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  • av Meg Lowman
    242

  • av Joanna Dee Das
    347

  • av Jeremy Varon
    420,-

  • av Larry (Professor of Philosophy at Washington University in St. Louis May
    401 - 1 100,-

  • av Noel Gilroy Annan
    336,-

  • - War, Money, and the American State, 1783-1867
    av Max M. Edling
    396

    Two and a half centuries after the American Revolution the US stands as one of the greatest powers on earth and the undoubted leader of the western hemisphere. The author maintains that the Founding Fathers clearly understood the connection between public finance and power: a well-managed public debt was a key part of every modern state.

  • - The Poetics of Nostalgia in The Classical Arabic Nasib
    av Jaroslav Stetkevych
    479,-

    Arabs have traditionally considered classical Arabic poetry, together with the Qur'an, as one of their supreme cultural accomplishments. Taking a comparatist approach, this book attempts to integrate the classical Arabic lyric into an enlarged understanding of lyric poetry as a genre.

  • av Andrew S. Berish
    349 - 1 256,-

  • av Daniel Wortel-London
    418 - 1 273,-

  • av Pollyanna Rhee
    401 - 1 273,-

  • av Alexander Alberro
    453 - 1 273,-

  • av Daniel J. Sherman
    524,-

  • av Mara Casey Tieken
    251 - 1 256,-

  • Spar 10%
    av Clemence Boulouque
    392 - 1 176,-

  • av International Botanical Congress
    548 - 1 463,-

  • av Antoine Lilti
    468

  • av Judith Resnik
    516,-

    "This wholly original book provides the untold history of punishment inside prisons. Legal scholar Judith Resnik charts the invention of the corrections profession that imposed radical restrictions on human movement as if doing so was normal. She weaves together the stories of people who debated how to punish and the stories of people living under the regimes that resulted. Resnik excavates the first-ever international rules aiming to improve the treatment of prisoners, which the League of Nations adopted in 1934 as the Nazis rose to power. Her transatlantic account documents the impact of World War II, the United Nations, the US Civil Rights Movement, and pioneering prisoners who insisted law protected their dignity as individuals. Resnik maps the results, including a trial of whipping--Arkansas' preferred "discipline" in the 1960s--and challenges thereafter to hyper-crowded cells, filth, violence, and profound isolation. Resnik tracks the cross-border expansion of the prison industry, waves of abolition efforts, and the impact of legal precepts rejecting "excessive," "cruel and unusual," and "degrading" sanctions. Exploring the interdependency of people in and out of prisons, Impermissible Punishments argues that governments committed to equality cannot set out to ruin people and therefore many contemporary forms of punishment need to end"--

  • av Ingie Hovland
    349 - 1 256,-

  • av Kirsten Wesselhoeft
    375 - 1 256,-

  • av Thomas Fallace
    365 - 1 273,-

  • av George Selgin
    403,-

  • av Gayle F. Wald
    330

  • av Jillian Berman
    330

  • av Uljana Feest
    453 - 1 176,-

  • av Alexis De Tocqueville
    427

    The continuation of Alexis de Toccqueville's great meditation on the origins and meanings of the French Revolution. With his monumental work The Old Regime and the Revolution, Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-59)-best known for his classic Democracy in America-envisioned a multivolume philosophical study of the origins of modern France that would examine the implications of French history on the nature and development of democratic society. Volume I, which covered the eighteenth-century background to the Revolution, was published to great acclaim in 1856. On the continuation of this project, he wrote: "When this Revolution has finished its work, [this volume] will show what that work really was, and what the new society which has come from that violent labor is, what the Revolution has taken away and what it has preserved from that old regime against which it was directed." Tocqueville died in the midst of this work. Here in Volume II is all that he had completed, including the chapters he started for a work on Napoleon, notes and analyses he made in the course of researching and writing the first volume, and his notes on his preparation for his continuation. More than ever before, readers will be able to glean how Tocqueville's account of the Revolution would have come out, had he lived to finish it. This handsomely produced volume completes the set and is essential reading for anyone interested in the French Revolution or in Tocqueville's thought.

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