Documents found

  1. 151.

    Article published in Cahiers de géographie du Québec (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 1, Issue 1, 1956

    Digital publication year: 2005

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    Professor Jean Gottmann has written Jour books in the past six or seven years which constitute his main contribution to geography, especially in the field of political and economic geography.Some of his ideas are and will be discussed ; they certainly bring forward new approaches to old problems and new techniques to old methods. His four books are analyzed and reviewed together : l'Amérique (1949), A Geography of Europe (1950), la Politique des États et leur géographie (1952), Virginia at mid-century (7955).

  2. 155.

    Article published in Globe (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 4, Issue 2, 2001

    Digital publication year: 2011

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    A brief history of the teaching of Quebec literature in the Independent Republic of Uzbekistan for the past ten years and a description of curriculum by the Chair of the European, American and Australian Languages and Literatures Department of the National University of Uzbekistan.

  3. 156.

    Article published in Séquences (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 205, 1999

    Digital publication year: 2010

  4. 158.

    Azard-Malaurie, Marie-Madeleine

    À Paris

    Article published in Vie des arts (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 50, 1968

    Digital publication year: 2010

  5. 159.

    Article published in Report of the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Historical Association (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 15, Issue 1, 1936

    Digital publication year: 2006

  6. 160.

    Decaux, Emmanuel

    ENJEUX ET PERSPECTIVES

    Article published in Revue québécoise de droit international (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 13, Issue 1, 2000

    Digital publication year: 2023

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    The European Convention is at the crossroads of two great post-war ideas, the European adventure and the protection of Human Rights. For the past fifty years, the European Court has built an extensive case law of more than one thousand decisions which are relevant today for forty-one State Parties across a free and reunified Europe. Nevertheless, the Convention is undermined, from the inside, by the political abdication of States in the face of gross Human Rights violations, and from the outside, by the development of the European Union and the risk of double standards in a two-tier Europe. Only the reaffirmation of the universality and indivisibility of Human Rights can help overcome these contradictions and fulfil the work of the founding fathers.