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When madness ruled the hour Unionists and Confederates in Civil War Texas /Crane, Timothy Eugene, Forgie, George B., January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2003. / Supervisor: George B. Forgie. Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Available also from UMI Company.
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The Syrian conflict in Lebanese mediaCarr, Daryl Thomas 21 November 2013 (has links)
This thesis examines how three Lebanese satellite stations and two print journals cover the Syrian civil war. It is useful to analyze Lebanon’s news programming because the relative lack of regulation over its media allows them to take drastically different political stances. Syria and Lebanon’s unique political and cultural connection causes the conflict to permeate both the debates over foreign and domestic policy. My paper is significant because it elucidates the specific ways in which the Syrian crisis divides the already fractured Lebanese populace. My analysis reveals how regional news sources give meaning to the Arab Spring using language drawn from local historical and political experiences. / text
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A history of Arizona during the Civil War, 1861-1865Hastings, Virginia Marston January 1943 (has links)
No description available.
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Resources, Realpolitik, and Rebellion: Rethinking Grievance in Aceh, IndonesiaHolst, Joshua January 2008 (has links)
This paper engages operationalized discourses from economics and political science on resources and conflict using anthropological theory and ethnographic techniques. Current trends among civil war scholars locate grievances as ubiquitous constructs or rhetorical tools, irrelevant in causal analysis. This de-emphasis generates an unsavory menu of options for governments seeking to eliminate domestic conflict in resource-rich regions rationalizing grievance-generating human rights abuses.In "developing" resource-rich regions the historical trajectory of indigenous populations is placed in conflict with a development agenda that serves state interests. Grievances are central to the conflict over identity within the affected communities in a struggle for national affiliation or disaffiliation. In the absence of a pluralistic political system grievance-motivated political imperatives combine with political isolation to generate political unrest. As grievances are central to understanding cultural change and social unrest, pluralistic institutions and human rights protections have "realpolitikal" value in securing stability in resource-rich regions.
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Representing refugees: Canadian newspapers’ portrayals of refugees of El Salvador’s civil war, 1980 – 1992Dubois, Danielle Jacqueline 11 September 2014 (has links)
During the civil war in El Salvador, approximately 38,000 Salvadorans came to Canada, making them the largest group of Latin American migrants to Canada in that era. The arrival of these Salvadoran refugees has received limited academic attention. My thesis examines how Salvadoran refugees to Canada were portrayed in Canadian newspapers. I specifically examine how Salvadorans were written about in the Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star and Montreal’s Gazette; I focus on three eras: 1980 to 1982, 1986 to 1987, and 1991 to 1992. I argue that, throughout these years, Canadian newspapers acted as discursive gatekeepers to the “imagined community” of Canada. Salvadoran refugees moved closer to this community, but were not granted full admittance.
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The Civil War career of Major-General Edward Massey (1642-1647)Evans, David Sidney January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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The role of the Midland knights in the period of reform and rebellion 1258-67Fernandes, Mario Joseph January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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The Royalist reader in the English RevolutionDe Groot, Jerome Edward Gerard January 2000 (has links)
This thesis offers an interpretation of Royalist literature of the first civil war. It particularly addresses the importance of spatial metaphors and material realities to loyalist notions of identity and meaning.I illustrate how royalist space was predicated upon scientific and mathematical notions of authority and hierarchy, and how this sense of 'absolute space' inflected royalist conceptions of a variety of other locations: gender, society, language, the public. The thesis traces how Charles attempted to use economic, political and juridical measures to create a context in which he could impose certain sociospatial relations and structures of identity. Proclamations and royal protocols polemically reconfigured the institutional life of the country. Licensing of the presses provided a controlled textual mediation of information and fostered particular definitions of national identity. Against this background discourse Charles and his court created a model of Royalism which inflected and created social relations and in particular notions of allegiance. Modes of behaviour that seemed outside the bounds of institutionally and socially defined normality were caricatured as external, alien and other. The model of Royalism I postulate throws into new relief studies of Parliamentary texts, and restructures our thinking about allegiance, text and identity during the Civil War period. My thesis falls into two sections. The opening two chapters establish the material contexts and constraints of publication during the war. Chapter one looks in depth at the relocation of the court within the city of Oxford, considering the institutional and political manifestations of this movement. Chapter two analyses censorship and licensing, circulation and the status of text. The second part of the thesis considers a wide variety of texts published at Oxford, considering specific modes (panegyric, elegy) and forms (speeches, satires, epic, topographical verse). These works are analysed by reference to the contexts outlined in the opening section. By considering tracts, newsbooks, sermons, institutional reform, painting, poetry, hitherto unconsidered manuscript material, political theory, translation and linguistic textbooks I contextualise in depth and further our understanding of Royalist culture.
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Communicative Structure and the Emergence of Armed ConflictWarren, T. Camber January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Duke University, 2008.
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Maintaining the violent status quo : the political economy of the Colombian insurgency /Beckley, Paul A. January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--Naval Postgraduate School, 2002. / Cover title. "June 2002." AD-A404 644. Includes bibliographical references. Also available via the World Wide Web.
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