YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Postwar France and Democracy
Essays 151 - 180
The International Band for Reconstruction and Development would be formed as a consequence of the Bretton Woods System in 1945 (Wo...
ensured that workers, government and employers all contributed to the social fund, and thereby provided health care and disability...
of investment in industry was the major factor, to which the response was the development of Thatcherism....
reality of the war, of its physical wounds were to be seen. This had to have had a psychological impact on the people of the count...
as no one bothered to make sure that things would go well. In the end, the war was just stopped but there were no victories. Ther...
attempt to make to the viewer sympathetic to his ideas...the film highlights the many conflicting realities which are inherent in ...
German Democratic Republic (East Germany) from 1945 to 1970. Within four years of the end of the war, Germany had been divided...
black people choosing to leave the country. Post-War Race Relations The post-war immigration in the late 1940s and 1950s in...
had constraints placed on individuals in the same way being totally unacceptable on the new world order that was emerging. This wa...
Nevertheless, professionalizing home economics and consumer science helped the very women it was teaching to stay home to enter th...
stance for nationalism. Henry Kissinger once said that to implement an effective foreign policy, it must be drafted through calcu...
and instead of taking the lead, Presidents were being relegated to the role of follower. Policymakers envisioned themselves as th...
In fourteen pages Canada is examined in terms of its economy and the effects of immigration as a result of its postwar policy. Th...
and every person. To say that women had to fight for their existence within a patriarchal world would be a gross understate...
also of the survivors of the overall destruction of this exclusive caste system. Shortly after the initial publication of Gon...
In two pages the postwar economic effects Japan experienced as a result of U.S. occupation are examined. Four sources are cited i...
In a paper consisting of eight pages a common denominator is sought in two postwar viewpoints that seem on the surface to be widel...
In five pages this paper discusses postwar Canada in a consideration of population patterns and a growth in the number of babies ...
This research paper offers discussion of a variety of questions that relate to the postwar development of Japan. Included in this ...
In six pages the ways in which Octavio Paz represented postwar Mexico via uses of political, physical, and cultural setting in his...
is this so? Intolerance is a significant factor among the many reasons countries enter into world conflicts. Coupled with the fa...
In seven pages the inequities of wealth and power distribution in the postwar United Kingdom are examined and the impact of such i...
In thirteen pages the postwar consensus debate is considered in an overview of the texts B. Pimlott's The Myth of Consensus, Antho...
The successes of postwar Japan are featured in five pages along with the recent economic failures also discussed. Eight sources a...
they began to buy land, and design and build homes on a modest scale. By trial and error, Alfred learned how to be an architect wh...
In seven pages this paper examines the miracle that bolstered Japan's postwar economy and argues that another miracle might be req...
The 1924 postwar London melodrama is discussed in this paper consisting of 6 pages. There are no additional bibliographic sources...
This paper examines William Golding's postwar novel within the thematic context of the loss of innocence in 3 pages. There is 1 s...
This essay offers a brief report on the first five chapters in a book entitled, On Our Own. America in the Sixties. It takes the r...
The years following World War II were a time of great change for Japan....