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1971qw145Sav Breizh Revue 1971 In-8 (13,5 x 21,2 cm), dos carré collé, lot comprenant les 20 premiers numéros de la revue Sav Breizh sur 23 (Directeur : Erwan Vallerie ; Comité de rédaction : Xavier Grall, Alain Guel, Gwenc'hlan le Scouezec, Philippe Le Solliec, Erwan Vallerie) ; plats frottés et pouvant présenter des rousseurs, mors blanchis, bel ensemble de cette revue militante plutôt rare. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
1971ga2675Sav Breizh Revue 1971 In-8 (13,5 x 21,2 cm), dos carré collé, lot comprenant les 23 numéros de la revue Sav Breizh (Directeur : Erwan Vallerie ; Comité de rédaction : Xavier Grall, Alain Guel, Gwenc'hlan le Scouezec, Philippe Le Solliec, Erwan Vallerie), les trois derniers numéros sont différents du reste de la revue : plaquette de 8 pages agrafées pour les n°21 et 22, plaquette non paginée pour le n°23 (contenant un éditorial et une table des textes publiés en 1974 et 1975), ensemble peu commun et rare complet ; couverture frottées et blanchies aux mors, charnières et bords des plats, par ailleurs intérieur frais, assez bon état général. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
45166Lyon, directeur Jacques Aubenque. Un volume 14,2x22,5cm, 150 pages. Bon état.
42378Bordeaux, animateur : Jean-Claude Valin, 1961 - un volume broché (14,5x22,5 cm), 41 pages - textes de Joseph Rouffranche, Jean Breton, Patrice Cauda, Louis gGuillaume, Roger Kowalski, Jean-Louis Houdebine, Hubert Juin, Michel Butor, Jean-Claude Valin - bon état -
1924002426Paris Nouvelle revue française 1924 In-12 Broché Edition originale
45012Paris, éditions Emile-Paul. Directeurs: Emile-Paul et Maurice Martin du Gard. Comité de rédaction: Edmond Jaloux, Valery Larbaud, André Germain et Philippe Soupault. Gérant: Paul Budry. Fascicule 16,6x25,2cm broché de 44 pages.
46868Marseille, directeur: Jean Ballard. Un volume de 78 pages. Exemplaire en bon état.
45185Sous la direction de Jean Prévost. Lyon, directeur René Tavernier. Un volume 14,2x22,5cm, 420 pages.
46793Marseille, directeur: Jean Ballard. Un volume de 80 pages. Exemplaire en bon état.
46813Marseille, directeur: Jean Ballard. Un volume de 150 pages. Exemplaire en bon état.
46898Marseille, directeur: Jean Ballard. Un volume de 90 pages. Exemplaire en bon état.
198212590ABMünchen, Schirmer - Mosel / Münchner Stadtmuseum, (1982 / 2009). 4°. 360 Seiten. Mit zahlr., teils farbigen Abbildungen / 239 Seiten. Mit zahlr. s/w Abbildungen. Orig.-Pappband mit fotoillustr. Schutzumschlag / Illustr. Orig.-Karton., 12590ab|12590ab 2|12590ab 4 [3 Warenabbildungen] Umschlag leicht angestaubt und gebräunt, Einband minimal randgebräunt, sonst wohlerhalten und sauber. / Schönes Exemplar.
7169L'ARCHITECTURE D'AUJOURD'HUI, n° 108, Boulogne, juin-juillet 1963. In-4, broché.
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. Previous owner's inscription inside. Small stain on bottom page ends. 214 pages, plus catalog. 8 1/4"w x 11"h.
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding as new. 214 pages, plus catalog. 8 1/4"w x 11"h. B&W photos, band shots, dance moves throughout.
189729920(Paris), La Plume, (1897, 15 février). Un vol. au format gd in-8 (268 x 192 mm) de [35] pp. Reliure moderne de plein cartonnage recouvert de papier marbré, plats jansénistes, dos lisse agrémenté du titre doré en long.
2002ga2319Edizioni Ennerre Revue 2002 In-8 (17 x 24 cm), dos agrafé, 23 pages, illustrations en noir ; très bon état. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
46271Mortemart : Editions Rougerie, 1983 - In-8 broché, de 208 pages non coupées avec 4 planches hors texte en noir - bon état -
48565in-8 broché - 183 pages - sd - Ed. Paris, Librairie Agricole de la Maison Rustique
1825230481825. EnvironmentalismAgriculture Archive of six manuscripts and printed works concerning water rights water supply and environmental regulation in the United States and Britain during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The materials chronicle the evolving legal protections governing access to water resources including industrial use agricultural supply municipal control of waterways and emerging concerns regarding river pollution. Together the documents trace a historical arc from early industrial petitions for water-powered manufacturing and property-based water rights disputes to later government and professional studies addressing irrigation law water infrastructure and environmental contamination. The archive contains six items three manuscripts and three printed works:<br /> <br /> 1 Manuscript Petition. Lancaster Pennsylvania. 1825 petition submitted to the Honorable Mayor and Common Council of the City of Lancaster requesting authorization to use water from the town run for manufacturing purposes. The petitioner proposes constructing a machine for manufacturing cards used in carding cotton and requests permission to convey water through wooden pipes from the municipal run to power the operation. The petition references specific lots and locations within Lancaster and includes statements assuring that the diversion would not interfere with existing water flow or neighboring property. Approximately 8 x 9.75 inches.<br /> <br /> 2 Autograph Letter Signed. Philadelphia February 25 1861. Letter addressed to J. E. Thompson concerning a dispute involving water use along the Wissahickon Creek. The writer discusses complaints relating to the removal of sand and alteration of water flow affecting neighboring property references a dam causing land inundation and ultimately states a willingness to relinquish certain rights so the dam may be removed noting that steam power is sufficient for his manufacturing purposes.<br /> <br /> 3 Charles C. Brown. River Pollution in the United States. Reprinted from the Journal of the American Society of Engineers October 1890. Early engineering study discussing sources of river contamination and methods of measuring and preventing industrial pollution of American waterways.<br /> <br /> 4 Certified Court Record Suffolk England 1833. Court of Common Pleas water rights dispute concerning property and access to a well in the parishes of Stowmarket and Needham Market Suffolk. The case lists William Ransom as plaintiff and Thomas Wells and Susan Wells as defendants relating to the liberty of drawing water and access rights. The record references the reign of King George IV and was officially certified July 16 1833 by Charles Roberts Assistant Keeper of Records of the Public Record Office.<br /> <br /> 5 R. H. Hess. Arid-Land Water Rights in the United States. Reprinted from the Columbia Law Review June 1916. Scholarly legal analysis examining riparian rights and the doctrine of prior appropriation in the American West and the legal development of irrigation water allocation.<br /> <br /> 6 United States Department of Agriculture. Farmstead Water Supply. Farmers' Bulletin No. 1448. Washington D.C. issued August 1925 and slightly revised June 1933. Government agricultural engineering bulletin describing sanitary well construction water storage and safe water supply systems for American farms.<br /> <br /> Manuscript documents show typical folds from original filing and storage with moderate toning and minor edge wear; handwriting remains clear and legible throughout. Printed pamphlets show light toning occasional edge wear and scattered minor staining consistent with use and inexpensive publication formats. Overall condition good to very good. This archive offers a compact documentary survey of water governance and environmental awareness across more than a century linking early industrial petitions and property disputes with the later emergence of legal scholarship and engineering studies addressing irrigation policy rural infrastructure and river pollution in the modern United States. unknown
1794066632.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1490955976.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
200584600Washington DC: U. S. Government Printing Office 2005. Presumed First Edition First printing. Wraps. Good/No DJ issued. x 179 1 i 5 pages. Tables. Illustrations. Front cover lower right corner curved. Among the participants in this hearing were: Fred Thompson Edward Markey Ashton Carter Gary Milhollin Curt Weldon and Henry Sokolski. In his opening statement Chairman D'Amato stated: "Our mandate calls on us to assess China's role in the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction to terrorist-sponsoring states. Ws we have stressed in our reports to the Congress proliferation stemming from China remains a serious concern. Have the Chinese taken decisive actions to reign in the various companies engaging in this behavior some of which have been repeatedly sanctions by the United States. We believe China must face this issue more frankly and effectively. Washington also must act to impose consequences on Beijing should it not cooperate on this vital matter. Currently the United States employes sanctions in hopes of curbing the proliferating habits of some of China's largest companies. That's the subject we're going to be exploring today. But U.S. sanctions laws have failed to stem this behavior and do not penalize the Chinese government for its lack of action to end it. Ultimately the Chinese government itself must be accountable for a WMD-related attack that involves either directly or indirectly materials or technologies originating in China. In addition to proliferation we will examine China's role in the North Korea nuclear crisis. The United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission informally the US-China Commission USCC is an independent agency of the United States government. It was established on October 30 2000 through the Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization Act. The USCC is responsible for providing recommendations based on their findings on bilateral trade with the Peoples Republic of China evaluating national security and trading risks in all industries and conducting research on Chinas actions. All these findings are discussed in their hearings and submitted as an annual report or specific research topics every year. In part due to its small size the USCC directly reports to Congress and the president - it is not a part of any other department or agency in the federal government. The USCC consists of 12 commissioners who staff it and facilities that were absorbed from the former US Trade Deficit Review Commission. The commissioners are appointed to two-year terms by the Majority and Minority Leaders of the U.S. Senate and by the Speaker and Minority Leader of the U.S. House of Representatives. The current head of the commission is Carolyn Bartholomew and the Vice Chairman is Robin Cleveland who are responsible for organizing meetings with other commissioners. Each commissioner is entitled to one vote. The USCC staff and facilities are from former US Trade Deficit Review Commission by the Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization Act of 2001. Since then the USCC is responsible for overseeing trade deficit matters with China. The USCC was created as the US government believes some of the current trades with China were in need of urgent attentions and corrections based on analyses considering Chinas military modernizations change of trade policy and media and information controls. Its first annual report in 2002 found that China is and will be a major competitor of the U.S. and also concluded that China as the third-largest trading partner had extremely unbalanced trade relationship. In the following years between 2004 and 2009 the USCC stated that Chinas undervalued currency counterfeiting and piracy export subsidies and lack of protection of US intellectual property right were continually contributed to a growing trade deficit. The main focus for the commission is constantly changing around the eight main areas. However the focused area in the last decade 2010-2020 is national security. The USCC argues the main direction of US-China relation will be "A combination of containment and engagement". The main part of the commission is to submit annual report every year. The USCC fulfills its mission by holding regular meetings with commission members to discuss recent related matters include write full analysis of eight focused parts which are Energy American Capital Market Economic transfers Regional Economics and Security impacts US-China Bilateral Programs Weapon proliferation World Trade Organization Compliance and Implications of restrictions on speech and information access in China. And provide conclusions and recommendations for legislative and administrative actions. Multiple hearings are held every year with commissioners and outside government parties to discuss relevant matters. The first hearing was "China Trade/Sectoral and WTO Issues" on June 14 2001. U. S. Government Printing Office paperback
1497346932.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback