Beijing Review - 19 February 2026

Beijing Review - 19 February 2026
Beijing Review - 19 February English | 52 pages | True | 19.0 MB

Beijing Review is 's only national newsmagazine in English. It is published every week in Beijing, by the China International Publishing Group (CIPG). Launched in March 1958, Beijing Review reports and comments on the 's social, , economic and affairs, changes and latest developments. It also offers in-depth analysis on major regional and international events, and provides consulting and information services.

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African Business English Edition - March 2026

African Business English Edition - March 2026
African English Edition - March English | 76 pages | | 70.4 MB

One of the world's leading sources of analysis and debate on African and economic issues. Using a variety of platforms and services including magazines, content, podcasts, as well as webinars and international events, we deliver unparalleled coverage on the latest developments in .

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The Art of Armenia: An Introduction - Christina Maranci

The Art of Armenia: An Introduction - Christina Maranci
Language: English | Publisher: | Format: - 172 pages | ISBN-13: 978-0190269005 | 46 MB

Though immediately recognizable in public discourse as a modern state in a "hot zone," Armenia has a material and visual that reaches back to the Paleolithic . This book presents a timely and much-needed survey of the arts of Armenia from antiquity to the eighteenth century C.E. Divided chronologically, it brings into discussion a wide range of media, including , stone sculpture, works in , wood, and cloth, manuscript illumination, and ceramic arts.

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The Afghan Patchwork State Political Ideology, Infrastructural Power, and the Critical Juncture of 1929


Free Download The Afghan Patchwork State: Ideology, Infrastructural Power, and the Critical Juncture of 1929 ( of South Asia) by Ryan S. Brasher
English | September 24, | ISBN: 9819765986 | 220 pages | | 1.13 Mb
This book provides a theoretically grounded and empirically fine-grained analysis of uneven state in Afghanistan beginning in the 20th Century. Based on archival research, the book shows that after Amanullah Shah's abortive modernist authoritarian experiment and Habibullah Kalakani's brief rule, a newly empowered Musahiban dynasty charted a patrimonial absolutist . The new regime delegated considerable authority to traditional tribal areas in the southeastern and eastern part of the , while pursuing a coercive strategy in other parts of the country that usurped traditional leadership at the regional and local levels. Previous explanations of the weakness of the Afghan state tend to emphasize structural determinants such as difficult geography, acephalous tribal organization, ethnic heterogeneity, as well as colonial interventions. Others have focused only on events after the Soviet or NATO interventions, pointing out faulty external -making, corrupt government officials and warlords, neighboring insurgent safe havens, or the international aid-fueled rentier economy. This book proposes an intermediate explanation for the patchwork nature of the Afghan state rooted in institutional choices made by a new ruling elite that took over in 1929. The year represents one critical juncture in Afghan , where individual agency based on certain ideological preferences set in motion a path-dependent process that shaped its politics well into the latter half of the century.
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