8,464 research outputs found

    G. Le Roy. Pascal savant et croyant

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    Flament Pierre. G. Le Roy. Pascal savant et croyant. In: Revue de l'histoire des religions, tome 154, n°2, 1958. pp. 242-243

    G. Le Roy, Pascal. Savant et Croyant

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    Semeese Gustave. G. Le Roy, Pascal. Savant et Croyant. In: Revue Philosophique de Louvain. Troisième série, tome 56, n°50, 1958. pp. 338-339

    Georges Le Roy, Pascal, savant et croyant. Paris, P.U.F., 1957

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    Burgelin Pierre. Georges Le Roy, Pascal, savant et croyant. Paris, P.U.F., 1957. In: Revue d'histoire et de philosophie religieuses, 38e année n°2,1958. Hommage au Doyen Charles Hauter à l'occasion de son 70e anniversaire. 9 juillet 1958. pp. 205-206

    Georges Le Roy, Pascal, savant et croyant. Paris, P.U.F., 1957

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    Burgelin Pierre. Georges Le Roy, Pascal, savant et croyant. Paris, P.U.F., 1957. In: Revue d'histoire et de philosophie religieuses, 38e année n°2,1958. Hommage au Doyen Charles Hauter à l'occasion de son 70e anniversaire. 9 juillet 1958. pp. 205-206

    Roy Pascal levelei Lukács Györgynek

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    Roy Pascal levele Lukács Györgynek

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    Roy Pascal levele Lukács Györgynek

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    United They Fall: Why the International Community Should Not Promote Military Integration after Civil War

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    The single strongest predictor of civil war is a nation having had one in the past, and preventing the recurrence of civil war has thus become the critical problem for both scholarship and policy. The conventional wisdom urges the creation of capable, legitimate, and inclusive postwar states to reduce the risk of relapse into civil war, and international peacebuilders have often encouraged the formation of a new national army including members of the war’s opposing sides. However, military integration has received little theoretical or empirical attention. Filling that gap, we argue that both the theoretical logics and the empirical record identifying military integration as a significant contributor to durable post-civil war peace are weak. Our analysis of eleven cases finds little evidence that military integration played a substantial causal role in preventing the return to civil war and little support for the likely causal mechanisms. Military integration does not usually send a costly signal of the parties’ commitment to peace, provide communal security, employ many possible spoilers, or act as a powerful symbol of a unified nation. We conclude that it is both unwise and unethical for the international community to press military integration on reluctant local forces.Based in part on a larger collective project: Roy Licklider (Ed.). (2014). New Armies from Old: Merging Competing Military Forces after Civil Wars. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press; see http://press.georgetown.edu/book/georgetown/new-armies-old

    Ekla Chalo Re: a tribute to Ms. Mary Roy

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    This is a tribute to activist Mary Roy, who passed away in 2022. The author traces the life of Mary Roy, highlighting the ways in which she challenged gendered norms and expectations. She was the applicant in a landmark case which brought equal property rights for Syrian Christian women in India. The author reminds readers that women&#39;s rights are human rights and change begins with us.&#160; </html

    Yunnan (China), men with the cow caravan

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    A cow caravan.Image is part of research conducted by Roy Chapman Andrews for the article: Traveling in China's Southland Author(s): Roy Chapman Andrews Source: Geographical Review, Vol. 6, No. 2 (Aug., 1918), pp. 133-146 Published by: American Geographical Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/207476http://www.jstor.org/stable/207476Grayscal
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