Δε δίνεται τίτλος στο τεκμήριο. Δίνεται σχετικός τίτλος κατά την τεκμηρίωση. Δεν υπάρχει ακριβής ημερομηνία. Η ημερομηνία έχει προκύψει κατά την τεκμηρίωση. Δεν υπάρχει ακριβής αναφορά του ονόματος ...στο τεκμήριο. Η ταύτιση έχει προκύψει κατά την τεκμηρίωση.
This book centers on the Report of the International
Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan
Wars , published in Washington in the early summer of 1914 by
the Carnegie ...Endowment for International Peace. The volume was born
from the conviction that the full assessment of the significance of
the Carnegie Report-one of the first international non-governmental
fact-finding missions with the intention to promote peace-requires
a deeper exploration of the context of its birth.
The authors examine how the countries involved in the wars
handled the inquires of the Carnegie Commission and the role of the
report in the remembrance of the wars in the respective states.
Although the report considered both the Ottoman Empire and the
Balkan nation-states insufficiently civilized to wage wars within
the limits of the codes of conduct of international law, this
orientalist conclusion can in part be explained by the liberal
internationalist strategy of the Carnegie Endowment, and of the
commission members' professional, political, and ethnic background.
Overshadowed by the outbreak of World War I, the Carnegie Report's
direct impact on international arbitration or international
criminal law was limited, yet-in the authors' opinion-it ultimately
contributed to the further juridification of international
relations
If only everybody meant the same thing by ‘bureaucracy’—or ‘feudalism’, ‘Old Regime’, ‘capitalism’, and so on, ad nauseam. If we all agreed on what these terms meant a good deal of paper might be ...saved. Since this is not even remotely the case, I had better begin by saying something about how the term ‘bureaucracy’ is to be used in the pages that follow. A government shall be said to be bureaucratized to the extent that it has come to resemble the organizational portrait drawn by Max Weber in Economy and Society. Weber's so-called definition is a list (or lists) of characteristics whose relative importance and relation to one another have stirred much debate.
Ever since it first raised the standard of revolt in Japanese-occupied French Indochina, the Viet-Minh régime has devoted an inordinate amount of time and attention to problems of local government ...and administration. The emphasis was just as apparent in its first Basic Law of 1945 as in the latest organic act of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, which went into effect in 1960, and in the manifold supplementary statutes promulgated in the interim to implement the constitutional provisions. This obvious concern on the part of Ho Chi Minh's leadership with the instrumentalities of local rule may be explained by reference to two different, though closely related, sets of considerations.
A Talk with Hu Shih Shih, Vincent Y. C.
The China quarterly (London),
04/1962, Volume:
10, Issue:
10
Journal Article
Peer reviewed
The distinguished Chinese scholar Hu Shih died on February 24. Born in 1891 and educated at Cornell and Columbia, Dr. Hu will always be remembered as the apostle of the literary revolution that led ...to the replacement of classical Chinese by the vernacular (pai-hua) as the literary medium. During the twenties and thirties, he held important academic posts including that of Dean of the College of Arts at the National Peking University during 1930–37. During much of the war (1938–42), he was his country's ambassador in Washington, but later returned to academic life as Chancellor of the Peking National University (1945–49). A disciple of Dewey, Dr. Hu had remained faithful to liberalism and pragmatism when many of his colleagues turned to Marxism, and when the Communists took over he left China. Because of their great influence, his ideas were selected by the Communists as a prime object of attack during the early fifties in their campaign to remould the intellectuals. After living in the United States for a number of years, Dr. Hu settled in Formosa where he was appointed President of the Academia Sinica in 1958.