We, the Balts

We, the Balts
Title We, the Balts PDF eBook
Author Algirdas Sabaliauskas
Publisher
Pages 170
Release 1993
Genre Foreign Language Study
ISBN

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The Balts

The Balts
Title The Balts PDF eBook
Author Marija Gimbutas
Publisher
Pages 294
Release 1963
Genre Baltic Provinces (Russia)
ISBN

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The World Outlook of the Ancient Balts

The World Outlook of the Ancient Balts
Title The World Outlook of the Ancient Balts PDF eBook
Author Norbertas Vėlius
Publisher
Pages 352
Release 1989
Genre Baltic States
ISBN

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Beautiful Balts

Beautiful Balts
Title Beautiful Balts PDF eBook
Author Jayne Persian
Publisher
Pages 494
Release 2017-06-08
Genre Political Science
ISBN 9780369314598

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170,000 Displaced Persons arrived in Australia between 1947 and 1952 - the first non-Anglo-Celtic mass migrants. Australia's first immigration minister, Arthur Calwell, scoured post-war Europe for refugees, Displaced Persons he characterised as 'Beautiful Balts'. Amid the hierarchies of the White Australia Policy, the tensions of the Cold War and the national need for labour, these people would transform not only Australia's immigration policy, but the country itself. Beautiful Balts tells the extraordinary story of these Displaced Persons. It traces their journey from the chaotic camps of Europe after World War II to a new life in a land of opportunity where prejudice, parochialism, and strident anti-communism were rife. Drawing from archives, oral history interviews and literature generated by the Displaced Persons themselves, Persian investigates who they really were, why Australia wanted them and what they experienced.

The Balts, the Northern Neighbours of the Slavs

The Balts, the Northern Neighbours of the Slavs
Title The Balts, the Northern Neighbours of the Slavs PDF eBook
Author Danuta Jaskanis
Publisher
Pages 96
Release 1981
Genre Balts (Indo-European people)
ISBN

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The Baltic Transformed

The Baltic Transformed
Title The Baltic Transformed PDF eBook
Author Walter C. Clemens
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Pages 312
Release 2001
Genre Political Science
ISBN 0847698599

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Why isn't the Baltic region like the Balkans? Why have the Baltic republics not experienced ethnic cleansing, border wars, authoritarian rule, and social chaos? Instead, peace, democracy, and market economies have taken root since the fall of communism. Walter C. Clemens, Jr. here uses complexity theory, which analyzes the role of self-organization in complex adaptive systems, to explain the "Baltic miracle." He argues that the theory is a vital tool for understanding the remarkable strides made by Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania since 1991 in coping with the transition to partnership with the new Europe. The Baltic peoples have adapted well to the demands of democracy, a market economy, and a constructive role in world affairs. The achievements of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania in the past decade are the more amazing when considered against the hundreds of years they were dominated by Teutonic knights, Hanseatic merchants, Sweden, Russia, and the USSR. Clemens uses this history as a springboard to analyze how Balts self-organize today to meet the challenges of transition. One of the first books to apply complexity theory to a major sphere of world politics, The Baltic Transformed will provoke constructive debate with its ambitious and well-grounded analysis of not only Baltic developments but European security more generally. Despite its theoretical foundation, the book is written in a clear and accessible style that will make it invaluable for courses on comparative politics, political development, international relations, security, or transition studies.

A Long Way from Home

A Long Way from Home
Title A Long Way from Home PDF eBook
Author Peter Carey
Publisher Random House Canada
Pages 345
Release 2018-02-27
Genre Fiction
ISBN 073527388X

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Over the course of his stellar writing life, Peter Carey has explored his homeland of Australia in such highly acclaimed novels as Oscar and Lucinda, True History of the Kelly Gang and Amnesia. Writing at the peak of his powers, Carey takes us on an unforgettable journey that maps his homeland's secrets in this extraordinary new novel. Wildly inventive, funny and profoundly moving, A Long Way from Home opens in 1953 with the arrival of the tiny, handsome Titch Bobs, his beautiful doll of a wife, Irene, and their two children in the small town of Bacchus Marsh. Titch is the best car salesman in southeastern Australia. Irene loves her husband, and loves to drive fast. Together they enter the Redex Trial, a brutal endurance race around the ancient continent, over roads no car is designed to survive. With them is their neighbour and navigator, Willie Bachhuber, a quiz show champion and failed school teacher who calls the turns and creek crossings on a map that will lead them, without warning, away from the white Australia they all know so well. Just like the novel, Peter Carey's new masterpiece, begins in one way and takes you somewhere you never thought you'd be. Often funny, the book is also and always a page-turner, surprising you with history these characters never even knew themselves. Its profound reckoning with Australia's brutal treatment of the continent's aboriginal people will also resonate strongly with Canadian readers.