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1

Boyle, W. Philip. Le developpement zonal dans Tunisie centrale: Rapport final de consultation. Worcester, Mass: Clark University, 1986.

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2

Boyle, W. Philip. Le développement zonal dans la Tunisie centrale: Rapport final de consultation. Worcester, MA: Clark University, 1986.

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3

Steen, Eliel. Destruction des sols (désertification) en Tunisie centrale: Mécanismes et remèdes : synthèse d'un projet suédo-tunisien 1983-1992. Uppsala: Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet, Institutionen för ekologi och miljövård, 1992.

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4

Fakhfakh, Mohamed. Projet eau potable en Tunisie centrale: Cartographie des resources en eau et population. Binghamton, N.Y: Institute for Development Anthropology, 1987.

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5

Zahar, Yadh. Eléments d'hydrologie pour l'aménagement: Modélisation spatiale et temporelle des précipitations extrêmes et érosives en Tunisie centrale. [Manouba]: Université des lettres, des arts et des sciences humaines, Tunis I, Faculté des lettres de la Manouba, 1997.

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6

Technical Consultation on Stock Assessment in the Central Mediterranean (3rd 1994 Tunis, Tunisia). Rapport de la troisième consultation technique sur l'évaluation des stocks dans la Méditerranée Centrale: Tunis, Tunisie, 8-12 novembre 1994 = Report of the third Technical Consultation on Stock Assessment in the Central Mediterranean, Tunis, Tunisia, 8-12 November 1994. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 1994.

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7

Technical Consultation on Stock Assessment in the Central Mediterranean (3rd 1945 Tunis, Tunisia). Sélection de documents présentés à la troisième consultation technique sur l'évaluation des stocks dans La Méditerranée Centrale, Tunis, Tunisie, 8-12 novembre 1994 = Selected papers presented at the third Technical Consultation on Stock Assessment in the Central Mediterranean, Tunis, Tunisia, 8-12 November 1994. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 1996.

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8

Messing, I. Effet des brise-vent sur la vitesse du vent, sur l'evapotranspiration et sur le rendement des cultures irriguees en zone aride, Sidi Bouzid Tunisie Centrale. (Effect of windbreaks upon wind speeds and evapotranspiration on irrigated crop yields in the arid zone of Sidi Bousid, Tunisia).. Uppsala: Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, 1991.

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9

Raymond, Gervais. Population and water in central Tunisia. Worcester, MA: Clark University, International Development Program, 1987.

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10

Chancellor, G. R. Turonian ammonite faunas from Central Tunisia. London: Palaeontological Association, 1994.

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11

Chancellor, G. R. Turonian ammonite faunas from central Tunisia. London: Palaeontological Association, 1994.

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12

Raymond, Gervais. Population and water in Central Tunisia. Worcester, MA: Clark University, International Development Program, 1987.

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13

Reeser, Robert M. Economics of water point development in central Tunisia. Worcester, MA: Clark University, 1987.

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14

Davis, Susan Schaefer. Employment generated by projects of the Central Tunisia Development Authority. Worcester, MA: Clark University, International Development Program, 1985.

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15

Salem-Murdock, Muneera. Household dynamics and the organization of production in central Tunisia. [Binghamton, NY]: Institute for Development Anthropology, 1986.

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16

Stone, R. J. Remote sensing of semi-arid terrain: A case study of Central Tunisia. Durham: University of Durham, Department of Geography, 1985.

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17

Appleby, Gordon. Criteria and methodology for the delimitation of water-short areas in central Tunisia. Worcester, MA: Clark University, 1987.

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18

Hacherouf, Abdelmajid. Evolution historique et comparative de la consommation alimentaire dans les pays du Magreb central Algérie-Maroc-Tunisie. Montpellier: CIHEAM-IAMM, 1993.

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19

Rapport sommaire: Tunisie centrale sous-projet de vulgarisation rurale et contacts directs = Summary report : central Tunisia rural extension and outreach subproject. Corvallis, Or: Oregon State University, 1988.

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20

Publications, USA International Business. Tunisia Central Bank & Financial Policy Handbook. Intl Business Pubns USA, 2005.

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21

Abdelli, Smida. Application of the Penman Equation to central Tunisia. 1986.

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22

Chancellor, G. R. Turonian Ammonite Faunas from Central Tunisia (Special Papers in Palaeontology S.). Paleontological Assn, 1996.

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23

Suzanne, Gozlan, ed. Recherches archéologiques tunisien: Les mosaïques des maisons du quartier central et les mosaïques éparses. [Rome]: Ecole française de Rome, 2001.

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24

Chouki, Salah. Evaluation of native and introduced plant species for revegetating Central Tunisian rangelands. 1985.

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25

Lower, Michael. Al‐Mustansir, Charles of Anjou, and the Struggle for the Central Mediterranean. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198744320.003.0003.

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Tunis and Sicily had entangled histories in the Middle Ages. This chapter explores how two powerful Mediterranean dynasts—Charles of Anjou, king of Sicily, and al‐Mustansir, emir of Tunis—struggled to assert themselves in the Sicilian Straits in the mid‐thirteenth century. While al‐Mustansir wanted Sicilian grain to feed his people, Charles needed African gold to pay for the debts he had accumulated in conquering Sicily in 1266. The question remained how that strategic interdependence would work itself out: would Charles and al‐Mustansir be partners, or would they wage a zero‐sum struggle to control the central Mediterranean? When al‐Mustansir sponsored an expeditionary force that landed on the coast of Sicily in the fall of 1267, it looked as if conflict would prevail. As it turned out, the landing was really the opening salvo in a negotiation that would extend throughout the course of the Tunis Crusade.
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26

Hanmer, Lucia, Edinaldo Tebaldi, and Dorte Verner. Gender and Labor Markets in Tunisia’s Lagging Regions. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198799863.003.0006.

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There are significant differences in labor market outcomes by gender in Tunisia. These gender differences differ substantially in the richer coastal and eastern regions and the poorer southern and western regions. This chapter uses the 2014 Tunisia Labor Market Panel Survey (TLMPS) to examine the characteristics of male and female labor market participants in the lagging southern, western, and central regions, and in the leading regions. The chapter also discusses results from an econometric analysis of the factors that influence monthly wages and the probability of employment for men and women respectively. Our results show that gender plays a huge role in labor market outcomes: women are less likely to participate in the labor force, are more likely to be unemployed, and receive lower wages. In addition, youth and educated women in lagging regions are particularly disadvantaged because they are less likely to find a job and may not have the option of moving to places where employment prospects are better. Moreover, our results suggest that wage discrimination against women is prevalent outside the leading region in Tunisia.
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27

Tobbi, Belgacem. Infiltration of water and its effects on soil erosion: A computational analysis pertaining to central Tunisia. 1986.

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28

Ryan, Eileen. Italian Imperialism and Sanusi Authority at the Turn of the Century. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190673796.003.0002.

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Italian unification preceded a new era of European imperial expansion. Italian nationalists were eager to ensure Italy’s position as a European great power by claiming overseas territories. For many Italians, adventures in East Africa served only as a distraction from the goal of securing the Mediterranean. After the French occupation of Tunisia in 1881 and the Italian military disaster at Adwa in 1896, Italian imperialists turned their focus to the Ottoman districts of Tripolitania and Cyrenaica in modern-day Libya. It was during these last decades of the nineteenth century that the Sanusiyya emerged as an undeniable political, social, and religious force in North Africa. Any central state authorities with an interest in securing the eastern Libyan district of Cyrenaica had to engage with the Sanusiyya. Sanusi elites developed patterns of engaging with centralized state authorities that would inform their reactions to the Italian occupation after 1911.
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29

Fleetwood, Erin E. J. Money and Finance in Africa: The Experience of Ghana, Morocco, Nigeria, the Rhodesias and Nyasaland, the Sudan and Tunisia from the Establishment of Their Central Banks Until 1962. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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30

Brooks, Risa A. Military Defection and the Arab Spring. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.26.

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The protests that began in Tunisia in December 2010, and quickly spread across the Arab world, have drawn significant attention to the impact of militaries and coercive institutions on protests and revolutionary movements. The actions of the militaries were a central determinant of the outcomes of the uprisings of 2010–2011. In Tunisia and Egypt the decision by military leaders to abstain from using force on mass protests to suppress them led to the downfall of the countries’ autocrats. In Syria and Bahrain, militaries defended political leaders with brutal force. In Yemen and Libya, militaries fractured, with some units remaining allied to the leader and using force on his behalf and others defecting. In still other states, leaders and militaries were able to forestall the emergence of large, regime-threatening protests.To explain these divergent outcomes, scholars and analysts have looked to a variety of explanatory factors. These focus on the attributes of the militaries involved, their civil-military relations, the size and social composition of the protests, the nature of the regime’s institutions, and the impact of monarchical traditions. These explanations offer many useful insights, but several issues remain under-studied. These include the impact of authoritarian learning and diffusion on protest trajectory. They also include the endogeneity of the protests to the nature of a country’s civil-military relations (i.e., how preexisting patterns of civil-military relations affected the possibility that incipient demonstrations would escalate to mass protests). Scholars also have been understandably captivated by the aforementioned pattern of military defection-loyalty, focusing on explaining that observed difference at the expense of studying other dependent variables. The next generation of scholarship on the uprisings therefore would benefit from efforts to conceptualize and investigate different aspects of variation in military behavior.Overall, the first-generation literature has proved enormously useful and laid the foundation for a much richer understanding of military behavior and reactions to popular uprisings in the Arab world and beyond.
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31

Velmet, Aro. Pasteur's Empire. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190072827.001.0001.

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In the 1890s, the Pasteur Institute established a network of laboratories that stretched across France’s empire, from Indochina to West Africa. Quickly, researchers at these laboratories became central to France’s colonial project, helping officials monopolize industries, develop public health codes, establish disease containment measures, and arbitrate political conflicts around questions of labor rights, public works, and free association. Pasteur’s Empire shows how the scientific prestige of the Pasteur Institute came to depend on its colonial laboratories and how, conversely, the institutes themselves became central to colonial politics. This book argues that decisions as small as the isolation of a particular yeast or the choice of a laboratory animal could have tremendous consequences on the lives of Vietnamese and African subjects, who became the consumers of new vaccines or industrially fermented intoxicants. Simultaneously, global forces, such as the rise of international standards and American competitors, pushed Pastorians to their imperial laboratories, where they could conduct studies that researchers in France considered too difficult or controversial. Chapters follow not just Alexandre Yersin’s studies of the plague, Charles Nicolle’s public health work in Tunisia, and Constant Mathis’s work on yellow fever in Dakar, but also the activities of Vietnamese doctors, African students and politicians, Syrian traders, and Chinese warlords. It argues that a specifically Pastorian understanding of microbiology shaped French colonial politics across the world, allowing French officials to promise hygienic modernity while actually committing to minimal development.
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32

Fleetwood, Erin E. J. Money and Finance in Africa Vol. 8: The Experience of Ghana, Morocco, Nigeria, the Rhodesias and Nyasaland, the Sudan and Tunisia from the Establishment of Their Central Banks until 1962. Taylor & Francis Group, 2010.

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