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Search results 3971 - 3980 of 4262 matching essays
- 3971: Colonial Impact On The Indian
- ... in India. Landlords were not landowners; they only had the right or privilege to collect taxes from the peasants (Rothermund, page 1). A village was more or less a self-sufficient economic unit and its business contacts with the outside world were limited to payment of land revenue (generally in kind) and the purchase of a few necessary things from the town nearby. The farmer raised only those crops, which he ...
- 3972: Cold War
- ... Eastern Country and which was broken by a French MNC. The US condemned this breach, whereupon the French government quite frankly expressed its support for the MNC and told the US to mind its own business. The US has certainly lost some importance of its leading role in the world, and this is also due to its internal problems with which it seems unable to cope with. There is a tremendous ...
- 3973: Charlotte Perkins Gilman
- ... Throughout her long career as a feminist writer and lecturer, Gilman was never comfortable with labels. "I was not a reformer but a philosopher," she wrote in her autobiography. "I worked for various reforms my business was to find out what ailed society, and how most easily and naturally to improve it. This method was through education. She used her lectures and publications to teach present and future generations about the ...
- 3974: Causes Of The Civil War 2
- ... gain large revenue for England, it was supplemented by the Stamp Act. The Stamp Act levied a direct tax on all newspapers printed in the colonies and on most commercial and legal documents used in business. Due to the fact that these two acts would not raise enough money needed for the army, the Quartering Act was created and inforced. This act required each colony to pay part of the expenses ...
- 3975: Academia
- ... near retirement, the America academia is facing some serious problems other countries have never endured: The lack of qualifying teachers with an effective teaching method for the great diversity in campus populations. Pamela Black of Business Week says, ‘§Further fueling the trend is the national political debate over education and fears of an impending teacher shortage.‘¨ (Black 174) Insufficient teaching resources deeply affects students‘¦ ability to get involved in school activities ...
- 3976: Advertising And Promotion Camp
- ... 26 percent in the first quarter of promotion and shot up 50 percent just prior to the World Cup. The marketing push was in more than half of the 200 countries where Coca-Cola does business. But rather than using a one-size-fits-all approach, Coca-Cola has tailored advertising, promotions and other marketing efforts for specific areas. 11 Finland National regulations/cultures also restrict promotional activities. For instance, Coca ...
- 3977: America
- ... a joining of American forces for the good of the colonies. Colonial businessmen agreed to stop importing British goods until the act was repealed, and trade was substantially diminished. Refusal to use the stamps on business papers became common, and the courts would not enforce their use on legal documents. The Stamp Act helped enflame the fire burning in American bodies of independence. Richard Henry Lee wrote to Arthur Lee in ...
- 3978: British Imperialism In Africa
- ... had strategic motives to protect the Suez Canal and the route to the east. As the scramble exploded in the 1880s, Britain was suddenly challenged for her right to trade and conduct financial and military business. "The prime object was defensive [in the eighties], as it had been under Disraeli: the prevention of serious inroads on British power; the anticipation of other powers, when strategically necessary, in the 'Scramble for Africa ...
- 3979: Britain And America Revolution
- ... the southern plantations and middle, bread , colonies. They also utilized these economic resources by generating trade with other countries such as France and her West Indian colonies. But they lacked gold and silver to do business with whichever decreasing because of British taxation. To top it off, Britain didn t give its colonies parliamentary representation or economic freedom of mobility because of the decreased nobility in their taxation and legislation. So ...
- 3980: Brief Shao Lin Monk History
- ... the generally neutral and likeable monks. The Boxer rebellion in 1901 was the beginning of the end of the Shao Lin temples. Prior to that, China had been occupied by western and Japanese governments and business interests. The British had turned the Imperial family into a puppet government largely through the import and sales of opium and the general drug-devastation inflicted on the poor population. This led to the incursion ...
Search results 3971 - 3980 of 4262 matching essays
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