Papers 2271-2280 of total 14073 found.
Category: /History
…. In the early days of the movement for social justice for homosexuals the reformers were glad of any support they could win from the established churches. Backing from the Moral Welfare Council of the Church of England helped in the formulation and eventual…
Details: Words: 4178 | Pages: 15.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…, the President is now quietly working to repeal certain parts of the terror bill which are clearly unconstitutional. The immigration reform bill (S. 1664), which is now in a conference committee, will be the chosen vehicle for undoing some of the unconstitutional…
Details: Words: 4259 | Pages: 15.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
Category: /History
…and the White elites of the South were inherently unequal. The former slaves were looked on not as equals, but as inferior.24 Whatever well meaning reforms were instituted were done so paternalistically and for Southern Democrats own interests. And when…
Details: Words: 4425 | Pages: 16.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
Category: /History
…to the other. Since it deprives governments of the possibility of devaluing their currency to help the economy, it increases pressure for tough structural reforms. Unable to devalue or spend their way out of recession, Europe's mostly left-leaning countries…
Details: Words: 4033 | Pages: 15.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…, planted medicinal plants and trees and built 84,000 Buddhist stupas and monasteries. He was very focused on public welfare and did much to create a better government and living for the people of India. He created inscriptions on rocks to spread his name…
Details: Words: 4593 | Pages: 17.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…have power to equal the other Estates. Clubs of the bourgeoisie, the middle class, were formed, proclaiming, 'Salus populi lex est.' It was a simple cry meaning 'the welfare of the people is law.' To these people, the Estates General was like a pair…
Details: Words: 4589 | Pages: 17.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…In examining great social and cultural changes in the modern West, many specific events come to mind: the Renaissance and the Reformation, the "discovery" of the Americas, industrialization, and World War Two. One such event, often overlooked…
Details: Words: 4595 | Pages: 17.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…resolution. c. The embedding of the sovereign members in a set of social relations within the community that generates shared understandings of security, welfare, and autonomy. Although security communities are commonly conflated with regional structures…
Details: Words: 4815 | Pages: 18.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…market to the underdeveloped homelands [7]. In the latter case, while some foreign companies and governments supported the political reforms such as the United States Congress involved itself in the South African on-goings by supporting the abolishment…
Details: Words: 3801 | Pages: 14.0 (approximately 235 words/page)
…to repeal certain parts of the terror bill which are clearly unconstitutional. The immigration reform bill (S. 1664), which is now in a conference committee, will be the chosen vehicle for undoing some of the unconstitutional points in the terror bill…
Details: Words: 4285 | Pages: 16.0 (approximately 235 words/page)