104,997 research outputs found
"Maastricht 2042 and the Fate of Europe: Toward Convergence and Full Employment"
Unemployment in the European Union (EU) is a serious problem that threatens to disrupt the integration of accession countries, the character of individual countries, and the continued existence of the EU. According to Senior Scholar James K. Galbraith, European integration poses a huge conundrum for European employment because the conventional theory explaining unemployment in EuropeÐlabor market rigiditiesÐis wrong. The application of this policy will not cure European unemployment, but it could destroy the economic promise of the EU for its poorer regions and the accession countries.
Nicoll F. Galbraith Sr. Collection
Letter from Henry G. Bennet, the president of the Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College, to Colonel Nicoll F. Galbraith Sr. In the letter, Bennet thanks Galbraith for his letter and his cooperation and assistance in the advancement of their ROTC program
Galbraith J. K. — Le nouvel État industriel
T. G. Galbraith J. K. — Le nouvel État industriel. In: Population, 24ᵉ année, n°5, 1969. p. 1011
Marriner S. Eccles, general correspondence, 1951 - 1977: G [03]
Correspondence of Marriner S. Eccles with economist John Kenneth Galbraith, discussing various topics including Galbraith\u27s published books
Two Newspaper Clippings
The newspaper clipping titled Short Stories of Ohio, written by J. B. Galbraith, covers Dr. Otto B. Cornell\u27s discovery of an old poem manuscript from his mother, Lucinda Lenore Merriss, which she supposedly wrote with the help of Ben Hanby. The second clipping, titled Getting Together with an unknown author, reports on the proposed union of the [Republicans and Progressives] under the G. O. P.https://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/cornell_ephemera/1308/thumbnail.jp
Galbraith (K.) - American capitalism. The concept of countervailing power.
Destanne de Bernis G. Galbraith (K.) - American capitalism. The concept of countervailing power.. In: Revue économique, volume 32, n°5, 1981. p. 990
Interview with the United States Ambassador to France
In this episode, host Peter Krogh travels to Paris to talk with Evan Galbraith, the United States Ambassador to France. Despite an historically strong diplomatic relationship, at the time of Galbraith's appointment by President Reagan France was somewhat of an anomaly among the United States' close allies. In 1966 French President Charles de Gaulle had withdrawn France from the military wing of NATO to create a new independent military command. By the time of this interview, France possessed the world's third largest military force. This massive military command, which also included the world's third largest nuclear force, allowed France more independence in its foreign affairs than the other NATO allies, whose defense against the Soviet military threat still relied almost entirely on the American dominated treaty organization. In this interview, Ambassador Galbraith discusses the effects this independent military capability has on U.S.-France relations, the recent election of Francois Mitterrand as the first Socialist President of the French Fifth Republic and his subsequent inclusion of Communists in important government ministries, and the United States' economic, diplomatic, and military commitments to Western Europe.Examines U.S.-France relations and the implications of France's independent military capabilities
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