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The secondary market in less developed countries' debt : development, efficiency and debt reductionShepherdson, Ian Charles January 1992 (has links)
The thesis describes and analyses, within a framework of qualitative market development theory, the development of the Secondary Market in the bank debts of less developed countries. A survey of market participants is presented and analysed. The theory of financial market efficiency is assessed, and secondary market price data is used to test the theory in the secondary market context. Market-based debt reduction is described in theory and in practice, with a qualitative and quantitative assessment of the Brady Initiative. Simulations and sensitivity analysis of the likely effect on debt servicing ability for the first three beneficiaries of Brady debt restructuring are presented. Suggestions for further research are presented in the concluding chapter.
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An “other based” approach for examining the third-person effect hypothesisJeong, Irkwon 13 July 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Festivals and the Third ReichWilson, William John 09 1900 (has links)
Existing studies of festivity in the Third Reich have focused on its role as an effective instrument of social integration and control; that is, festivals are interpreted either as a form of propaganda or as an outward manifestation of a secular religion. Such approaches, while advancing our understanding of public celebration in Nazi Germany, fail to take into account the festival experience as a form of popular culture that mediated between the complex forces binding state, economy, and society. Fundamental to this process was the role played by modern technology. In its efforts to involve all Germans in the public celebration of the 'national community', the NSDAP exploited the technical resources of the highly industrialized German state to such an extent that the modern world of technology came to redefine the context of popular festivity in the Third Reich. As an expression of forwardlooking nationalist aspirations, however, the Nazi version of the modern festival experience ultimately clashed with the diverse festival cultures already embedded in German society.
The thesis is divided into six chapters. Chapter 1 discusses the formalization of festivity as a dynamic expression of a formalization ethnically and culturally pure society organized according to the nationalist military ethos of Nazism. Drawing on various public opinion reports gathered by Nazi and state agencies as well as the underground network of the exiled SPD, Chapters 2 and 5 reconstruct the popular response to Nazi attempts to extend organizational control into
all areas of public celebration. Ranging from widespread enthusiasm to
open dissent, the diversity of popular attitudes vis-a-vis Nazi festivity
conforms to the image of a modern, pluralistic society, within whose public arena Germans selected or reJected aspects of festivity according to their individual political, social, economic and cultural needs.
Traditional folk festivals as a form of consumer-oriented popular culture, and Nazi attempts to transform this cultural sphere, is the focus of chapter 3. Chapter 4 examines the functional appeal of the festival industry to a Nazi state determined to alleviate Depression conditions and thereby reinforce its legitimacy.
The final chapter, extending many of these themes into the war period, argues that only in the context of a deteriorating war situation did the Nazi state attempt to institutionalize its 'totalitarian' form of social control with respect to the festival and ceremonial. At the same time, however, it suggests that the ultimate failure of an increasingly isolated Nazi administration to recast the culture of celebration and ceremony owed as much to the monumental success of the Nazi festival style before 1939 as it did to the severe restrictions on material and human resources and the declining public morale that accompanied the war. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
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Who, How, and What? Third-Party Intervention in VenezuelaRojas, Ines Nayhari 14 January 2007 (has links)
This thesis examines the impact that third-party identity and techniques have on mediation outcome. The roles of the OAS and the Carter Center in the negotiations between the Venezuelan government and the opposition (DC), during the period 2002-2003, and the implementation of the agreement in 2004 are compared as representing track I and track II actors and styles. Using a process-tracing methodology, five conflict mappings and stages of conflict are combined with the results of focused interviews to main participants of the negotiation process. The analysis shows a significant impact of third-party identity and strategies on the outcome of mediation. Moreover, the outcome is more likely to be successful when track II actors, actually track I ½, participate as mediators in the actual negotiations. The most effective strategies used by third parties, dependent on the timing of the intervention and the stage of conflict, are communication and formulation strategies.
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Die Versicherung für fremde Rechnung nach dem schweizerischen und dem deutschen Versicherungsvertragsgesetz /Corrodi, Paul. January 1916 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität Zürich.
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Die Stellungsanomalien der Weisheitszähne bei den Konstitutionstypen Inaugural-Dissertation /Sepp, Josef, January 1935 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich, 1932.
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Die Stellungsanomalien der Weisheitszähne bei den Konstitutionstypen Inaugural-Dissertation /Sepp, Josef, January 1935 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich, 1932.
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Strategic planning systems in technological developmentKahen, Goel January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Semiotics and design : for an intertextualized dialogical praxisCauduro, Flavio Vinicius January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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Regionalism and globalism in the design of the EC development cooperation policyTsoutsoplides, Constantine January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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