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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

FEDERAL GRANTS-IN-AID AND STATES' RIGHTS IN ARIZONA

Meyer, Louis Sabin, 1925- January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
2

Render unto Caesar: Sovereignty, the Obligations of Citizenship, and the Diplomatic History of the American Civil War

Negus, Samuel David 12 January 2006 (has links)
In scholarship on the Civil War there is generally a lack of emphasis placed upon the significance of transatlantic diplomacy. However, much of the literature that is devoted to this subject does little to draw the importance of diplomatic and domestic histories together. This thesis uses British Foreign Office papers to discuss the role of Her majesty’s consuls, and the importance of resident persons of British nativity, especially within the Confederacy, during the war. It argues that the struggle between the Union and the new Confederacy affected diplomatic relations not only in the geo-political sense, but directly and personally through the fate of foreign individuals residing within America. Political theory and the semantics of ideology will be cross-examined against British, Confederate and Union government documents and correspondence in order to develop a deeper understanding of the flexibility and malleability of the concept of sovereignty, and its role in Civil War diplomacy.
3

A policy approach to federalism cases of public lands and water policy /

Bradley, Dorotha Myers. January 1986 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D. - Political Science)--University of Arizona, 1986. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 313-330).
4

Roger B. Taney Jacksonian jurist,

Smith, Charles W. January 1936 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin, 1934. / Without thesis note. Bibliography: p. 215-238.
5

Roger B. Taney: Jacksonian jurist,

Smith, Charles W. January 1936 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin, 1934. / Without thesis note. Bibliography: p. 215-238.
6

Navigating Resources after Spinal Cord Injury: The Utility of Human Rights

Bryden, Anne Marie 27 August 2020 (has links)
No description available.
7

Minimální věk pro požívání alkoholických nápojů v USA: Oprávněná výjimka z principu plnoletosti? / Minimum Legal Drinking Age in the U.S.: A Reasonable Exception to Age of Majority?

Lokajíčková, Jana January 2012 (has links)
The MA thesis "Minimum Legal Drinking Age in the U.S.: A Reasonable Exception to Age of Majority?" examines the U.S. legal limit for consumption of alcohol from the perspective of policies aimed at controlling drunk driving because the minimum drinking age was set to twenty-one - higher than the age of majority - in order to reduce drunk-driving fatalities. The thesis analyzes different aspects of this issue and concludes that the high minimum legal drinking, which constitutes a severe limitation of personal freedom of those aged eighteen to twenty, did not fulfill the expectations with which it was introduced in 1984. The thesis suggests alternatives to the high age limit, and examines how and if they are implemented or what prevents their frequent use. The thesis has four parts: one provides basic facts about drinking, driving, and drunk driving in the U.S. society including the attitudes of the public toward the issue. The following part looks into the legal developments of the drinking age limits and legal challenges to the law arranging the age limit for its supposed unconstitutionality. The third chapter looks at the results of scientific research and suggests ways to deal with drunk driving more efficiently. The last part examines what prevents these more effective measures from being widely...
8

Rhetoric and reality in American political pluralism : Jackson-Calhoun controversy in perspective

Wise, Margaret Spencer 01 January 1973 (has links)
The essential problem of politics are ancient general, and persistent. A particular political system, such as that of the United States, can be interpreted as a way of coping with recurring problems. Some of the ways a political system deals with problems may be unique, some commonplace. Because it meets its problems in a particular time and place with a special body of past experiences to go on, each political system is unique; so too the American system is unique. But because some problems have recurred ever since civilized men have tried to live together, every political system has had to deal with enduring dilemmas. Its solutions may be unique, the basic questions are not. The focus of this paper is directed toward one particular problem -- the issue of conflict and consensus, political power and political order, in a changing democratic society with politics seen as the means whereby the community balances the tension between conflict and consensus. The American ancestors chose to live in a community, with its numerous and obvious advantages. But, when strong human beings seek the company of one another, conflict seems to be an inescapable aspect of community and hence of the human condition. While conflict has been the focus of attention by many -- philosophers, historians, social scientists, Aristotle, Machiavelli, Locke -- it is James Madison who perhaps more than any other single individual gave shape to American conflict in his modeling the American constitutional system. He held the conflict is built into the very nature of man, and thus a system must be devised through which it is channeled and controlled. Conflict and consensus, among other things, involve the interaction of power, order, liberty, and flexibility. It is to the Age of Jackson and the political philosophies promulgated by the founding fathers, that this research turns to gain an insight into how "factions" are channeled and controlled in the United States -- to gain insight into basic pluralistic political patterns of the United States.

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