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Academic Journals
- 262
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From:Building Design & Construction (Vol. 50, Issue 12)Staff The British government's new 46,285-sf embassy building in Warsaw, Poland's diplomatic quarter houses the ambassador's offices, the consulate, and visa services on three floors. The $20 million Modernist design...
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From:Middle East Policy (Vol. 14, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe following is the text of a lecture by the Rt. Hon. Michael Ancram, a member of the British Parliament and a former shadow foreign secretary, presented at the Middle East Institute in Washington DC, April 2007. It...
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From:The Ecologist (Vol. 31, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedBritain has promised more aid to India if it globalises faster. Visiting India in mid-January, Blair babe Glare Short, everybody's favourite international development secretary, offered to step up 'development aid'...
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From:European Business Journal (Vol. 8, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedIt was rather strange for the UK foreign and commonwealth secretary to state that the architects of the Treaty on European Union did not intend a split to emerge between the countries of the European Union. This goes...
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From:Nature (Vol. 541, Issue 7635) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Colin Macilwain (corresponding author) [1] With the arrogance expected of a governing class born to power, the British government has tried to buy off academic opposition to Brexit by showering...
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From:The Historian (Vol. 79, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedON 26 APRIL 1870, the Earl of Kimberley (1826-1902) recorded in his diary an episode of high tension in the ranks of the Liberal government of which he himself was a member. The entry reads: The occasion of the...
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From:Socialist Lawyer (Issue 70)The corrupt relationships between states and arms dealers means billions are spent on devastation. Andrew Smith asks: why can't the UK divert its military spending to peaceful green energy initiatives? The situation...
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From:Air Power History (Vol. 59, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn the Royal Air Force (RAF) during the Second World War it was said that you could tell how far your unit was from the Home Islands by the type of aircraft with which it was equipped. This maxim more than applied to...
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From:Northern Review (Issue 50) Peer-ReviewedThis article examines three main bodies of law that apply to the discovery of Her Majesty's Ships Erebus and Terror. These ships set sail from England in 1845, became trapped in ice in what is now the Canadian Arctic...
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From:Journal of Southeast Asian Studies (Vol. 50, Issue 4) Peer-Reviewed1819 represents a highly charged moment in the Singapore imagination. It marks the birth of our modern city-state, yet it also signals the beginning of our colonisation: the domination of Malay and other Asian cultures...
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From:Contributions to the History of Concepts (Vol. 13, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe carnage of World War I gave rise to liberal visions for a new world order with democratized foreign policy and informed international public opinion. Conservatives emphasized continuity in national sovereignty, while...
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From:Nature (Vol. 553, Issue 7686) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Günter Stock Author Affiliations: Brexit must protect UK-EU research collaborations As president of ALLEA (All European Academies), I am disappointed by the slow pace of Brexit negotiations and lack of...
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From:Design WeekLethal has developed a campaign for British Music at the South by Southwest music industry festival in Texas. British Music, a trade partnership that includes UK Trade & Industry, BPI and Performing Rights Society...
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From:Canadian Journal of History (Vol. 42, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis article examines Britain's response to Italy's forward policy in the Red Sea region during the mid-to-late 1920s. Previous examination and understanding of Anglo-Italian relations during this period has tended to...
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From:TLS. Times Literary Supplement (Issue 5905)MARY BEARD I was just about to go to University when Britain joined the Common Market in 1973. Even then Classics was a Euro-friendly discipline. But--except for the practical sides of archaeology, where a rather...
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From:Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies (Vol. 10, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis article examines Anglo-Spanish prewar relations through a consideration of the commercial rapport that bound them. By focusing on the English merchants trading to Spain it is possible to recapture a culture of...
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From:Southern Cultures (Vol. 4, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedIssues concerning how southern culture and politics is studied in the United Kingdom are presented, focusing on the lasting influence of such figures as Elvis Presley and Martin Luther King, Jr. Topics include popular...
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From:East Asia: An International Quarterly (Vol. 37, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedRelying primarily on sources which reveal the mentality of the Britons and the rioters, this article aims at filling the vacuum by remapping how the Britons, both the London diplomats and the colonial bureaucrats in Hong...
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From:Science (Vol. 239, Issue 4841) Peer-ReviewedAnglo-French Nuclear Missile Under Study British and French defense officials are looking into a joint project to develop a nuclear-armed air-to-surface missile; France's ultimate goal is a European-led nuclear...
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From:Presidents & Prime Ministers (Vol. 5, Issue 5)United Kingdom Prime Minister John Major affirms that the UK's natural affiliation is with Europe. He believes the best way of ensuring that the European Union (EU) functions democratically and effectively is for it to...