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Forest ecology --- Research --- Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest (N.H.)
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Forest ecology --- Research --- Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest (N.H.)
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Radiochemical analysis --- fysicochemie --- Proton-induced X-ray emission --- Protons --- Spectrometry, X-Ray Emission --- X-ray spectroscopy --- Spectroscopie de rayons X --- methods --- Proton-induced X-ray emission. --- Protons. --- methods. --- Methods. --- Spectrometry, X-Ray Emission - methods --- X-ray emission, proton induced
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Free enterprise --- Liberalism --- Institutional economics --- Economic policy --- #SBIB:321H50 --- #SBIB:324H40 --- #SBIB:35H435 --- #SBIB:023.IOS --- Economic nationalism --- Economic planning --- National planning --- State planning --- Economics --- Planning --- National security --- Social policy --- Liberal egalitarianism --- Liberty --- Political science --- Social sciences --- Free markets --- Laissez-faire --- Markets, Free --- Private enterprise --- Westerse politieke en sociale theorieën vanaf de 19e eeuw: liberalisme --- Politieke structuren: algemeen --- Beleidssectoren: economisch en werkgelegenheidsbeleid
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Without nation-states Covid-19, climate change, international cyberattacks, and other threats would go unchecked. In The World of States, John L. Campbell and John A. Hall challenge the view that nation-states have lost their relevance in the context of globalization and rising nationalism. The book traces how states evolved historically, how contemporary states differ from one another, and the interactions between them. States today confront a host of challenges, but two features make some states more effective than others: institutional arrangement and national identity. The second edition has been updated to discuss why the BRICS countries (with the exception of China) are no longer the rising powers they were once thought to be; the effects of Brexit on the European Union; the legacy of the Trump administration for US politics and hegemony; and how the coronavirus may upset the world of states going forward.
State, The --- Comparative government. --- History --- Comparative political systems --- Comparative politics --- Government, Comparative --- Political systems, Comparative --- Political science --- Administration --- Commonwealth, The --- Sovereignty --- State, The - History - 21st century --- Comparative government
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From unemployment to Brexit to climate change, capitalism is in trouble and ill-prepared to cope with the challenges of the coming decades. How did we get here? While contemporary economists and policymakers tend to ignore the political and social dimensions of capitalism, some of the great economists of the past - Adam Smith, Friedrich List, John Maynard Keynes, Joseph Schumpeter, Karl Polanyi and Albert Hirschman - did not make the same mistake. Leveraging their insights, sociologists John L. Campbell and John A. Hall trace the historical development of capitalism as a social, political, and economic system throughout the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. They draw comparisons across eras and around the globe to show that there is no inevitable logic of capitalism. Rather, capitalism's performance depends on the strength of nation-states, the social cohesion of capitalist societies, and the stability of the international system - three things that are in short supply today.
Capitalism --- Economics --- Economists --- History. --- Social scientists --- Capitalism - History --- Economists - History --- Economics - History --- Economic order --- Economic schools
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Free enterprise --- Liberalism --- Institutional economics --- Economic policy
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