Showing 41 - 60 results of 236 for search '"republicanism"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
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    « Comment survivre (et bien) à un père républicain espagnol » by Marguerite Salvador-Aflallo

    Published 2021-01-01
    Subjects: “…Spanish Republican exile in Toulouse…”
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  5. 45

    Political Struggle of M. Fuad Köprülü: From Ruling Party to the Opposition (1956-1966) by Nasrullah Uzman

    Published 2013-12-01
    Subjects: “…Fuad Koprulu; Adnan Menderes; the Democratic Party; the New Democratic Party; Republican People’s Party…”
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    The Church as <i>Res Publica</i> by Cyril Hovorun

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…Christianity emerged valuing horizontal socio-political relations, which it inherited from Jesus Christ, and which resonated with the ideals of ancient Greek and Roman republicanism. As the church engaged with the Roman Empire, its republican roots faded, adopting monarchical traits. …”
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  12. 52

    Perpetuum Mobile of Radicalism – Islamism in la France Laïque by Mariusz Sulkowski

    Published 2024-11-01
    “…According to the author, French republicanism, which is inextricably linked to laïcité, is incapable of resolving this tension and, in fact, systemically generates it. …”
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  13. 53

    Nostalgie et posthistoire dans quelques utopies louis-quatorziennes (1675-1714) by Peter Murvai

    Published 2018-06-01
    “…Thus, inside this paradigm, the hypothesis of a correlation between the classical narrative utopias and the ideology of progress doesn’t stand scrutiny given the fact that these texts reject the foundations of liberalism in the name of the old ideal of the civic republicanism and of the simplicity of the Native Americans.…”
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  14. 54

    The Transatlantic Political Economy by Allan Potofsky

    Published 2006-03-01
    “…On both sides of the Atlantic, a desire to deepen economic ties between the two « regenerated » nations was kindled by the ideological potentials of republicanism in the United States and of the « reform monarchy » at the end of the ancien régime and opening years of the Revolution.This article examines an overlooked element in the « master narrative » of historians who have focused on the degradation of the political and economic ties between the two nations after 1787 : the American financial debt toward France grew in significance with the awareness of the proportions of the deficit of the French state. …”
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  15. 55

    Citoyenneté féminine sous la Seconde République : entre le réformisme social et la démocratisation by Ana Aguado

    Published 2014-07-01
    “…All these rights, as well as the right to vote, were included in the Constitution of 1931. The new republican regime therefore created the necessary conditions -although still insufficient- for women to redefine egalitarian concepts found in certain political cultures, such as republicanism or socialism, with a gender approach. …”
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  16. 56

    Le communalisme ou l’avenir de la Commune de 1871 by Pierre Sauvêtre, Frank Noulin, Jean-François Wagniart

    Published 2021-03-01
    “…It is no longer a question of overcoming the weaknesses of the Commune, but of asking the Commune how to go beyond certain dead-ends in left-wing traditions such as left-wing republicanism, Marxism or anarchism. This is the meaning of the ongoing construction of a communalist movement, which can find in the Commune of 1871 a set of inspirations – on the substitution of a confederation of communes for the state, the self-institution of a commune which is both democratic and social, and the emancipation of women – and in the work of Murray Bookchin a theoretical contribution to define the relationship between communalism and ecology. …”
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  17. 57

    Machiavelli and instituent power by Albano Pina

    Published 2025-01-01
    “… This article reconsiders the concept of instituent power from the perspective of Machiavelli’s republicanism. More specifically, it intends to see how the Florentine, while reflecting on the relation between society and institutions in Roman republic, already identifies the defining features of the mentioned power: namely, 1) his conflictual nature; 2) his inappropriability; 3) the fact that it consists in a continuous process, without beginning nor end. …”
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  18. 58

    La idea de España en la Institución Libre de Enseñanza. Análisis de los primeros cinco años del Boletín (1877-1882) by José R. de Arellano

    Published 2023-07-01
    “…From its foundation in 1876 until its prohibition in 1940, the Institución Libre de Enseñanza [«Free Institution of Education»] played a central role in what we now call the Silver Age of Spanish science and culture and in the shaping of the Spanish left through tendencies like republicanism, regenerationism and socialism. The ILE’s contribution to the development of a country in great need of an educational impetus contrasts with the criticisms of anti-patriotism or Black Legend that it still receives today (Krausist philosophy, uncritical adoption of «Europeanness» as a model, etc.). …”
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    A cidadania, o universalismo e a diferença by Paulo Manuel Costa

    Published 2015-01-01
    “…The contemporary debate on citizenship has been dominated by three theoretical currents: liberalism, communitarianism and republicanism. It reveals different ways of conceptualising citizenship and thus a diversity of proposals for the design and organization of political institutions. …”
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    Transgression et subversion : George Jacob Holyoake, Charles Bradlaugh et l’athéisme militant à l’époque victorienne by Jean-Michel Yvard

    Published 2014-06-01
    “…Charles Bradlaugh (1833-1891), who became the most famous representative of atheism at the time, embodied both the intellectual debate induced by the question of the existence of God and a constant, militant involvement in favour of other causes that were just as radical and transgressive, such as republicanism or artificial birth control. In 1880, when he became an MP, Bradlaugh never stopped professing an atheistic position, which prevented him from occupying his seat in the House of Commons for six years, although he was later re-elected no less than four times. …”
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