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This text provides an account of urban land reform in China, which
is unique in merging the existing socialist landowner system with
market mechanisms. The book starts with a historical account of the
land tenure system in China followed by discussions of the reform
in the frameworks of law, administration and finance. Contrasting
case studies of the Shanghai land system and of Hong Kong after the
end of British rule illustrate the impact of land reform in China's
transition.
In this volume of Reviews of Physiology we present three articles
on modulation of PKC in antitumor treatment, compartment-specific
functions of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway and transgenic models
of alpha2-adrenergic receptor subtype function.
Provides an authoritative account of urban land reform in China,
which is unique in merging the existing socialist landowner system
with market mechanisms. The book starts with an historical account
of the land tenure system in China followed by discussions of the
reform within its legal, administrative and financial frameworks.
The history of the Fort Worth Police Department started in April
1873 and can not be told without considering many factors which
brought about its existence. Fort Worth's location at the
confluence of the West Fork and Clear Fork of the Trinity River
placed it along one of the major cattle trails, the Chisolm. The
location on this trail brought about issues both political and
financial in nature and had a definite affect on city fathers.
Frequently the entire membership of the police force would change
with the election of new city leaders. The infamous "bloody third
ward" on the south end of Fort Worth, between present day Seventh
Street and the Texas and Pacific Railroad tracks carried the name
"Hell's Half Acre." A definite sub-culture formed within this
section of town and early law enforcement was caught in the middle,
between the city leaders and the citizen's interests. The majority
of complaints against Fort Worth officers and the first officer's
murder had addresses in "Hell's Half Acre." 1 The area became a
distressing factor not only to the police but also to the citizens
"up town." Fort Worth was not the only trail town to have a "Hell's
Half Acre." The name came into common use shortly after the Civil
War. But Fort Worth's "Acre" was definitely tied to the political
faction of the town and the police. In the 1940s and 50s the
stretch of roadway between Fort Worth and the present city of Lake
Worth known as the Jacksboro Highway was not only a source of
gambling, drinking and gangland style murder but also of police
corruption. These and other influences would be major factors in
the development of the Fort Worth Police Department as it moved
toward the 21st Century.
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