169 research outputs found

    Merle (Louis). La métairie et l'évolution agraire de la Gâtine poitevine de la fin du Moyen Age à la Révolution.

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    Deprez Paul. Merle (Louis). La métairie et l'évolution agraire de la Gâtine poitevine de la fin du Moyen Age à la Révolution. . In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome 39, fasc. 3, 1961. Langues et litteratures modernes - Moderne taal- en letterkunde. pp. 939-942

    Discussion

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    Schofield R.S., Coale A.-J., Henry Louis, Hollingsworth T.H., Desama Claude, van de Walle Etienne, Livi-Bacci Massimo, Dupâquier Jacques, Deprez P., Poussou Jean-Pierre, Andorka Rudolf, Laslett Peter, Marcilio Maria-Luisa, Nadal Jordi, Dányi Dezsö, Hélin Etienne, Cipolla Carlo- M. Discussion. In: Annales de démographie historique, 1972. Techniques et méthodes. Actes du colloque de Florence, 1er-3 octobre 1971. pp. 225-244

    Discussion

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    Schofield R.S., Dányi Dezsö, Andorka Rudolf, Hélin Etienne, Deprez P., Kintz Jean-Pierre, Hollingsworth T.H., Corsini Carlo A., Cipolla Carlo- M., Henry Louis, Fedele S., Poussou Jean-Pierre, Bardet Jean-Pierre, Sonnino Eugenio, Hayami Akira, Kovacsics Jozsef, Laslett Peter, Dupâquier Jacques, Livi-Bacci Massimo, Charbonneau Hubert, Nadal Jordi. Discussion. In: Annales de démographie historique, 1972. Techniques et méthodes. Actes du colloque de Florence, 1er-3 octobre 1971. pp. 127-146

    Aspects of the biological sulphur cycle in limnological ecosystems in the Vestfold Hills, Antarctica

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    Progress Code: completedStatement: The quality of the scanned pages may vary. An OCR process has been run over the document.This is a scanned copy of the report, 'Aspects of the biological sulphur cycle in limnological ecosystems in the Vestfold Hills, Antarctica' by P.P. Deprez and P.D. Franzmann.<br/><br/>Taken from the document:<br/><br/>This document is a report of the work carried out by two wintering biologists at Davis in 1984. It encompasses work completed between January 1984 and October 30 1984. It is not a publication in the scientific sense. It was written quickly, in the first two weeks of November, 1984 and was not revised. It was edited by Harry Burton in December, 1984.<br/><br/>It includes:<br/><br/>1) Determination of sulphate reduction rates by radiometric methods in the sediments of Burton Lake, Ace Lake, Watts Lake, Shield Lake and Ellis Fjord.<br/>2) Measurement of reduced sulphur compounds in Antarctic Lakes by gas chromatography with dual flame photometric detection.<br/>3) Chemical measurements and parameters of some Antarctic lakes.<br/>4) Collection and preliminary investigation of Antarctic micro-organisms.<br/>5) Other bits

    Discussion

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    Henry Louis, Van der Woude A. M., Sogner Solvi, Laslett Peter, Hollingsworth T.H., Deprez P., Kintz Jean-Pierre, Kovacsics Jozsef, Hayami Akira, Dányi Dezsö, Livi-Bacci Massimo, Sonnino Eugenio, Nadal Jordi, Hélin Etienne, Poussou Jean-Pierre, Corsini Carlo A., Charbonneau Hubert, Marcilio Maria-Luisa, Fedele S., Dupâquier Jacques, Schofield R.S., Andorka Rudolf, Legare Jacques, Blayo Yves, Zanni R., Desama Claude, Parenti G. Discussion. In: Annales de démographie historique, 1972. Techniques et méthodes. Actes du colloque de Florence, 1er-3 octobre 1971. pp. 365-383

    Vertical Integration and Capital Theory: a comment

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    The author, in this comment, replies to a criticism made by Johan Deprez in his article “Vertical Integration and the problem of fixed capital” (JPKE, Fall 1990, vol.33,No. 1, pp.47-64). The Author claims that Deprez’ interpretation of the process of vertical integration misplaces both its function and its purpose. Deprez’ asserts that “vertical integration is a method of synchronic logic compatible to the analysis of natural dynamics in a system without structural change... it ultimately fails to capture important diachronic considerations”. The author does not accept the negative propositions nor the implicit assertion that vertical integration is a development of “synchronic thinking”. The process of vertical integration goes beyond both synchronic and diachronic thinking. Vertical integration IS A WAY OF LOOKING AT THE ECONOMIC SYSTEM. It takes each physical quantity in the final demand vector as the point of reference, and collapses all the interrelations that are behind it simply into a physical labor coefficient and a physical unit of productive capacity. It does not impose a restriction on the real world. The model is meant to be an analytical device rather than a description of reality

    Petit guide des conflits de normes par le Conseil d'Etat - à l'attention du Conseil constitutionnel ?

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    International audience(CE 5 janv. 2005, Mlle Deprez et M. Baillard, RFDA 2005.67, note B. Bonnet

    Ozawa's class for locally compact groups and unique prime factorization of group von Neumann algebras

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    We study class for locally compact groups. We characterize locally compact groups in this class as groups having an amenable action on a boundary that is small at infinity, generalizing a theorem of Ozawa. Using this characterization, we provide new examples of groups in class and prove a unique prime factorization theorem for group von Neumann algebras of products of locally compact groups in this class. We also prove that class is a measure equivalence invariant.sponsorship: The author is supported by a PhD fellowship of the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO). Part of this research was performed while the author was visiting the Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics (IPAM), which is supported by the National Science Foundation. The author would like to thank Arnaud Brothier and Stefaan Vaes for interesting discussions and helpful comments. (Research Foundation Flanders (FWO), National Science Foundation)status: Publishe

    Unequal economie development at the origin of the federalization process

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    Unequal economic development in Belgium is often reduced to a mere change in the economic fortunes of Flanders and Wallonia. This image is then used to explain the federalization process. A closer look at the economic development of Flanders and Wallonia, in its relation to the geography of demographic changes, yields a more complex process consisting of three stages. Nevertheless, this very process created different political hegemonies north and south of the linguistic frontier. This explains why unequal economic development was perceived in terms of Flanders and Wallonia and why this perception was politically effective. The present chapter gives a description of this unequal development and points to the geographical basis of the two political hegemonies
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