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Tectonic motion of the Adria microplate exerts a first-order
control on the tectonics, geology, seismology, resource
distribution, and the geological hazards across a broad zone of
south-central Europe and the north-central Mediterranean. Since its
first application to geodynamical problems, GPS geodesy has
gradually revealed the nature of motion and deformation for most
active areas of deformation across the Earth. One of the last
remaining regional-scale problems on the planet is the motion and
associated deformation in the peri-Adriatic region. Selected
local-scale studies have examined aspects of this motion, but to
date no truly regional analysis or regional team has systematically
attacked the full breadth of this problem. A NATO Advanced Research
Workshop (ARW) was held in Veszprem, Hungary from April 4-7, 2004.
This workshop brought together a distinguished international group
of scientists working in the peri-Adriatic region to: (1) review
research activities and results, (2) share technical expertise, and
(3) provide a springboard for future collaborative research on
Adria geodynamics. Areas of agreement were identified, as well as
remaining areas of debate. In addition, attention focused on
important scientific questions and the potential for international
and interdisciplinary research in the future. "
Tectonic motion of the Adria microplate exerts a first-order
control on the tectonics, geology, seismology, resource
distribution, and the geological hazards across a broad zone of
south-central Europe and the north-central Mediterranean. Since its
first application to geodynamical problems, GPS geodesy has
gradually revealed the nature of motion and deformation for most
active areas of deformation across the Earth. One of the last
remaining regional-scale problems on the planet is the motion and
associated deformation in the peri-Adriatic region. Selected
local-scale studies have examined aspects of this motion, but to
date no truly regional analysis or regional team has systematically
attacked the full breadth of this problem. A NATO Advanced Research
Workshop (ARW) was held in Veszprem, Hungary from April 4-7, 2004.
This workshop brought together a distinguished international group
of scientists working in the peri-Adriatic region to: (1) review
research activities and results, (2) share technical expertise, and
(3) provide a springboard for future collaborative research on
Adria geodynamics. Areas of agreement were identified, as well as
remaining areas of debate. In addition, attention focused on
important scientific questions and the potential for international
and interdisciplinary research in the future. "
A retired cop tells all. What people don't even see on reality
television or read about are some of the bizarre and fun adventures
cops have on the job. Adventures In Blue share some of the sick,
silly, and surprising lengths they will go to in coping with the
chaos they must deal with everyday.
Have you ever considered what the middle ground between capitalism
and socialism would look like? Socially Mixed Economies offers a
tantalizing snapshot of this brave new world, a third way born of
compromise by countries accepting that social gains can develop in
opposed systems. John Weber takes the reader on an intellectual
journey through the give-and-take of post Cold War history. Drawing
on examples from Europe, the United States, and the developing
world this provocative work suggests that today's political
landscape is far from polarized between purely socialist and
capitalist regimes. Rather than documenting the triumph of "pure"
capitalism over "pure" socialism, by means of different
country-specific examples, Weber illustrates how much of today's
political fabric has been shaped by "concessions." The result is a
socially mixed economy, of coexisting capitalist and socialist
structures. This is essential reading for economists, political
scientists, and historians seeking to understand the evolution of a
new transitional society and its important, unprecedented
consequences for twenty-first century world politics.
In the early years of the twentieth century, newcomer farmers and
migrant Mexicans forged a new world in South Texas. In just a
decade, this vast region, previously considered too isolated and
desolate for large-scale agriculture, became one of the United
States' most lucrative farming regions and one of its worst places
to work. By encouraging mass migration from Mexico, paying low
wages, selectively enforcing immigration restrictions, toppling
older political arrangements, and periodically immobilizing the
workforce, growers created a system of labor controls unique in its
levels of exploitation. Ethnic Mexican residents of South Texas
fought back by organizing and by leaving, migrating to destinations
around the United States where employers eagerly hired them--and
continued to exploit them. In From South Texas to the Nation, John
Weber reinterprets the United States' record on human and labor
rights. This important book illuminates the way in which South
Texas pioneered the low-wage, insecure, migration-dependent labor
system on which so many industries continue to depend.
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