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An authoritative guide to Africa's economic development and
prospects. This is volume 3 in a major international research
project coordinated by the African Economic Research Consortium and
bringing together the top academics in development economics, trade
policy and international economics from Africa, Europe and North
America. This third volume examines schemes for regional
integration, and the successes and failure of each of these
specific projects to examine the potential and pitfalls facing
co-operation and integration in Africa today.
First published in 1976, Religion and Voluntary Organisations in
Crisis, analyses the experience of late nineteenth and early
twentieth century organised religion by setting it in the context
of the whole range of voluntary and other organisations. It
provides a detailed study of churches and chapels in Reading set
alongside the experience of a biscuit factory, football club, the
hospital, the university, the WEA branch, the Social Democratic
Federation, the Coop, and the other organisations. The interweaving
of religion into the broad social history of the town gives a
detailed and exciting picture of the social development of late
nineteenth century England. It shows the part that religion had to
play in the life of the locality in a very different society from
our own and it explores the pressures on religion in the changing
phases of capitalist development. This book is an essential read
for scholars and researchers of religion, sociology of religion and
history.
First published in 1988, this book sets out to reinterpret the
changing place of working-class association in capitalist Britain.
It argues that in combination, co-operation and association
constitutes labour's power - what is has to work with and who to
work for - yet social historians have tended to overlook such views
in a co-operative setting. What was the struggle, what form did it
take, who were the protagonists and what relevance did they have to
the community co-operators of the 1980s? The essays collected in
this book explore class potential and class conflict within and
against co-operative thought and practice.
First published in 1988, this book sets out to reinterpret the
changing place of working-class association in capitalist Britain.
It argues that in combination, co-operation and association
constitutes labour's power - what is has to work with and who to
work for - yet social historians have tended to overlook such views
in a co-operative setting. What was the struggle, what form did it
take, who were the protagonists and what relevance did they have to
the community co-operators of the 1980s? The essays collected in
this book explore class potential and class conflict within and
against co-operative thought and practice.
An authoritative guide to Africa's economic development and
prospects. This is volume 3 in a major international research
project coordinated by the African Economic Research Consortium and
bringing together the top academics in development economics, trade
policy and international economics from Africa, Europe and North
America. This third volume examines schemes for regional
integration, and the successes and failure of each of these
specific projects to examine the potential and pitfalls facing
co-operation and integration in Africa today.
Volume 1. Victorian Agitator, George Jacob Holyoake (1817-1906):
Co-operation as 'This New Order of Life.'Holyoake was a classic
example of Gramsci's working-class 'organic intellectual'. An
Owenite 'social missionary', he became a Radical Liberal,
Secularist and Co-operator, responsible for the legend of 'the
Rochdale Pioneers'. A journalist, thinker, multiple 'joiner' and
promoter of freedom in many settings, Holyoake was also a
highly-readable stylist. An influential 19th century public figure,
his life and work have recently been neglected among co-operators
as by well historians. The case for reviving work on his ideas is
powerful.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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