Academic literature on the topic 'Resident Ambassadors'

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Journal articles on the topic "Resident Ambassadors"

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Radway, Robyn Dora. "The Captive Self: The Art of Intrigue and the Holy Roman Emperor’s Resident Ambassador at the Ottoman Court in the Sixteenth Century." Journal of Early Modern History 22, no. 6 (November 6, 2018): 475–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700658-12342605.

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Abstract In 1580-1581, the Austrian Habsburg ambassador to the Ottoman court shared news of a remarkable letter and self-portrait that had arrived from an Ottoman subject in Habsburg captivity. Tracing the scramble for details on the matter and its import for Habsburg-Ottoman diplomacy reveals the structure, contours, and challenges of the Habsburg mission in Constantinople. The article argues that the image and the accompanying letter may be a forgery seeking to place the ambassador and the peace he was to uphold in jeopardy. Instead, the ambassador himself was captive to the factions, rivalries, and shifting loyalties in the borderlands that played out in the diplomatic culture of Ottoman Constantinople. This reveals the possibilities, limits, and ranges of control that early modern resident ambassadors had of their missions.
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Trapp, N. Leila. "Managing participatory destination branding." Journal of Place Management and Development 13, no. 3 (November 3, 2019): 241–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jpmd-01-2019-0002.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to address the contemporary interest in participatory destination branding. Because of a lack of empirical and evaluative studies on this form of branding, the current case study examines a volunteer resident ambassador program, which began as part of Aarhus, Denmark’s year as a European City of Culture in 2017, and has become permanent because of its success. Design/methodology/approach The case study is based on official document analyses, participant observations of program activities, and interviews with volunteer program managers and volunteers who greet cruise ship tourists. Findings Findings indicate that while the two managers and the volunteers all report on three volunteer roles – personal hosts, place promoters and providers of information – they prioritize and understand the roles differently. Similarly, the volunteers’ encounters with visitors are all unique, and this inevitably results in the conveyance of unruly and incidental destination images. Practical implications This unruliness is not necessarily problematic: despite the wide-spread interest in the management of participative branding initiatives, it is seen to be the lack of explicit brand-centered management that fosters the program’s positive outcomes, including authentic and pleasant interactions between volunteers and tourists, which, in turn, result in positive attitudes amongst tourists toward their visit. Originality/value This study discovers that positive participatory destination branding outcomes depend on managers respecting the ambassadors’ coveted autonomy, and letting go of control of a destination brand. Because of the growing hostility toward mass tourism in cities internationally, it is also noted that a resident ambassador program’s success is expected to depend on residents’ positive attitudes toward tourists.
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Rana, Kishan S. "Singapore's Diplomacy: Vulnerability into Strength." Hague Journal of Diplomacy 1, no. 1 (2006): 81–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187119006x101861.

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AbstractSingapore is a practitioner of focused, innovative diplomacy, constantly in search of the political space for itself that would overcome its sense of vulnerability resulting from its geopolitical location. This has entailed involving other states in its well-being, constantly searching for ways to make itself relevant to the international community, through niche diplomacy and a proactive style.It has been creative in its use of regional diplomacy. It runs a relatively small network of embassies, with strong centralized control through its foreign ministry; it has economized on its scarce resource — skilled manpower — through extensive use of 'non-resident ambassadors'. Poor accountability to publics, attrition of talent and gender inequality are among its few weaknesses. Some, but not all, of its methods are relevant to other small states.
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Langhorne, Richard. "Alberico Gentili on Diplomacy." Hague Journal of Diplomacy 4, no. 3 (2009): 307–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187119109x455928.

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AbstractAlberico Gentili was a significant academic lawyer of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century. He was an Italian religious refugee who fled to England and became professor of law at Oxford. Among his works are three books on diplomacy dating from 1585. These have never attracted the same degree of interest as his other works and this article discusses both why this has been so and indicates ways in which they are worthy of more attention — particularly that they are peculiarly accurate representatives of the contemporary discussion of diplomacy and that there are two real and original contributions that Gentili made. One concerns the rights and privileges of resident ambassadors and the other rests on his clearly expressed conviction that diplomacy could know no bounds set by religion or culture. In both these opinions he was ahead of his time.
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Stylidis, Dimitrios. "Residents’ destination image: a perspective article." Tourism Review 75, no. 1 (January 2, 2020): 228–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/tr-05-2019-0191.

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Purpose This paper aims to discuss the development up to now in the field of residents’ destination image and propose new avenues for research that will help the field to mature. Design/methodology/approach The paper is based on a thorough review of the relevant academic literature. However, owing to the very tight word limit (1,000), only few representatives studies were mentioned in the manuscript. Findings In spite of its contribution, the restricted and descriptive nature of much of the research calls for a more theoretically informed approach. A lack of consensus is also apparent with regard to the conceptualization and operationalization of the resident destination image construct. Most studies did not commonly provide a definition, and an interchangeable use of “place image” and “destination image” is noted. Equally, great variation is observed in the measurement items used to capture image – the scales used are often readily adopted from tourist studies – while there is limited attempt for scale development. Within this realm, the vast majority of previous research used quantitative methods. Next, despite the strong theoretical rationale, there is limited empirical evidence documenting the importance of residents’ destination image on tourists’ own image formulation. Little is also known about the inner motives that lead some residents to act as ambassadors of their place. Originality/value The need to expand our knowledge and understanding of residents’ destination image in the future is established. The paper also briefly presented the first era of research on residents’ destination image and critiqued its predominantly descriptive nature. Areas that seek further attention have been highlighted along with directions for future research.
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Cheng, Vincent C. C., Hong Chen, Shuk-Ching Wong, Jonathan H. K. Chen, Wing-Chun Ng, Simon Y. C. So, Tuen-Ching Chan, et al. "Role of Hand Hygiene Ambassador and Implementation of Directly Observed Hand Hygiene Among Residents in Residential Care Homes for the Elderly in Hong Kong." Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology 39, no. 5 (February 27, 2018): 571–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ice.2018.21.

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OBJECTIVEMultidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs) are increasingly reported in residential care homes for the elderly (RCHEs). We assessed whether implementation of directly observed hand hygiene (DOHH) by hand hygiene ambassadors can reduce environmental contamination with MDROs.METHODSFrom July to August 2017, a cluster-randomized controlled study was conducted at 10 RCHEs (5 intervention versus 5 nonintervention controls), where DOHH was performed at two-hourly intervals during daytime, before meals and medication rounds by a one trained nurse in each intervention RCHE. Environmental contamination by MRDOs, such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter species (CRA), and extended-spectrum β-lactamse (ESBL)–producing Enterobacteriaceae, was evaluated using specimens collected from communal areas at baseline, then twice weekly. The volume of alcohol-based hand rub (ABHR) consumed per resident per week was measured.RESULTSThe overall environmental contamination of communal areas was culture-positive for MRSA in 33 of 100 specimens (33%), CRA in 26 of 100 specimens (26%), and ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae in 3 of 100 specimens (3%) in intervention and nonintervention RCHEs at baseline. Serial monitoring of environmental specimens revealed a significant reduction in MRSA (79 of 600 [13.2%] vs 197 of 600 [32.8%]; P<.001) and CRA (56 of 600 [9.3%] vs 94 of 600 [15.7%]; P=.001) contamination in the intervention arm compared with the nonintervention arm during the study period. The volume of ABHR consumed per resident per week was 3 times higher in the intervention arm compared with the baseline (59.3±12.9 mL vs 19.7±12.6 mL; P<.001) and was significantly higher than the nonintervention arm (59.3±12.9 mL vs 23.3±17.2 mL; P=.006).CONCLUSIONSThe direct observation of hand hygiene of residents could reduce environmental contamination by MDROs in RCHEs.Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2018;39:571–577
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Loisy, Marine. "Tourism and involvement of inhabitants in Paris." International Journal of Tourism Cities 5, no. 3 (November 29, 2019): 326–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijtc-01-2018-0006.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the adaptation strategies of inhabitants and the forms of participation they adopt in tourism activities in Paris. As public policies have recently recognized the importance of taking into account inhabitants in the tourism development strategy in Paris and its suburbs, this paper proposes an analysis of the different forms of this participation and its stakes for the territories. Design/methodology/approach This paper gathers the first results of a thesis work in anthropology that is based on an ethnographic method combining participant observation, semi-directive interviews and bibliographic work. Observations took place in Paris and in several cities of the Grand Paris with inhabitants involved in tourism activities, or who are experiencing a difficult cohabitation with tourists in their neighborhoods. Thus, some 40 semi-directive interviews were conducted with inhabitants, members of associations and entrepreneurs. There were also participatory observation works within public institutions, mainly at the Paris City Hall, as well as interviews with dozens of tourism professionals from the private, public and associative sectors. Findings Not all residents have the same commitment to tourism and they do not all want to meet visitors. The relationship of inhabitants to tourism is complex and heterogenous. Nevertheless, this research shows that the roles played by inhabitants are multiple: producers of tourist services, ambassadors for their city or neighborhood, the permanent resident can also be seen as a product that attracts visitors, and as a tourist himself. The permanent resident offers the possibility of going off the beaten track, and promotes the revalorization of the identity of a territory and its inhabitants. Originality/value The originality of this research lies in the choice to focus primarily on the point of view of the visited population in a European capital. Ethnographic work allows for the observation and analysis of practices, in order to understand the stakes of visitor/visitor cohabitation and to anticipate possible movements of anti-tourist rejections.
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Cavanagh, Edward. "The Atlantic Prehistory of Private International Law: Trading Companies of the New World and the Pursuit of Restitution in England and France, 1613–43." Itinerario 41, no. 3 (December 2017): 452–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s016511531700064x.

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This article concerns itself with the kind of legal conflicts that broke out in the Atlantic New World between merchant interests from different parts of Europe. Case studies are made of two disputes: one between Samuel Argall of the Virginia Company and a factor on behalf of Antoinette de Pons at the Île des Monts-Déserts, and the other between the Compagnie de Caën and the Kirke brothers at the Saint Lawrence River. Together, these case studies reveal how important it was for merchant interests to have resident ambassadors and state officials advancing their interests in England and France. Procedural difficulties and jurisdictional uncertainty often impeded the road to redress. Additionally, this article suggests that the peacetime reckoning of events associated with warfare provided an optimal opportunity for disaffected private actors to have their claims for redress recognised. The extent to which private overtures for restitution relied upon public acts of diplomacy reveals some of the reasons why it is not possible to date the origins of private international law before the long nineteenth century. Rather we might profitably identify, in events such as these, the prehistory of private international law.
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Loomie, S.J., Albert J. "London's Spanish Chapel Before and After The Civil War." Recusant History 18, no. 4 (October 1987): 402–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0268419500020687.

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IN THE mid-seventeenth century the chapel of the Spanish embassy caused considerable concern to the authorities at Whitehall since they were frustrated in preventing scores of Londoners from attending it for masses and other Catholic devotions. This was a distinct issue from the traditional right of a Catholic diplomat in England to provide mass for his household or other compatriots,’ and from the custom of Sephardic Jews to gather in the embassy for Sabbath worship when they desired. While the practice of Londoners to attend mass secretly at the residences of various Catholic diplomats had developed early in the reign of Elizabeth and occasional arrests at their doors had acted as a deterrent, late in the reign of James I sizeable crowds began to frequent the Spanish embassy. John Chamberlain commented in 1621 that Gondomar had ‘almost as many come to his mass’ in the chapel of Ely House as there were attending ‘the sermon at St. Andrewes (Holborn) over against him’. Although Godomar left in 1622 and subsequently the embassy was closed for five years during the Anglo-Spanish War, it was later, from 1630 to 1655, that the Spanish chapel acquired not only a continuous popularity among Catholics of the area but also an unwelcome notoriety in the highest levels of government. This paper will suggest two primary factors which led to that development: the persistent ambition of the resident Spanish diplomats to provide a range of religious services unprecedented in number and character, and their successful adaptation to the hostile political conditions in the capital for a quarter of a century. The continuous Spanish diplomatic presence in London for this long period was in itself both unexpected and unique for it should be recalled that, for various reasons, all the other Catholic ambassadors, whether from France, Venice, Portugal, Savoy or the Empire, had to leave at different times and close their chapels. However, the site of the Spanish residence during these years by no means permanent since, as with other foreign diplomats, a new property was rented by each ambassador on arrival. There is, moreover, a wider significance in this inquiry because of the current evidence that by the eve of the Civil War the king was considered in the House of Commons to have been remiss in guarding his kingdom from a ‘Catholic inspired plot against church and state’, for while it has been well argued that a public disquiet over Henrietta-Maria's chapels at Somerset House and St. James's palace had by 1640 stimulated increasing suspicions of a Popish Plot, there were other protected chapels, particularly the Spanish, where scores of Londoners were seen to attend. Indeed, after the closure of the queen's chapels at Whitehall in 1642, the Spanish remained for the next thirteen years as silent evidence that Catholics seemed to be ‘more numerous’ and were acting ‘more freely than in the past’.
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Edwards, Deborah, Mingming Cheng, IpKin Anthony Wong, Jian Zhang, and Qiang Wu. "Ambassadors of knowledge sharing." International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management 29, no. 2 (February 13, 2017): 690–708. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijchm-10-2015-0607.

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Purpose The aim of this study is to understand the knowledge-sharing structure and co-production of trip-related knowledge through online travel forums. Design/methodology/approach The travel forum threads were collected from TripAdvisor’s Sydney travel forum for the period from 2010 to 2014, which contains 115,847 threads from 8,346 conversations. The data analytical technique was based on a novel methodological approach – visual analytics, including semantic pattern generation and network analysis. Findings Findings indicate that the knowledge structure is created by community residents who camouflage as local experts and serve as ambassadors of a destination. The knowledge structure presents collective intelligence co-produced by community residents and tourists. Further findings reveal how these community residents associate with each other and form a knowledge repertoire with information covering various travel domain areas. Practical implications The study offers valuable insights to help destination-management organizations and tour operators identify existing and emerging tourism issues to achieve a competitive destination advantage. Originality/value This study highlights the process of social media mediated travel knowledge co-production. It also discovers how community residents engage in reaching out to tourists by camouflaging as ordinary users.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Resident Ambassadors"

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Gawronski, Sarah M. "“I neither omit aught, nor have I omitted aught”: Embodying a Sovereign—The Resident Ambassador in the Elizabethan Court, 1558-1560." DigitalCommons@USU, 2011. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/1062.

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In November 1558, Elizabeth I ascended the throne of England as a single Queen with Protestant tendencies in a male-dominated Catholic world. Her council believed it was imperative that she marry immediately, and the rest of Western Europe agreed. Catholic suitors sought to bring England back under Catholic control. Protestant suitors hoped for an ally in the religious wars that were ravaging Europe. Even Englishmen sought to become king. Ambassadors from the Spanish Empire, the Holy Roman Empire, and the Baltics and Scotland came to negotiate the suits of their monarchs. Ambassadorial correspondences are often used as primary source material for historians, yet few rarely recognize the importance of the ambassador and his role in the court, especially during the marriage negotiations of Elizabeth I. Ambassadors left their home to live in a foreign country, often for long periods of time. The ambassadors were the embodiment of their sovereigns during the negotiations, and often success or failure rested on their abilities. An ambassador was the eyes and ears of the Elizabethan court for his sovereign in a foreign country. They wrote minutely detailed letters that included basic facts and information along with court gossip and personal opinions and recommendations. Their intimate relationship with the Queen and her court made their recommendations invaluable to their monarch. They were far more than mere note takers and should be recognized as such. The focus of this thesis deals primarily with the ambassadorial reports of the Spanish and Hapsburg ambassadors as they participated in the negotiations in one form or another during the time frame discussed, 1558-1560. They also not only wrote about their own negotiations but the negotiations involving Protestant and English suitors. Their reports are full of pertinent information that, without, their monarchs would have been blind to the goings on of the English court. The marriage of Elizabeth I was seen as a priority by all except her. During the first two years of her reign, more than a half dozen suits were pursued, not just by kings and dukes, earls and knights, but, more importantly, by their ambassadors.
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Janis, Jonathan. "the Ambassador's Residence at 909 West Franklin." VCU Scholars Compass, 2009. http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/1753.

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In redesigning the century old Scott House into a modern Class IV residence of an US Ambassador, his/her family, and staff the concepts of transparency, circulation, and materiality and the ideas of openness and design as a display of national identity are explored.
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Maxson, Brian. "Review of Diplomacy in Renaissance Rome: the Rise of the Resident Ambassador, by Catherine Fletcher." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2016. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/6181.

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Uchinaka, S., Vignesh Yoganathan, and V.-S. Osburg. "Classifying residents' roles as online place-ambassadors." 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/16629.

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Residents are pivotal in the competitiveness of tourism destinations. Yet, their role as place-brand ambassadors needs better understanding, particularly in relation to social media, which directly link visitors to residents through user-generated-content (UGC). This paper explores residents’ roles as place-brand ambassadors on Twitter, using the case of Onomichi (Japan), where decreasing population meets economic dependence on tourism. From a content analysis of residents’ tweets, four distinct roles are identified, and corresponding types of content are mapped on a two-dimensional continuum based on direct vs. indirect word-of-mouth and the level of sentiment. Authors discuss implications for Destination Management Organizations (DMOs). Findings highlight the increasingly shifting role of residents towards being primary sources of place-marketing, especially due to social media, and as active proponents (rather than passive targets) of place-branding in the digital age. Such organic place-marketing may be the key to sustaining tourism in the face of rising anti-tourist sentiments worldwide.
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Books on the topic "Resident Ambassadors"

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Lambach, Frank. Our men in Washington: From the first Prussian minister resident to the ambassadors of the Federal Republic of Germany = Unser Mann in Washington : von den ersten preussischen Ministerresidenten bis zu den Botschaftern der Bundesrepublik Deutschland. 2nd ed. [S.l: s.n., 2004.

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Jan, Mårtenson. Residens: Svenska ambassader i EU-länder. [Sweden]: Wahlström & Widstrand, 1997.

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Aldington, Regine. The German Ambassador's residence in London. 2nd ed. Cambridge: John Adamson, 2003.

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Knox, Tim. The British ambassador's residence in Paris. Paris: Flammarion, 2011.

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Bull, T. A. The residence of the British ambassador at Lisbon. Lisboa: British Historical Society of Portugal, 1995.

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Mesrobian, Hickman Caroline, and Hasse John Edward 1948-, eds. The Turkish ambassador's residence and the cultural history of Washington, D.C. Istanbul: Istanbul Kultur University, 2013.

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Stapleton, Dorothy Walker. Elegant entertaining: Seasonal recipes from the American Ambassador's Residence in Paris. Paris: Flammarion, 2009.

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Tajani, Angelo. Oakhill: Residenza di principi e ambasciatori. Milano: Editori del Sole, 2006.

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Tajani, Angelo. Oakhill: Residenza di principi e ambasciatori. Milano: Editori del Sole, 2006.

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(Argentina), United States Embassy, ed. The Bosch Palace: Residence of the ambassador of the United States to Argentina. Buenos Aires: Pablo Corral, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Resident Ambassadors"

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Brovadan, Carlotta Paola. "La «gita di Fiandra»: globi, libri e carte geografiche per Ferdinando II de’ Medici nella corrispondenza diplomatica di Giovan Battista Gondi." In Studi e saggi, 69–95. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-5518-181-5.06.

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In the summer of 1634 the grand-ducal ambassador resident in France Giovan Battista Gondi made an undercover journey to Spanish Netherlands to meet Maria de’ Medici and tried to persuade her to leave the Habsburg territories for Florence. Despite the failure of the negotiations, a series of unpublished letters exchanged between Gondi and the first secretary of the Grand Duchy Andrea Cioli will serve as an opportunity to analyze which cultural and artistic affairs involved the Tuscan agent alongside the political events he primarily dealt with. In his letters Gondi described different artefacts that could have been acquired for the Medici collection, and publications that could have contributed to the reputation of the Grand Duke or, on the contrary, jeopardized it.
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"The Diplomacy of the Renaissance and the Resident Ambassador." In The Practice of Diplomacy, 37–62. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203391518-8.

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"The diplomacy of the Renaissance and the resident ambassador." In The Practice of Diplomacy, 47–70. Routledge, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203841891-9.

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Rakow, Donald A., Meghan Z. Gough, and Sharon A. Lee. "Promoting Neighborhood Safety and Well-Being." In Public Gardens and Livable Cities, 14–36. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501702594.003.0002.

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This chapter examines the approach, process, and outcomes of placemaking partnerships formed with public gardens to promote a sense of safety and well-being at the neighborhood scale. Cases in this chapter emphasize the intentional use of urban greening as a tool to empower residents to actively contribute to positive change, to elevate diverse cultures sharing common spaces, and to capitalize on existing assets in the community to manage vacant land. One such case is the greening of Brooklyn. The chapter discusses the efforts that the Brooklyn Botannical Garden (BBG) put into making Brooklyn green. The strategy of the BBG was to transform the neighborhood into a community of gardeners by initiating greening contests. It also talks about the efforts of the Queens Botannical Garden and how they took advantage of the diverse culture that can be found in Queens to make their area green by creating the ambassador program. In this program, they recruit twelve to fifteen ambassadors who speak in their native language to their communities on behalf of the botannical garden.
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"TEN DAYS IN THE JAPANESE AMBASSADOR’S RESIDENCE:." In The Thames and I, 1–6. Renaissance Books, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvf3w29v.9.

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La Serna, Miguel. "Chavín de Huántar." In With Masses and Arms, 219–24. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469655970.003.0022.

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Nestor Cerpa and the MRTA rebels inside the Japanese ambassador’s residence engage in more symbolic warfare. A rescue force storms the residence, killing Cerpa and the other MRTA members. Fujimori’s government had been planning the operation, code-named Chavin de Huantar, for months.
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La Serna, Miguel. "Captivity." In With Masses and Arms, 208–18. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469655970.003.0021.

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Bishop Juan Luis Cipriana leads the negotiations with Nestor Cerpa and the MRTA occupiers of the Japanese ambassador’s residence; Marco Miyashiro and Luis Giampietri cope with captivity inside the residence. Two MRTA women, Herma Luz Melendez, aka La Gringa, and Luzdina Villoslada, experience abuses by the other MRTA men. Alberto Fujimori promises to resolve the hostage crisis peacefully, but Cerpa has reason to believe otherwise.
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La Serna, Miguel. "Gone with the Wind." In With Masses and Arms, 199–207. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469655970.003.0020.

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Retired navy admiral Luis Giampietri attends a reception at the Lima residence of the Japanese Ambassador to Peru, Morihisha Aoki. Marco Miyashiro, the DINCOTE counterinsurgency head who had previously been in charge of locating and arresting MRTA leaders, is also in attendance. A small MRTA column led by Nestor Cerpa, Tito Cruz, and Rolly Rojas, occupy the residence at gunpoint, taking the guests as hostages. The event becomes known as the Japanese embassy crisis.
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Clarence-Smith, William G. "Middle Eastern States and the Philippines under Early American Rule, 1898–1919." In From Anatolia to Aceh. British Academy, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197265819.003.0009.

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Faced with Moro Muslim resistance in the southern Philippines from 1898, America sought help from Middle Eastern rulers. The Ottoman Empire played the central role, although Egypt and Persia also became involved. In 1899 the American ambassador in Istanbul persuaded the sultan, as Caliph, to order the Moros to submit. In 1913 the Ottoman sultan appointed a ‘high teacher’ for the Moros, Shaykh Wajih al-Kilani, from Palestine. Expelled from the Philippines by the Americans in early 1914, Wajih went to Washington to plead his cause, but died in Virginia in 1916. The Ottomans usually relied on European consuls to protect their nationals resident in the Philippines, but the ‘Young Turks’ appointed a career consul in Manila in 1910–11. After April 1917, Ottoman subjects became ‘allies of enemy’, despite the largely ‘Syrian’ community protesting its allegiance to the USA. After the First World War, the US ceased to court Middle Eastern states.
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Simaika, Samir, and Nevine Henein. "Simaika and the British Administrators." In Marcus Simaika. American University in Cairo Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5743/cairo/9789774168239.003.0007.

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This chapter discusses Marcus Simaika's relationship with several British administrators, from Lord Cromer to Lord Lloyd. The head of the British administration in Egypt was the British agent and consul general until 1914, when his title became High Commissioner for Egypt and Sudan. After the 1936 Anglo-Egyptian Treaty, he became the British ambassador to Egypt and high commissioner for Sudan. Those administrators ran the country, first from the Turf Club, then from the British Residency in Qasr al-Dubara in Garden City. Among them were Sir Evelyn Baring (later the Earl of Cromer), Sir Eldon Gorst, Herbert Horatio Kitchener, Sir Arthur Henry McMahon, Sir Reginald Wingate, Lord Edmund Allenby, and George Lloyd. In his memoirs, Simaika recounted his impressions of the administrators he dealt with.
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Conference papers on the topic "Resident Ambassadors"

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Hagströmer, Denise. "Memory, history and fragmented identity: the Swedish ambassador’s 1991 Tokyo residence." In 9th Conference of the International Committee for Design History and Design Studies. São Paulo: Editora Edgard Blücher, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5151/despro-icdhs2014-0030.

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