The International Research Fellowship Program
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 92 pages
File Size : 25,11 MB
Release : 1984
Category : Medicine
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 92 pages
File Size : 25,11 MB
Release : 1984
Category : Medicine
ISBN :
Author : National Institutes of Health (U.S.)
Publisher :
Page : 28 pages
File Size : 46,70 MB
Release : 1977
Category : Medicine
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 8 pages
File Size : 29,95 MB
Release : 1983
Category : Medicine
ISBN :
Author : National Institutes of Health (U.S.)
Publisher :
Page : 24 pages
File Size : 23,15 MB
Release : 1966
Category : Medicine
ISBN :
Author : National Institute of Health (U.S.)
Publisher :
Page : 24 pages
File Size : 23,2 MB
Release : 1966
Category : Research grants
ISBN :
Author : Emily Erikson
Publisher : Princeton University Press
Page : 268 pages
File Size : 41,45 MB
Release : 2016-09-13
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 0691173796
The English East India Company was one of the most powerful and enduring organizations in history. Between Monopoly and Free Trade locates the source of that success in the innovative policy by which the Company's Court of Directors granted employees the right to pursue their own commercial interests while in the firm’s employ. Exploring trade network dynamics, decision-making processes, and ports and organizational context, Emily Erikson demonstrates why the English East India Company was a dominant force in the expansion of trade between Europe and Asia, and she sheds light on the related problems of why England experienced rapid economic development and how the relationship between Europe and Asia shifted in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Though the Company held a monopoly on English overseas trade to Asia, the Court of Directors extended the right to trade in Asia to their employees, creating an unusual situation in which employees worked both for themselves and for the Company as overseas merchants. Building on the organizational infrastructure of the Company and the sophisticated commercial institutions of the markets of the East, employees constructed a cohesive internal network of peer communications that directed English trading ships during their voyages. This network integrated Company operations, encouraged innovation, and increased the Company’s flexibility, adaptability, and responsiveness to local circumstance. Between Monopoly and Free Trade highlights the dynamic potential of social networks in the early modern era.
Author : National Institutes of Health (U.S.)
Publisher :
Page : 32 pages
File Size : 18,48 MB
Release : 1976
Category : Medicine
ISBN :
Author : Lawrence Chua
Publisher : University of Hawaii Press
Page : 292 pages
File Size : 16,13 MB
Release : 2021-02-28
Category : Architecture
ISBN : 0824887735
“Utopia” is a word not often associated with the city of Bangkok, which is better known for its disorderly sprawl, overburdened roads, and stifling levels of pollution. Yet as early as 1782, when the city was officially founded on the banks of the Chao Phraya river as the home of the Chakri dynasty, its orientation was based on material and rhetorical considerations that alluded to ideal times and spaces. The construction of palaces, monastic complexes, walls, forts, and canals created a defensive network while symbolically locating the terrestrial realm of the king within the Theravada Buddhist cosmos. Into the twentieth century, pictorial, narrative, and built representations of utopia were critical to Bangkok’s transformation into a national capital and commercial entrepôt. But as older representations of the universe encountered modern architecture, building technologies, and urban planning, new images of an ideal society attempted to reconcile urban-based understandings of Buddhist liberation and felicitous states like nirvana with worldly models of political community like the nation-state. Bangkok Utopia outlines an alternative genealogy of both utopia and modernism in a part of the world that has often been overlooked by researchers of both. It examines representations of utopia that developed in the city—as expressed in built forms as well as architectural drawings, building manuals, novels, poetry, and ecclesiastical murals—from its first general strike of migrant laborers in 1910 to the overthrow of the military dictatorship in 1973. Using Thai- and Chinese-language archival sources, the book demonstrates how the new spaces of the city became arenas for modern subject formation, utopian desires, political hegemony, and social unrest, arguing that the modern city was a space of antinomy—one able not only to sustain heterogeneous temporalities, but also to support conflicting world views within the urban landscape. By underscoring the paradoxical character of utopias and their formal narrative expressions of both hope and hegemony, Bangkok Utopia provides an innovative way to conceptualize the uneven economic development and fractured political conditions of contemporary global cities.
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 32 pages
File Size : 40,70 MB
Release : 1970
Category : Federal aid to medical care research
ISBN :
Author : Tom Kemper
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 312 pages
File Size : 17,32 MB
Release : 2010
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 0520257065
This is a history of Hollywood agents as they rose in the studio system in the late 1920s and early 1930s up through the 1940s, demonstrating the central role they played in the classical Hollywood period.