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NEW YORK (Oct. 13, 2014) – Maple syrup from Vermont, ghost chili salsa from Texas and tea-infused chocolate from California produced by members of the Specialty Food Association will be sampled in booth 4R064 in the USA Pavilion at SIAL Paris, October 19 – 23, 2014.
Full text of ' STALINISM NEW DIRECTIONS SHEILA FITZPATRICK STALINISM Stalinism is a provocative addition to the current debates related to the history of the Stalinist period of the Soviet Union. Sheila Fitzpatrick has collected together the newest and the most exciting work by young Russian, American and European scholars, as well as some of the seminal articles that have influenced them, in an attempt to reassess this contentious subject in the light of new data and new theoretical approaches. The articles are contextualized by a thorough introduction to the totalitarian/revisionist arguments and post-revisionist developments. Eschewing an exclusively high-political focus, the book draws together work on class, identity, consumption culture, and agency. Stalinist terror and nationalities policy are reappraised in the light of new archival find- ings.
Stalinism offers a nuanced navigation of an emotive and misrepre- sented chapter of the Russian past. Sheila Fitzpatrick is Bernadotte E. Schmitt Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago. Rewriting Histories focuses on historical themes where standard conclu- sions are facing a major challenge. Each book presents papers (edited and annotated where necessary) at the forefront of current research and interpretation, offering students an accessible way to engage with contem- porary debates.
Series editor Jack R. Censer is Professor of History at George Mason University. REWRITING HISTORIES Series editor: Jack R.
Censer Already published THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION AND WORK IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY EUROPE Edited by Lenard R. Berlatistein SOCIETY AND CULTURE IN THE SLAVE SOUTH Edited by J. William Harris ATLANTIC AMERICAN SOCIETIES From Columbus through Abolition Edited by J.R. McNeill and Alan Karras GENDER AND AMERICAN HISTORY SINCE 1890 Edited by Barbara Melosh DIVERSITY AND UNITY IN EARLY NORTH AMERICA Edited by Philip D.
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Despite the existing problems, the formation of integrative trade and economic, currency, customs and political associations still remains one of the main tendencies of the world development. Economic integration of five CIS countries - Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, Armenia and Kyrgyzstan - continues in a format of the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). This article describes the stages of the development of integration processes, since the creation of the Union State of Russia and Belarus and formation of EEU. Special attention is paid to the need of coordination of actions of association’s participants in the key directions defining competitiveness of economies. The article is devoted to the analysis of the provisions of the two International Covenants on Human Rights, which establish the obligations of their States parties in the form of taking measures to ensure the status of these international acts in the national legal system and their applicability in the national courts. The article also analyses the clarifications on this issue given by the relevant two committees (Human Rights Committee and Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights) in their general comments.
The paper considers the existing approach to the above raised issue realized in Great Britain and the USA belonging to the Anglo-Saxon legal system. Protection of indigenous rights is one of the main trends of the international system of human protection. In order to address particular attention to the rights of indigenous peoples at international level The Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples in 2007 was adopted. From that moment, the protection of the rights of indigenous peoples became an international matter, in Africa as well. That has fostered new mechanisms and instruments in that field. The decision of the African Court on human and peoples’ rights in the case “African Commission on human and peoples’ rights v. Republic of Kenya” confirms this thesis.