168,049 research outputs found

    J. Gaudemet, Droit de l'Église et société civile (XVIIIe-XXe siècles), 1998

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    Borras Alphonse. J. Gaudemet, Droit de l'Église et société civile (XVIIIe-XXe siècles), 1998. In: Revue théologique de Louvain, 30ᵉ année, fasc. 2, 1999. p. 271

    J. Manzanares (éd.), La parroquia desde el nuevo Derecho Canónico. Aportaciones del Derecho común y particular. X Jornadas de la Asociación Española de Canonistas, Madrid 18-20 abril 1990. 1991

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    Borras Alphonse. J. Manzanares (éd.), La parroquia desde el nuevo Derecho Canónico. Aportaciones del Derecho común y particular. X Jornadas de la Asociación Española de Canonistas, Madrid 18-20 abril 1990. 1991. In: Revue théologique de Louvain, 23ᵉ année, fasc. 1, 1992. pp. 74-76

    [Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author #1]

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    Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author. The report contains a list of officers who gave depositions to the United States Attorney

    [Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author #2]

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    Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author. The report contains a list of officers who gave depositions to the United States Attorney

    Murder on the mountain: author talk with Peter J. Wosh

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    Author talk by Peter J. Wosh on May 5th, 2022, on his book, "Murder on the Mountain: crime, passion, and punishment in gilded age New Jersey.

    Mr. Melvin J. Collier, RWWL AUC, June 2011

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    This video is a conversation with Mr. Melvin J. Collier. Mr. Collier talks about his book, "From Mississippi to Africa: A Journey of Discovery". Daniel Le, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer

    Land struggles and working people

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    The dominant convention in critical agrarian studies, as well as among agrarian movements, is that struggles for land are best captured by the framework of agrarian reform that seeks to expropriate land from large private monopolies for redistribution to landless and near-landless working classes, with the aim of building a dynamic agricultural sector. This perspective originates in classical agrarian studies, which locates the land issue within the context of agriculture’s contribution to capitalist industrial development. This type of land struggle remains important today, but it does not fully capture the range of the land struggles of working people across rural and urban, agricultural and nonagricultural spaces and sectors. Recent decades have seen the fragmentation of working classes, as the ranks of those who combine various types of agricultural/nonagricultural, rural/urban livelihoods have vastly expanded. As a result, the land struggles of working people have become decentered from the classical treatment in relation to agriculture and capitalism. This chapter argues that land struggles of working people today are dispersed and multisited, polycentric in political leadership and power, and multiscalar, but this does not make them less important compared to their counterparts in the twentieth century. The current global conjuncture makes them profoundly important as they are

    A Tripartite Post-Recession Rebalancing

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    In this latest Advance & Rutgers Report, entitled “A Tripartite Post-Recession Rebalancing,” Dean James W. Hughes and Professor Joseph J. Seneca deliver an incisive assessment of the current market conditions and obstacles in the path of our economic recovery. They offer a statistical cautionary tale that the private and public sector need to hear and acknowledge in order for the economy to make continued progress.This report was published as Issue Paper Number 7, November 2011, in Advance & Rutgers Report

    Evidence for the decay B0→J/ψω and measurement of the relative branching fractions of meson decays to J/ψη and J/ψη′

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    First evidence of the B 0 → J / ψ ω decay is found and the B s 0 → J / ψ η and B s 0 → J / ψ η ′ decays are studied using a dataset corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.0 fb -1 collected by the LHCb experiment in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of sqrt(s) = 7 TeV. The branching fractions of these decays are measured relative to that of the B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0 decay:frac(B (B 0 → J / ψ ω), B (B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0)) = 0.89 ± 0.19 (stat) - 0.13 + 0.07 (syst),frac(B (B s 0 → J / ψ η), B (B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0)) = 14.0 ± 1.2 (stat) - 1.5 + 1.1 (syst) - 1.0 + 1.1 (frac(f d, f s)),frac(B (B s 0 → J / ψ η ′), B (B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0)) = 12.7 ± 1.1 (stat) - 1.3 + 0.5 (syst) - 0.9 + 1.0 (frac(f d, f s)), where the last uncertainty is due to the knowledge of f d / f s, the ratio of b-quark hadronization factors that accounts for the different production rate of B 0 and B s 0 mesons. The ratio of the branching fractions of B s 0 → J / ψ η ′ and B s 0 → J / ψ η decays is measured to befrac(B (B s 0 → J / ψ η ′), B (B s 0 → J / ψ η)) = 0.90 ± 0.09 (stat) - 0.02 + 0.06 (syst)
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