minimalist views on resource justice, and instead argues in favour of an egalitarian approach. It then moves on to address some important challenges to an egalitarian theory of resource justice. For instance, it is sometimes argued that the ‘resource curse’ shows that natural resource endowments make little difference to economic growth. If so, egalitarian interest in their distribution is misplaced. The chapter shows how egalitarians should respond to this challenge. It also addresses objections from relationist scholars of global justice, and from those who believe that individual nations or states might have special claims over the resources they control.
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40

Thompson, William R., and Leila Zakhirova. The United States: Emulating and Surpassing Britain. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190699680.003.0008.

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In this chapter, we focus on the rise of the United States as a two-stage process. In the first stage the United States acquired dominance in mass-production industries that were contingent on not only technological innovation but also an unusually rich resource endowment and an equally distinctive domestic market. U.S. economic growth emulated Britain’s coal-centric trajectory and outdid it by the end of the nineteenth century. As electricity and petroleum began to be utilized in the latter part of the nineteenth century, they reshaped the nature of American industry, heating, and transportation, pushing the nation ahead of the rest of the world. Technological innovation and power-driven machinery increasingly provided the intermittent stimuli needed for the United States to fully embrace carbon-based energy sources that initially were relatively inexpensive. At the same time the large domestic market made increases in the scale of production possible, and the nature of United States’ resource endowment ensured that raw materials were inexpensive. The combination of innovation, cheap raw materials (including energy), and a very large domestic market pushed the United States into an economic leadership position by World War I. But the second stage of the process, the rise to world technological leadership, did not begin until after World War II because it was based on science, and it took longer for the United States to acquire the lead in scientific research. Centrality in technology innovation, science, and world economic growth followed.
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41

Forrestal, Alison. The Lazarist Missionary. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198785767.003.0006.

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Along with its endowment and formal structure, a third essential constituent of the Congregation of the Mission was an ethos, necessary to cultivate a common and distinctive sense of purpose and practice. De Paul’s described the Congregation’s purpose precisely as the salvation of the souls of the rural poor and the pursuit of perfection amongst those who worked for this goal. Chapter 5 confirms that he exhibited remarkable consistency in the pronouncements that he made about the methods that the missionaries should adopt to achieve their goal and the values by which they should operate to do so. These methods and values formed the missionary ethos of the Lazarists, a kind of institutional code that expressed the true nature of their vocation in the church, and enabled them to assert their singular character as humble instruments of God’s charity.
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42

Author), World Bank (Corporate, Unesco (Corporate Author), Ismail Serageldin (Editor), and Joan Martin-Brown (Editor), eds. Understanding Culture in Sustainable Development: Investing in Cultural and Natural Endowments : Proceedings of the Conference Sponsored by the World Bank ... the World Bank (World Bank Discussion Paper). World Bank Publications, 1999.

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