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"From thy mother's arms" Coleridge, colonialism, and the domestic realm /Jones, Christopher D. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Miami University, Dept. of English, 2004. / Title from first page of PDF document. Includes bibliographical references (p. 38-39).
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Les peines coloniales et l'expérience guyanaise /Thamar, Maurice, January 1999 (has links)
Th. doct.--Droit--Paris, 1935. / La couv. porte en plus : "essai" Bibliogr. p. 193-194.
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Individual assessments and collective decisionsMallon, Eamonn Bernard January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Red Albion: Genocide and English Colonialism, 1622-1646 / Genocide and English Colonialism, 1622-1646Kruer, Matthew, 1981- 06 1900 (has links)
viii, 170 p. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library catalog for the location and call number. / This thesis examines the connection between colonialism and violence during the
early years of English settlement in North America. I argue that colonization was inherently
destructive because the English colonists envisioned a comprehensive transformation of the
American landscape that required the elimination ofNative American societies. Two case
studies demonstrate the dynamics ofthis process. During the Anglo-Powhatan Wars in
Virginia, latent violence within English ideologies of imperialism escalated cont1ict to
levels of extreme brutality, but the fracturing ofpower along the frontier limited Virginian
war aims to expulsion of the Powhatan Indians and the creation of a segregated society.
During the Pequot War in New England, elements of violence in the Puritan worldview
became exaggerated by the onset of societal crisis during the Antinomian Controversy. The
resulting climate of fear unified the colonies and created an ideological commitment to the
genocide of the Pequots. / Committee in Charge:
Dr. Jack Maddex, Chair;
Dr. Matthew Dennis;
Dr. Jeffrey Ostler
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Short-term task allocation in small social insect groupsSpencer, Andrew January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Essays on international migrationSlaymaker, Rachel January 2018 (has links)
Immigration has become an increasingly salient issue across Europe in recent years. However, much of the existing economics literature focuses on the impact of immigration on labour markets. In order to gain a more complete understanding of the impact of immigration on a host country, it is important to take a broader perspective. In this thesis we investigate some of the wider effects of immigration on host countries and their native citizens. The thesis contains three self-contained chapters, each of which tries to establish the causal effects of immigration on a separate socio-economic aspect of the host country. Chapter 2 investigates the causal link between migration and trade flows. We exploit the large, exogenous increase in migrants to the UK as a result of the 2004 EU enlargement. In contrast to the standard gravity model approach, we use a difference-in-differences estimation strategy, which enables us to compare changes in UK trade flows with accession countries to changes in UK trade flows with other central and eastern European countries. At the product level, separating goods according to their informational content using the classification put forward by Rauch (1999), we find evidence that UK imports from accession countries increased, and that this was driven by differentiated goods. In Chapter 3 we investigate whether the proportion of migrants in a local area affects the success of an anti-immigration political party. Using Swedish municipality-level data, we focus on the impact of large inflows of migrants, many of whom were refugees, from non-OECD countries in the 1980s and 1990s. In order to address concerns over the endogeneity of migrant location, we exploit a refugee placement policy which aimed to disperse refugees across the country. Initial OLS estimates suggest that a one percentage point increase in the migrant share is associated with a 0.28 percentage point increase in the New Democracy vote share. However, we do not find evidence of a positive relationship between the arrival of refugees and the New Democracy vote share in our 2SLS estimation. Further analysis suggests that our OLS results are driven by municipalities surrounding the three major urban areas of Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmo. In addition, we find no evidence that natives responded to an influx of migrants by relocating to another area. In Chapter 4 we examine the relationship between immigration and house prices. Focusing on the case of England and Wales, we exploit variation in migrant inflows across local authority districts to identify the effects of migration on changes in house prices. We build on existing papers by conducting the analysis at the local authority district level which enables us to better account for unobserved local level characteristics. In addition, we then exploit data on the postcode of each individual housing transaction in an attempt to better control for housing quality. In our OLS specifications we find no conclusive evidence of any relationship between migrant inflows and changes in house prices. We then address endogeneity concerns by using an instrument based on historical settlement patterns. Although our 2SLS estimates suggest that a 1% increase in the migrant share is associated with a 2.4% fall in house prices, we show that this effect is driven by local authorities in London, and that our instrument based on historical migrant settlement patterns is weak and fails to fulfil the relevance requirement for local authorities outside of London. These findings cast doubt over the suitability of the shift-share instrument for addressing endogeneity concerns in this setting.
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Colonialism and linguistic knowledge : John Gilchrist and the representation of Urdu in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuriesSteadman-Jones, Richard January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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British colonial policy in West Africa, 1885-1900Ekechi, Felix K., 1934- January 1965 (has links)
No description available.
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Making a career in the British Empire, c. 1900-1960Jeppesen, Christopher January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Ploughing for the Hereafter: Debt, Time, and Mahdist Resistance in Northern Sudan, 1821-1935Ziai, Hengameh January 2021 (has links)
This dissertation explores formations of the ‘colonial’ in Sudan through the vantage point of transformations in debt and temporality. Situating Sudan in an Ottoman-Egyptian context, it offers an account of how debt and land came to be reorganised so as to be separated from the realm of ethical relations. It does so by exploring legal-juridical changes brought about under Ottoman-Egyptian rule, which gradually altered notions of selfhood and time. In light of this, forms of resistance—especially during the Mahdist uprising—are shown to be a reformulation of disciplinary and ethical regimes and a (re)fashioning of subjects. Concluding with the early decades of British colonial rule, it considers the temporal regimes used to neutralise Mahdist subjectivities, which involved producing a rational, sedentary, and calculative peasantry oriented toward—not an afterlife but—a prosperous future.
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