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Legal itineraries through Spanish Gitano family law : a comparative law ethnographyDrummond, Susan G. (Susan Gay), 1959- January 2001 (has links)
In the context of globalization, the idea of place is reputed to be losing its footing. This thesis explores the implications of these developments with respect to the way that place is constructed in law by focusing on tensions between the concept of jurisdiction and the ways that the contexts of law overspill it, threatening to engulf comparative analysis. Central to the idea that jurisdiction is losing its familiar moorings is the implication that other forms of thinking about legal normativity are emerging as more commonsensical alternatives to the state-based idea of jurisdiction that emerged in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The thesis explores this hypothesis by bringing elements of the discipline of comparative law (conventionally state based) into play with elements of the discipline of legal anthropology (conventionally culture based). The focus for this theoretical intrigue is an Gitano population in the South of Spain that served as the fieldwork locale for seven months of ethnographic fieldwork carried out in 1995. Investigations are centered on the theme of family law. Familiar notions of state and culture, and the legal sensibilities associated with each, are examined through exploring the interplay between local expressions of Gitanitude in Jerez de la Frontera and regional, national, international, and global forces that structure legal sensibilities in the area. The first chapter explores the interplay by focusing on the context surrounding Spain's reforms to family law in the 1980s. The familiar frontiers of the state are prodded through this analysis. The second chapter then explores the frontiers of culture through an examination of a variety of expressions of Gitanitude in Spain. The third chapter brings modified versions of state and culture together in a reconceptualisation of family law. As a whole, the thesis suggests a new way of approaching the problematic relationship between context and the disciplines of comparative law an
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War, politics and morality : the Spanish Catholic church and World War II.Varley, Gerald January 2009 (has links)
This thesis starts from the proposition that moral and ideological issues now drive the continuing intense interest in World War II. There has been an increasing challenge to the probity of the response of both opponents and bystanders to the threat raised by Nazism. The thesis views these issues from the viewpoint of the Spanish Catholic Church, an institution involved in yet detached from the war, having morality as its core concern yet itself struggling to reconcile moral principles with political imperatives. Such tensions might illuminate, in particular, the similar struggles of the Western Allies. This study has been set against a background of historiographical development. It has considered the evolution of Catholic teaching on the morality of war and threats posed to the Church in the early twentieth Century political world of conflicting ideologies. In Spain, the Church, quintessentially Spanish yet inspiring extremes of devotion and hatred in Spain's total, ideological Civil War, had been devastated by that struggle. In defending its urgent spiritual priorities during a new European war, it faced many challenges that necessitated reactions involving complex interplay of morality and politics. Not only was its relationship with the victorious Franco regime uncertain but it feared the infiltration into Spain of any of the European war's contending ideologies-Fascism and Nazism, Communism and liberal democracy. The thesis describes the Church's response. This work also takes the view that the intensity of the ideological struggle made World War II a war of unprecedented totality. This study examines the attitudes of the Spanish Church to aspects of total war. It concludes that, although the responses of the Spanish Church reveal interplay of the moral and the political, these reactions shed some light upon questions of war and morality still asked today. / Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of History and Politics, 2009
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Jenseits der Konfession die frühe Frankreichpolitik Philipps II. von Spanien, 1559-1571 /Reinbold, Markus. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Philipps-Universität, Marburg, 2003/04. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 265-272) and indexes.
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Trade and navigation between Spain and the Indies in the time of the HapsburgsHaring, Clarence Henry, January 1918 (has links)
The author's doctoral dissertation, Harvard University, 1916, but not published as a thesis. / "Part of the material in chapter VII was embodied in an article printed in the Quarterly journal of economics, in May, 1915, and the second half of chapter VIII is largely an adaptation of another article, 'España y el Canal de Panamá', which appeared in Hispania (London) in December, 1912"--Pref. Bibliography: p. xv-xxvii.
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Die byzantinisch-katalanischen Beziehungen im 12. und 13. Jahrhundert unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Chronik Jakobs I. von Katalonien-AragonHierro, Ernest Marcos. January 1996 (has links)
Originally presented as the author's Inaugural-Dissertation--Universität München, 1994. / Includes bibliographical references (p. xv-lxix) and indexes.
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Die byzantinisch-katalanischen Beziehungen im 12. und 13. Jahrhundert unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Chronik Jakobs I. von Katalonien-AragonHierro, Ernest Marcos. January 1996 (has links)
Originally presented as the author's Inaugural-Dissertation--Universität München, 1994. / Includes bibliographical references (p. xv-lxix) and indexes.
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The Right under the second Spanish Republic, 1931-1936, with special reference to the CEDARobinson, Richard Alan Hodgson January 1968 (has links)
The thesis which follows is, as the title suggests, a general study of the Right in Spain from the beginning of the Second Republic in April 1931 until the outbreak of the Civil War in July 1936. Pride of place has been given to the <u>CEDA</u> (and its antecedents <u>Acción Nacional</u> and <u>Acción Popular</u>) because this was the biggest and most important of the parties of the Right during the Republic. The terra 'Right' has been taken to signify those parties which did not proclaim themselves Republican, i.e. principally the Catholic CEDA, the Monarchist groups and the 'Fascist' <u>Falonge</u>. Consideration has also been given to two important institutions usually believed to be 'on the Right': the Church and the Army. Although some information on the Right has appeared in various books, no attempt at a comprehensive study has hitherto been made. Galindo Herrero's <u>Los partidos monárquicos bajo la aegunda República</u> (1936) deals inadequately with the Monarchist parties. Professor Payne'a study of the <u>Falange</u> does not satisfactorily place the movement in the context of the other Rightist movements with which it quarrelled or was from time to time connected. The same author's work on the Army (<u>Politics and the Military in Modern Spain</u>), was published just before this thesis went to the typist, as were the biographies of Franco by Crosier and Hills. Professor Sánchez's book on the Church and the Republic, <u>Reform and Reaction</u>, appeared in 1964, two years after work on this thesis began. Concentration on the <u>CEDA</u> in this thesis is felt by the writer to be fUlly justified, not only because of that party's size and importance for the history of the Republic, but also because it has hitherto been so neglected by historians. Only one book in any language deals with it - Monge Bernal's <u>Acción Popular</u> - and it is an 'authorized' history written by a party member at the end of 1935. Neglect of the party's history is perhaps attributable to the fact that its leaders were <u>personae non gratae</u> both to the Left and to the victors in the Civil War. The purpose of this thesis is therefore to try and provide a comprehensive study of the Right during the Republic. The thesis endeavours to explain why the various parties existed, to trace the development of each of them and to give an account of relations between them. The attitude of each to the Church and to the Army (and <u>vice versa</u>) is also discussed. An attempt is also made to examine and explain the policies, ideology and strength of each and, so far as is possible, to indicate socially and geographically whence came their supporters. The absence of adequate biographical information has however hindered a proper study of the economic interests represented by them. This thesis also constitutes an attempt to set the Right's activities firmly within the broader context of the history of the Republic and the events leading up to the Civil War. For this reason the chronological approach adopted would seem to be justified: the events of the years 1931-1936 in Spain are comparable in their complexity to those of, for example, the years 1789-1799 in France. Furthermore, the activities and development of the Right were to a considerable extent dictated by this kaleidoscopic sequence of events in which, by and large, the Left held the initiative.
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The 2004 Spanish Elections: Unpopular Foreign Policy and the Fall of the Popular PartyBuchanan, Melissa 01 January 2006 (has links)
On March 11, 2004 Spain suffered one of the worst terrorist attacks in its history. At three separate stations throughout Madrid, ten bombs exploded on commuter trains filled with morning rush-hour passengers. Three days later, Spain held a national parliamentary election, where the Spanish people voted out Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar and his Popular Party government in favor of the Socialist Party (PSOE).
The downfall of the conservative Popular Party, who had been expected to win a third term in government, was not only a result of the train bombings and the way Aznar' s government handled them, but also of the foreign policy stances Aznar made as Prime Minister. Aznar's alliance with the United States during the invasion of Iraq was unpopular with an overwhelming majority of Spanish citizens. This study explores the historical relationships between Spain and the United States and Spain and its Western European neighbors ranging from the Franco dictatorship (1939-1975), through the PSOE government (1982-1996). Spaniards distrust the United States because the United States had given aid to Franco and his authoritarian regime. As opposed to the policies of the PSOE, who tried to built a closer relationship with Western Europe, Aznar' s policies were seen as a reversal back to the Francoist period. The conclusion of this study is that governments are held accountable for the way in which they address foreign policy matters. However, Aznar's Popular Party was still expected to win the 2004 election, and probably would have had it not been for the gross mishandling of the commuter train bombing situtation.
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Christian attitudes towards the mudéjares in the reign of Alfonso III of Aragon (1285-1291)Lourie, Elena January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
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Nourishing the nation : manifestations of Catalan national identity through foodCongdon, Venetia January 2015 (has links)
In this thesis I ask whether food can be used to express Catalan national identity, and if so, in what ways this occurs. In doing so, I consider the lived realities of nationalist movements, rather than simply the ideas and political claims that inform such movements. The Catalan Autonomous Community in northeast Spain is an ideal place to research this issue, due to the strengthening of nationalist sentiments there in light of the rise in support for independence from Spain. I wished to see whether this had any effect on the connections between food and national identity (or gastronationalism). National identity and food are connected in many diverse and varied ways. Food culture allows us to reflect on national identity as a whole. Themes which commonly appear in nationalist discourse, such as cultural specificity, historicism, or landscape (to name but a few), also inform discussions of national food identity. In the present case, while other markers of identity (e.g. language) are also important, ideals of Catalan nationalism may take the guise of Catalan gastronationalism as well. The current pro-independence movement has had the effect of making Catalans more aware of their cultural symbols, including cuisine, which is now one of many such symbols that can be mobilized for the expression of national identity.
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