27 results
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2. Constitutional parliamentarism in Europe, 1800–2019.
- Author
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Cheibub, José Antonio and Rasch, Bjørn Erik
- Subjects
- *
CABINET system , *WORLD War II , *CONSTITUTIONAL history , *NINETEENTH century - Abstract
This paper analyses the institutions associated with government termination in parliamentary systems: no-confidence and confidence motions, and the early dissolution of the parliament. We consider constitutional texts for all European countries between 1800 and 2019 and identify two broad trends: (1) the constitutionalisation of practices that have first emerged as the result of strategic interactions between the government and the parliament; (2) the tendency towards protecting both the executive and the parliament from mutual interference. While the first tendency has culminated with an almost universal constitutionalisation of the principle of parliamentarism in European constitutions, the second led to the protection of executives and the extension of effective legislative terms. We suggest that these constitutional developments are associated with the stabilisation of parliamentarism after World War II and conclude that although parliamentarism remains a flexible system, contemporary regimes do not function like their forebears did in the 19th century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. An Uneasy Relationship: Democracy and Representative Government in the Writings of Nineteenth-Century Liberals.
- Author
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Craiutu, Aurelian
- Subjects
- *
DEMOCRACY , *REPRESENTATIVE government , *LIBERALS , *LIBERALISM , *NINETEENTH century , *LITERATURE - Abstract
In nineteenth-century Europe, democracy was not embraced with the same enthusiasm it now enjoys. Conservative critics questioned central democratic normative principles, while liberals often tried to correct the limitations of democracy. While accepting the inevitability of democracy, nineteenth-century liberals often resisted the idea that universal suffrage guaranteed the wisdom of the people?s choices. Nothing better illustrates this difficult apprenticeship of democracy than the writings of François Guizot, whose political thought focused on the relationship between liberalism and democracy. This paper explores Guizot?s theory of representative government with special emphasis on his theory of political capacity and publicity. The final section concentrates on the issue of ?moderating? democracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. European capitalism and the effects of agricultural commercialization on slave labor in Tunisia, 1780s–1880s.
- Author
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Montana, Ismael M.
- Subjects
- *
CAPITALISM , *SLAVE labor , *AGRICULTURAL industries , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY ,TUNISIAN history, 1516-1881 ,TUNISIAN history - Abstract
The paper argues that while the significance of Tunisian state economic and political reforms during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries has reflected the changing patterns of the caravan slave trade in previous research, much of this research has not considered the role of slaves in the emergent Tunisian economy. Nowhere is this negligence more apparent than in the agricultural sector, which was predominantly responsible for strengthening economic growth from the late eighteenth century until its weakening as a result of encroaching European capitalism by the mid-nineteenth century. Drawing on Tunisian state population data known as theMajbaCensus and the extant economic literature, the paper addresses this gap by exploring the implications of the Tunisian state economic reforms on enslaved labor in the agricultural sector. Exploring this research gap will enable us to ascertain the extent to which enslaved labor contributed to Tunisia’s burgeoning agricultural sector in a manner that has dodged academics’ attention. After providing a historical context of European capital penetration and its implications on political and economic reforms from the Ottoman conquest through the Husaynid periods, the paper looks at how European capital infusion after the first quarter of the nineteenth century transformed the agricultural sector and examines the role of slave labor prior to the European capital infusion and commercialization of the agricultural sector. Using theMajbaCensus records’ regional distribution of blacks in the Regency the paper sheds light on the implications of the precarious economy engendered by agricultural commercialization under the aegis of European capitalism on the structure of enslaved labor. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. GENERAL APPROACH TO THE JUDICIAL SYSTEM IN CONTINENTAL EUROPE.
- Author
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SALIU, Xhemile
- Subjects
- *
JUSTICE administration , *ROMAN law , *NINETEENTH century , *TWENTIETH century , *JURISPRUDENCE - Abstract
The law in Continental Europe dates back to the time of Roman law and the Corpus Juris Civilis complexes, which was founded in the 5th century by the King of East Rome, Justinian I. The law in Continental Europe has developed and has taken root in the countries of Continental Europe and in many other countries of the world. The assessment and use of the legal texts of Roman law was the reason for the creation of a common legal basis on which legal science in Europe is based. Legal science in Europe has influenced the implementation of the law and this implementation has found a place in many European Countries. Particularly the Corpus Juris Civilis's Kazuistic texts have had great impact, which texts bring solutions to eventualities. The law in Continental Europe has achieved its development until the adoption of abstraction and general rules through the interpretation of the Corpus Juris Civilis codification, with the adaptation of Roman law as well as theoretically with the national codification which is based on Roman law. The law in Continental Europe, although it represents the first beginnings of the legal life of the European people, is always defined as a right which has kept alive the reform spirit, has been systematized in a wider range, and has always been adhering to general principles. Most of the laws from Continental Europe have been codified in the 19th and 20th century. As an example we can mention the Austrian Civil Code which entered into force in 1811, the German Civil Code which came into force in 1896, the Civil Code of Switzerland, which entered into force in 1907 and the Italian Civil Code which came into force on the year 1942. There are substantial and important differences between these civil codes. It is commonly seen that even in the Legal System of Continental Europe there is a cross classification of Roman justice and German law. The law in continental Europe is largely classified and structured and contains many general principles and rules; is also based on abstraction rules, all jurisdictions are systematized and it is a valid juridical method of judgment. One of its core qualities is that the courts respect law and judge by law, interpret them and apply them in cases where there are disputes and gaps within the law. It is generally assumed that law can be applied anywhere. Where the law can not be applied, in order to fill legal gaps the judges refer to the general rules and principles. Therefore, through this paper we will highlight the fundamental characteristics and the general approach to the judicial system in Continental Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
6. On the boredom of science: positional astronomy in the nineteenth century.
- Author
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DONNELLY, KEVIN
- Subjects
- *
ASTROMETRY , *HISTORY of astronomy , *OBSERVATORIES , *ASTRONOMICAL observatories , *RESEARCH , *BOREDOM , *HISTORY of science , *NINETEENTH century - Abstract
To those not engaged in the practice of scientific research, or telling the story of this enterprise, the image of empirical observation may conjure up images of boredom more than anything else. Yet surprisingly, the profoundly uninteresting nature of research to many science workers and readers in history has received little attention. This paper seeks to examine one moment of encroaching boredom: nineteenth-century positional astronomy as practised at leading observatories. Though possibly a coincidence, this new form of astronomical observation arose only a few decades before the English term ‘boredom’, for which the Oxford English Dictionary has no record prior to 1850. Through examining forms of observatory labour and publications, I offer in this paper an example of how boring work and reading helped shape a scientific discipline. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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7. Metternich and the Ottoman reform movement.
- Author
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Sˇedivy´, Miroslav
- Subjects
- *
DIPLOMACY , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *OTTOMAN Empire , *NINETEENTH century ,EUROPEAN politics & government ,EUROPEAN foreign relations - Abstract
The goal of the paper is to illuminate Metternich's attitude towards possibilities of reform in the Ottoman Empire and the reasons for his interest and practical steps taken in this matter. The paper attempts to provide an accurate account of an important, but until now, entirely ignored, aspect of Metternich's diplomacy and offer further proof that Metternich was not the benighted reactionary depicted in the nineteenth-century historiography, but a conservative keenly aware that the conservative order could survive only if reformed so as to adapt it to the realities of a post-revolutionary age. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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8. Development of Soil Consumption Driven by Urbanization and Pattern of Built-up Areas in Prague Periphery since the 19th Century.
- Author
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STACHURA, JAN, CHUMAN, TOMÁŠ, and ŠEFRNA, LUDĚK
- Subjects
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SOIL quality , *FARMS , *ORTHOPHOTOMAPS , *NINETEENTH century , *URBANIZATION - Abstract
Soil consumption has become a very rapid and intensive process in many European countries, especially around large cities and important highways. The Prague periphery is not an exception. This paper analyses the extent and quality of consumed agricultural land and pattern of built-up areas in selected 22 cadastres in Prague periphery, by using historical maps and orthophotomaps, over four time horizons since the 19th century till 2010. The results show an extensive soil consumption. The average extent of built-up area increased from less than 1% to more than 13% per cadastre. This extensive development caused consumption of high quality soils and changed the pattern of built-up areas from more compact to less compact built-up areas. The average nearest neighbour distance between built-up patches has increased by more than 38%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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9. On Jacobi's transformation theory of elliptic functions.
- Author
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Cogliati, Alberto
- Subjects
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ELLIPTIC functions , *JACOBI forms , *HISTORY of mathematics , *NINETEENTH century , *INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
The main interpretative challenge set by the Fundamenta Nova Theoriae Functionum Ellipticarum lies in Jacobi's transformation theory upon which the entire theoretical edifice of the treatise depends. Unfortunately, Jacobi did not convey any indication of how he attained his general formulae for rational transformations of elliptic functions. He limited himself to providing a posteriori verification of the validity of his claims. The aim of this paper is precisely to describe the heuristic path by which in 1827 Jacobi succeeded in finding these transformation formulae. The proposed historical reconstruction will hopefully shed new light upon the emergence in Jacobi's work of the inversion process of elliptic integrals of the first kind and thus of the elliptic function sinam $$u$$ itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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10. Anti-French Discourse in the Nineteenth-century British Antivivisection Movement.
- Author
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ALONSO RECARTE, CLAUDIA
- Subjects
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VIVISECTION , *EXPERIMENTAL physiology , *MEDICAL research , *ANIMAL rights activists , *ACTIVISM in literature , *NINETEENTH century , *LAW - Abstract
Antivivisection literature has for some time now been the corpus of research of scholars of cultural studies, particularly since Richard Ryder's revealing publications in the mid-1970s and 1980s. Although it is well-known and accepted that it was the rise of experimental physiology as a discipline in continental Europe (particularly France and Germany) that launched the establishment of vivisection as the absolute means for medical research, further explorations as to the type of discursive constructs used by British antivivisectionists to construe French medical culture aids us in the comprehension of how animal protection groups explored and tested their strategies. In this paper, I focus exclusively on the image of France in the nineteenth-century activist writing of British animal protectionists to analyse how their discourse emerged and evolved in response to legal regulations on vivisection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
11. Botanical travel, climate and David Moore's moral geographies of Europe.
- Author
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Johnson, Nuala C.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of botany , *BOTANY , *SCIENTISTS , *CLIMATOLOGY , *NATURAL theology , *NINETEENTH century , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation , *TRAVEL ,BOTANICAL garden curatorship - Abstract
During his forty-year curatorship of the Royal Dublin Society's botanical gardens in Glasnevin (1838-1879), David Moore undertook a number of excursions to continental Europe. These served to deepen the networks of plant exchange between Dublin and other botanical institutions and allowed him to examine the relationships between climate, plant survivability and societal development This paper focuses on two trips taken in the 1860s to Scandinavia and Iberia and charts how Moore situated his experience of these places within a climatic hermeneutic. Moore's understanding of northern and southern Europe was organized around a set of Judgments about their relative backwardness or advancement with respect to his experience of home and was seen through the lens of a moral climatology. Moreover, his Scots Presbyterian background and his commitment to natural theology informed his interpretation of the landscapes he encountered in his excursions across Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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12. Brokering Instruments in Napoleon's Europe: The Italian Journeys of Franz Xaver von Zach (1807–1814).
- Author
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Dal Prete, Ivano
- Subjects
- *
SCIENTIFIC apparatus & instrument design & construction , *HISTORY of scientific instruments , *SCIENTIFIC apparatus & instruments industry , *HISTORY of astronomy , *SCIENCE & state , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY ,EUROPEAN history, 1789-1815 - Abstract
This paper explores the interactions between scientific travel, politics, instrument making and the epistemology of scientific instruments in Napoleon's Europe. In the early 1800s, the German astronomer Franz Xaver von Zach toured Italy and Southern France with instruments made by G. Reichenbach in his newly-established Bavarian workshop. I argue that von Zach acted as a broker for German technology and science and that travel, personal contacts and direct demonstrations were crucial in establishing Reichenbach's reputation and in conquering new markets. The rise of German instrument making highlights the complexity of the scientific relationship between the centre and the peripheries in Napoleon's empire, and reveals the existence of diverging views on the role of instruments and of their makers. In von Zach's view, Reichenbach's instruments could not penetrate the French market because Parisian astronomers focused on mathematical astronomy and, for both political and epistemological reasons, dismissed instruments and material innovations from the peripheries. The German astronomer and his Italian colleagues, on the contrary, regarded Reichenbach's technical achievements as outstanding contributions to astronomy, and considered the political and cultural hegemony of the capital as a hindrance to the advancement of science. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Antisemitism in East Central Europe. Ideas, Politics and Praxis of Jew-Hatred from a Comparative Perspective, ca. 1880-1939.
- Author
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Mannert, Pascale
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of antisemitism , *ANTISEMITISM , *POLITICAL violence , *POGROMS , *HISTORY of racism , *PROPAGANDA , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *TWENTIETH century - Abstract
The article reports on a conference on the history of antisemitism in Eastern Europe from the late nineteenth century until the beginning of World War II, convened in Warsaw, Poland, from May 16-18, 2013. Papers presented included examples of antisemitic political violence, pogroms, and racist propaganda in such countries as Hungary, Poland, and Ukraine.
- Published
- 2013
14. The Aesthetics of Diaspora in Colonial Fields of Power: Elite Nationalism, Art and the Love to Die for.
- Author
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Johnson, Mark
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM , *DIASPORA , *AESTHETICS , *NINETEENTH century , *CULTURAL identity - Abstract
This paper explores the conditions of cultural production that enabled the invention of the Philippine nation from afar among literary and artistic diasporan elites in the metropolitan centres of Europe in the late nineteenth century. I draw together Bourdieu's analysis of the creation of the autonomous field of cultural production and Anderson's analysis of the origins of nationalism to demonstrate how affective and aesthetic investments in art and the nation enabled historically one group of people – theilustrado(elite Filipino nationalist) – to overcome and exchange the estrangement and humiliations of race for national belonging and recognition in colonial fields of power. Doing so critically extends Bourdieu, moving beyond his methodological nationalism to foreground the racial hierarchies embedded in the making of the classed habitus and situate the aesthetics of diaspora within a translocal field of distinction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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15. Seeking the Educational Cure.
- Author
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Yousef, Hoda A.
- Subjects
- *
ANCIENT Egyptian education , *EDUCATION , *REFORMERS , *GOVERNMENT policy on schools , *EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATIONAL change , *NINETEENTH century ,EGYPTIAN politics & government - Abstract
This paper examines the development of European-style education in Egypt during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as Egyptian reformers and governments, in their desire to create relevant and effective educational institutions, began looking to Europe for inspiration. The resulting institutions utilized modern methods while preserving the local character of education, often straddling the line between the strictly European and Egyptian. With these compromises and negotiations, ultimately, one of the most influential legacies of European education was the belief in education as a "cure" for all the ills of modern Egyptian society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The tornado history of the Czech Lands, AD 1119–2010
- Author
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Brázdil, Rudolf, Chromá, Kateřina, Dobrovolný, Petr, and Černoch, Zbyněk
- Subjects
- *
TORNADOES , *SPATIO-temporal variation , *CHRONOLOGY , *AUXILIARY sciences of history , *FLUCTUATIONS (Physics) , *SEASONAL variations in biogeochemical cycles , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
Abstract: Documentary evidence is employed to present the history of tornadoes in the Czech Lands (recently Czech Republic) in AD 1119–2010. Based on contemporaneous descriptions of events, tornadoes are categorised as proven or probable. They are analysed collectively in terms of their spatio-temporal changes, annual variation, specific features, and impacts according to the Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale. The first documented tornado, on 30 July 1119, did great damage to Vyšehrad Castle in Prague (EF3). Only three other tornadoes were recorded before AD 1500. In the following three centuries, the number fluctuated between 11 and 16 events per century. Documented tornado frequency increased significantly from the 19th century onwards, reaching peaks in 1931–1940 (44 tornadoes) and particularly in 2001–2010 (56 tornadoes); this rise, however, reflects the availability of relevant sources as well as increased social awareness and advances in communication technology. A total of 264 tornado days and 307 tornadoes were documented for the Czech Lands in 1119–2010. Although they are relatively homogeneously extended over the territory of the Czech Republic, tornadoes tend to occur more frequently at lower and medium altitudes. The highest frequency of tornadoes is recorded for the summer half-year (mainly from June to August), although they may develop between March and October. Probable tornadoes have also been recorded in the winter months. The strongest tornadoes in the Czech Lands may be classified as EF3, largely with significant damage to buildings and trees, but 13 related deaths have also been recorded. The paper presents not only a new chronology and climatology for Czech tornadoes but is also an important contribution to the study of tornadoes in Europe. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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17. Artur Hazelius and the ethnographic display of the Scandinavian peasantry: a study in context and appropriation.
- Author
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DeGroff, DanielAlan
- Subjects
- *
ETHNOLOGY , *PEASANTS , *NATIONALISM , *EXHIBITIONS , *NINETEENTH century , *SOCIAL history ,SCANDINAVIAN history - Abstract
Artur Hazelius (1833–1901), founder of the Nordiska Museet and the Skansen Open-Air Museum, was a pioneering figure in the practice of ethnographic display in Europe. Hazelius achieved Europe-wide recognition following his presentation of Swedish and Scandinavian peasant ethnography at the Paris Universal Exposition of 1878, where his displays were reviewed positively in the international press. This paper argues that the significance of the Hazelian ethnographic project was embedded in overlapping contextual frames with centres in Stockholm and Paris. If the displays most readily spoke to a general concern with the decline of traditional life as rooted in the countryside, they arguably took on other, different and occasionally conflicting meanings as they were moved from one exhibitionary context to another. Whereas in Stockholm the ethnographic displays were inscribed in the conciliatory rhetoric of Scandinavism, the exhibitionary setting of the exposition universelle imposed an interpretative frame defined by the logic of a competitive nationalism. For Nordic audiences, the scenes reflected the positive historical significance of the peasantry in the unfolding narrative of Scandinavian political modernity; for the French audience, however, those same scenes were either applauded for their life-likeness or seen as reflective of the ethnographic richness of the ‘kingdom of Sweden’. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. 'A Reign of Steam': Continental Perceptions of Modernity in Victorian London, 1840-1900.
- Author
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de Sapio, Joseph
- Subjects
- *
URBAN life , *TRAVELERS' writings , *EUROPEAN authors , *MODERNITY , *TOURISM , *INDUSTRIALIZATION & society , *INDIVIDUALISM , *NINETEENTH century , *EUROPEAN history ,LONDON (England) description & travel ,HISTORY of London, England - Abstract
This paper examines the image of London as recorded by tourists from continental Europe in the latter half of the nineteenth century. London is represented as a synecdoche for British industrial modernity, which is intimately connected with the haphazard nature of the metropolis. British modernism is thus presented as inherently unstable and individualistic, lacking many of the familiar markers common to cities on the Continent. The judgement of these visitors suggests a differentiation between types of modernity, which is influenced by the differences between Continental and British urban systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The Context of the Stewart–Prevost Correspondence.
- Author
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Etchegaray, Claire, Haakonssen, Knud, Schulthess, Daniel, Stauffer, David, and Wood, Paul
- Subjects
- *
LETTER writing , *REPUBLIC of letters , *SCHOLARLY communication , *EIGHTEENTH century , *NINETEENTH century , *INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
The correspondence in this issue of History of European Ideas has not previously been published. It is the surviving part of the epistolary exchange between Dugald Stewart and the Genevan professor and man of letters Pierre Prevost (1751–1839) from the 1790s to the 1820s. To this are added several closely connected letters to and from their associates. This correspondence is striking evidence of the republic of letters continuing to flourish in the aftermath of the French Revolution, illustrating the transmission of works, the role of go-betweens, the provision of letters of introduction and the formation of intellectual and personal alliances. Not least, the letters tell us much about the ideas of those involved, and about the formation, development, and relation of these ideas to published works. This is particularly significant for Stewart, most of whose letters and papers are lost. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Procreation, family and ‘progress’: Administrative and economic aspects of Ottoman population policies in the 19th century
- Author
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Dursun, Selçuk
- Subjects
- *
REPRODUCTION , *FAMILIES , *POPULATION policy , *NINETEENTH century , *MARRIAGE , *COMPARATIVE studies , *BIRTH control , *OTTOMAN Empire - Abstract
Abstract: The making of the modern Ottoman state in the 19th century was closely interrelated with population issues and policies. ‘Population’ became an important component of Ottoman history throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries. As the state identified the ‘population’ as a source of income after the Tanzimat, it tried to protect and procreate it through certain institutional arrangements and regulations. These policies consisted of protecting the existing population, controlling population movements, promoting procreation, and giving subsidies and lending money at interest to peasant families. The procreation policies included enforcement of marriages and encouragement of reproduction within marriages while they discouraged traditional birth control methods and practices. As in any other context, Ottoman families resisted the policies of procreation and pressures coming from the central government. This paper will examine the state''s policies toward families and individuals as well as the responses of the people to these policies. I will attempt to construct a model based on the protection and the procreation policies of the modern Ottoman state, which will be an important springboard toward building a basis for conducting comparative analysis with other European states. By doing this, I will try to challenge some of the established assumptions on the nature of the ‘modern state’ in the 19th century. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Guano, compromisos creíbles y el pago de la deuda externa peruana del siglo XIX.
- Author
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VIZCARRA, CATALINA
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC history , *PERFORMANCE evaluation , *EXTERNAL debts , *DECOMPOSITION method , *PRICE inflation , *ECONOMIC impact - Abstract
Peru's experience with sovereign debt during the guano boom is one of the most remarkable in the nineteenth century. Despite the country's ongoing political instability and poor capital market reputation, the price of Peruvian bonds soared shortly after settlement in 1849, and the country enjoyed relatively low credit risk until the 1870. he paper discusses the incentives Peru and its creditors faced, and explains how Peru's extraordinary performance was founded on its credible commitment to service its debt with the guano proceeds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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22. History of Labor Intermediation. Institutions and Individual Ways of Finding Employment (19th and Early 20th Centuries).
- Author
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Deseke, Norma
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of labor , *MEDIATION , *JOB hunting , *NINETEENTH century , *SOCIAL history , *TWENTIETH century - Abstract
Information about papers delivered at the workshop "History of Labor Intermediation: Institutions and Individual Ways of Finding Employment (19th and Early 20th Centuries)" held November 27-28, 2010 at the University of Vienna is presented. Topics include a study of how jobs were acquired in the 19th and 20th centuries, the reorganization of labor markets in 19th century Western Europe, and trade unions and labor mediation in 19th century France. Scholars whose work was presented include Thomas Buchner, Ad Knotter, and Malcolm Mansfield.
- Published
- 2010
23. Liberalism: rationality of government and vision of history.
- Author
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Hindess, Barry
- Subjects
- *
LIBERALISM , *EUROCENTRISM , *NINETEENTH century , *SOCIAL history , *EIGHTEENTH century - Abstract
The paper addresses two issues arising from Foucault's work. One concerns his treatment of liberalism in The Birth of Biopolitics, which is probably more familiar through the work of the (mostly) British 'governmentality' school, and the other concerns a comment on relations between the West and the rest in The Order of Things that seems to express an insensitive Eurocentrism. I argue that we cannot make sense of liberalism without grasping the place of this Eurocentrism in eighteenth/nineteenth century western thought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Between teaching and research: Adolphe Ganot and the definition of electrostatics (1851–1881)
- Author
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Simon, Josep and Llovera, Pedro
- Subjects
- *
ELECTROSTATICS , *STATIC electricity & fires , *PHYSICS literature , *NINETEENTH century - Abstract
Abstract: Adolphe Ganot''s Traité was a canonical physics textbook in 19th-century Europe. In this period, static electricity was largely based on research conducted during the eighteenth century. However, the discussion on the theories of electricity had an important role in the configuration of physics as a discipline through the replacement of imponderable fluids by other frameworks such as the conservation of energy. In spite of this process of unification, the practices defining nineteenth-century electrostatics were not uniform. In this paper we intend to provide a big picture of nineteenth-century electrostatics and to launch a fruitful dialogue between historians and scientists. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Nineteenth-century language ideology: A postcolonial perspective.
- Author
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Krishnaswamy, Revathi
- Subjects
- *
IDEOLOGY , *POSTCOLONIALISM , *SANSKRIT language , *INDO-Aryan languages , *POLITICAL science , *COLONIZATION - Abstract
Conceived as both a critique of and a contribution to the field of language ideology, this paper seeks to challenge the continued equation of Europe and linguistic theory by restoring the Indian component in nineteenth-century language ideology to the historical record. Focusing on Vyakarana or the ancient Indian science of (Sanskrit) grammar, I examine how the tradition of linguistic analysis developed by Panini and transmitted to Europeans by Indian pundits influenced the development of linguistic thought in nineteenth-century Europe. Taking a broad interdisciplinary approach, I try to establish five basic contexts of influence for investigating the impact of Vyakarana on nineteenth-century language ideology: poetics, epistemology, ethnology, linguistics and the figure of the linguist/scientist. Tracing the imbrication of Indian linguistic knowledge in the discourses of Romanticism, positivism and empiricism, I highlight the role of Vyakarana in showing nineteenth-century Europe that language could be described on its own terms without reference to thoughts or things. I argue that it was the way Sanskrit was codified and taught by Indians that made the language seem so structured and the identification of cognates so easy, even though the very systematicity and thoroughness of Vyakarana rendered Sanskrit suspicious in the eyes of some Europeans. Exploring the ways in which the Sanskrit grammatical tradition encouraged the use of language for ethnological purposes, I examine how the Vyakarana apparatus, mediated through the scholarship of the British Orientalists, injected brahminical ideologies of language into the stream of Romantic thought that nourished nineteenth-century linguistic nationalism. By emphasizing the metalinguistic, conceptual or ideological contributions of Vyakarana, I wish not only to complicate the conventional view of Sanskrit as simply the most privileged exotic site for western constructions of history and linguistic theory, but also to contend that Europe's exclusive claim to 'linguistic theory/science' rests on a simultaneous appropriation and denial of colonized linguistic knowledge that constituted Sanskrit as a privileged yet safe object of antiquarian interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Are Muslims the New Catholics? Europe's Anti-Headscarf Laws in Comparative Historical Perspective.
- Author
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Kahn, Robert
- Subjects
- *
MUSLIMS , *CATHOLICS , *HIJAB (Islamic clothing) , *BURQAS (Islamic clothing) , *NINETEENTH century - Abstract
The past decade has seen a spate of anti-headscarf laws passed by supposedly liberal European constitutional democracies. The French have banned the hijab for public school students; several German states ban it for teachers. Meanwhile, towns in Belgium ban the wearing of the burka. Likewise, there was a recent row in the United Kingdom about whether lawyers could wear the niqab. My goal is to put these laws in comparative perspective by looking at two events: (1) the Kulturkampf in which Iron Chancellor Otto von Bismarck led a coalition of German nationalists and liberals, concerned about an influx of Catholics into Germany in the 1870s, to pass laws targeting Catholic belief and practices; and (2) the passage of clerical garb laws in the United States in the late nineteenth century (these laws were intended to prevent nuns from teaching in public schools). Ultimately both attempts at combating Catholics failed; the Kulturkampf was reversed within a decade and the religious garb laws (while still on the books) have fallen out of favor. My paper argues that the debate over Muslim practices (not only headscarves, but also mosque construction and related matters) is similar to the nineteenth century debates over Catholics. In both instances saw a fear of extremist, fundamentalist religion, ethnic based concerns about migration, and a determination to combat the problem through law. I also argue that just as the United States and Germany eventually integrated Catholics into society, the same result is possible with European Muslims. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
27. When Omission is Admission: Secrecy and Transparency in IR.
- Author
-
Kirpichevsky, Yevgeniy
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTELLIGENCE service , *SECRECY , *NINETEENTH century - Abstract
Secrecy is not an intrinsic feature of international relations. When information is verifiable (e.g. through intelligence collection), incentives to conceal information may be absent. Europe in the 19th century illustrates this dynamic. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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