Search results for " Civil War"

showing 10 items of 181 documents

Why did Spanish Regions not Converge before the Civil War? Agglomeration Economies and (Regional) Growth Revisited

2015

In this paper we explore the relationship between the presence of agglomeration economies and regional economic growth in Spain during the period 1870-1930. The study allows us to revisit the existence of a trade-off between economic growth and territorial cohesion, and also to examine whether the existence of agglomeration economies could explain the upswing in regional income inequality during the early stages of development. In doing so, we present alternative indicators for agglomeration economies and estimate conditional growth regressions at province (NUTS3) level. In line with new economic geography models, agglomeration economies in a context of market integration widened regional i…

Economics and EconometricsHistoryO10Economies of agglomerationWelfare economicsAgglomerationAglomeraciónEspañaO40Economic historyCrecimiento económicoHistoriaEconomíaHistoria económicaSpanish Civil WarSpainPolitical scienceN93Economic growth
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EU Refugee Policies and Politics in Times of Crisis: Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives

2017

Phenomena such as civil war, protracted conflict, and deteriorating internal security, especially in the Middle East, Africa and Southern Asia, have triggered massive departures of civilian populations in recent years. The war in Syria alone has displaced over 5 million people (UNHCR, 2017a). While most of these forced migrants are either internally displaced or remain in Syria’s immediate neighbourhood, the numbers of those trying to come to Europe have steeply increased in 2015 and 2016. In each of these two years more than 1.2 million asylum-seekers submitted their asylum claims in the EU (Eurostat, 2017a), as compared to 625,000 in 2014 (Eurostat, 2015, p. 4). This represents the larges…

Economics and EconometricsMiddle EastRefugee05 social sciencesWorld War IIGeneral Business Management and Accounting0506 political sciencePoliticsGeographyInternal securitySpanish Civil WarEconomyInternally displaced person0502 economics and businessPolitical Science and International RelationsEuropean integration050602 political science & public administration050207 economicsBusiness and International ManagementJCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies
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The Lutheran and Roman Catholic Churches in Latvia

2021

Before World War II Latvia had several strong traditional religious communities: Lutheran, Roman Catholic, Baptist, Russian Old Believers and Orthodox. After the war, the Soviet regime extended the persecution of these communities eliminating the most disobedient clergymen and church members. The property of religious groups was nationalized, and many parishes were abolished. Even after the repressions, religious communities continued to be active. However, to preserve their faith, they had to seek compromises with the Soviet regime, including with the KGB. The chapter focuses on the two main Christian churches in Latvia, the Roman Catholic Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church, explai…

FaithSpanish Civil Warmedia_common.quotation_subjectOld BelieversPolitical scienceWorld War IIReligious studiesmedia_commonPersecution
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Paradojas de la historia, paradojas de la historiografía. Las peripecias del fascismo español

2001

The author argues here the importance of avoiding the paradigm of backwardness in analyzing the evolution and vicissitudes of Spanish fascism. Like in other European countries, the fin-de-siècle cultural crisis saw the emergence of a new nationalist political culture, which would deeply influence Spanish fascism in the future. After the failure of the fascist movement during the Second Republic, explicable fundamentally in political terms, there followed its conversion into a mass party during the Civil War and its immediate subordination to the State, to which it nonetheless represented a fundamental support. Franco’s regime, as a fascistic —not fascist— dictatorship, may be seen as a pecu…

FascismHistorymedia_common.quotation_subjectSocial SciencesDictatorshiplcsh:Social SciencesDerecha; Fascismo; Fascistización; Franquismo; NacionalismoHPoliticsState (polity)NacionalismoRight-wing ideologyDerechaFascistizaciónSociologymedia_commonNationalismFascismoFascistizationReactionaryFranquismoNationalismlcsh:HSpanish Civil WarRight-wing ideology; Fascistization; Fascism; Francoism; NationalismEthnologyPolitical cultureIdeologyFrancoismHumanitiesHispania
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The lost mother tongue : An interview study with Finnish war children

2015

This article presents the third study of an interview investigation concerning 10 Finnish war children who were evacuated during the World War II to Sweden and who did not return to live in Finland after the war. The focus is on how they remembered or did not remember their early experiences of displacement and on how they expressed thoughts about their childhood and their adult life. We found that all of them as adults still bore signs of trauma. The younger the children were at the time of the evacuation, the more difficult or even impossible it was for them to think or fantasize about the past. It was consequently not possible for them to work through their experiences of loneliness, abs…

First languageWorld War IILonelinessDisplacement (psychology)humanitiesDevelopmental psychologyPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyAdult lifeSpanish Civil Warlanguage usageevacuationmedicineInterview studytraumatic reactionswar childrenmedicine.symptomPsychologyta515lost mother tongueScandinavian Psychoanalytic Review
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La nación contra el fascismo: PSOE y SFIO, 1933-1936

2020

Este artículo propone un estudio del antifascismo socialista en España. Al respecto, se apuesta por situar la nación como referente cultural y político en el centro del análisis, y aplicar una perspectiva comparada con el caso de Francia. Dicho análisis se plantea para el período inmediatamente anterior a la Guerra Civil en España y toma como principal fuente a la prensa socialista.El artículo se desarrolla en dos grandes bloques, con la Revolución de Octubre de 1934 como hito. A partir de entonces emergió en el seno del PSOE un enfrentamiento por el control de la organización. El artículo se centra en el estudio de la corriente caballerista, considerada el ala izquierdista, a la cual se co…

FranciaHistoryEspañaHistory (General)identidad nacionalPoliticsSpanish Civil WarForgesocialismoSocialismPolitical scienceD1-2009antifascismoEconomic historyLeft-wing politicsArticulation (sociology)Period (music)
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Introduction to Part V

2018

The shock of defeat at the end of the First World War left many German academics dumbfounded and numb. Even Hilbert, an outspoken internationalist, was deeply disillusioned by the chaos and instability that plagued the early Weimar years. Already during the war, political differences widened the gulf that had already formed within the Gottingen Philosophical Faculty, whose conservative members felt they were constantly being provoked by the “Hilbert faction.” The controversy over Emmy Noether’s candidacy to habilitate in 1915, mentioned in the introduction to Part IV, was only one of many such instances. Others were even more serious, as when Hilbert and his pacifist friends were accused of…

GermanPoliticsSpanish Civil WarPhilologyPolitical sciencePhenomenonlanguageCandidacyHumanismlanguage.human_languageClassicsFirst world war
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Kiedy sacrum sprofanowano, czyli sanktuarium św. Anny w czasie II wojny światowej

2017

WHEN SACRUM WAS DESECRATED, THAT IS ST. ANNA’S SANCTUARY DURING SECOND WORLD WARThe Anastazy Piotr Polanko’s monograph “The Franciscans in Annaberg during second World War” is anew publication concerning the history of the Annaberg’s cloister just before the2nd World War and during the war. It has been published by St. Antony’s Franciscan Publisher in 2013. It was elaborated on the basis of archives of Annaberg’s Franciscan cloister. The author had to make an effort to translate the remaining documents from German. In his book he presents biographies of friars who lived in the cloister during first years of war, their ministry work with number of statistics regarding trips, sermons, retreat…

GermanSpanish Civil WarHistoryCloisterWorld War IIlanguageNazismChristian ministryPilgrimageSecond Worldlanguage.human_languageClassicsStudia nad Autorytaryzmem i Totalitaryzmem
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The lifelong struggle of Finnish World War II veterans.

2014

Objectives: In many countries veterans from World War II are growing old. Research has shown that war experiences continue to impact those who have been involved in war for a long time. The present study targets old injured war veterans from World War II in Finland. The aim of this study was to produce knowledge of the impact of war experiences and injuries on the lifespan of Finnish war veterans.Method: The method used was grounded theory. Data were collected by interviewing 20 aged war veterans in their homes.Results: The analysis resulted in four categories, with also subcategories: (1) lost childhood and youth; (2) war traumas impacting life; (3) starting life from scratch; and (4) find…

GerontologyMaleWarfareWorld War IIPoison controlContext (language use)Personality AssessmentSuicide preventionGrounded theoryWhite PeopleInterviews as TopicStress Disorders Post-TraumaticAdaptation PsychologicalHumanshealth care economics and organizationsta515FinlandQualitative ResearchAgedVeteransAged 80 and overCombat DisordersWorld War IIHuman factors and ergonomicsSocial SupportGender studiesPTSDsocial sciencesta3142war traumashumanitiesPsychiatry and Mental healthSpanish Civil Warexperiential ageingGeriatrics and GerontologyPshychiatric Mental HealthPsychologyGerontologylifespanQualitative researchgrounded theoryAgingmental health
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The German Orthopedic Society from 1918 to 1932. Developments and trends

2001

The German Orthopedic Society was founded in 1901. The period between 1918 and 1932 was characterized by the aftermath of World War I. Up to the middle of the 2nd decade, orthopedic surgeons mainly treated soldiers and civilians affected by the war. Almost every congress dealt with amputations and artificial limbs. At the same time, orthopedic surgery became a specialty at the German universities, legitimizing it as a subject of its own. Besides the large number of victims of the First World War who had to be treated by orthopedic surgeons, there was a second group of patients, the so-called cripples. These handicapped people had not previously been treated in general. A new law established…

Governmentmedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentRotationplastySpecialtyArthroplastyhumanitieslanguage.human_languageGermanSpanish Civil WarFamily medicineOrthopedic surgerylanguagemedicineOrthopedics and Sports MedicineResocializationbusinessDer Orthopäde
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