01274nam0 22003133i 450 SUN001084920140314124821.5050.00IT79 858420021128d1979 |0itac50 baitaIT|||| |||||Imprese industriali e banche di fronte alla nuova disciplina valutariaatti del Convegno di Milano, 23-24 giugno 1978[Roma]Isgea[Milano]Giuffrè1979288 p.23 cm.001SUN00109852001 Quaderni della Rivista impresa ambiente e pubblica amministrazione13210 MilanoGiuffrè1975-.ValuteLegislazioneCongressi1978FISUNC005957CongressiMilano1978FISUNC005958MilanoSUNL000284RomaSUNL000360332.421GiuffrèSUNV001757650IsgeaSUNV009430650ITSOL20181231RICASUN0010849UFFICIO DI BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI GIURISPRUDENZA00CONS VI.H.7 00 943 20021129 Imprese industriali e banche di fronte alla nuova disciplina valutaria612449UNICAMPANIA00677nam a2200217 i 450099100433522610753620240729145452.0240729s1999 it er 001 p ita dBibl. Dip.le Aggr. Scienze Umane e SocialiitaSocioculturale Scsita851.91423Catalfamo, Antonio1749014Diario pavesiano /Antonio Catalfamo ; prefazione di Paolo RuffilliBologna :Pendragon,stampa 1999111 p. ;21 cmPoesia ;10Ruffilli, PaoloPoesia ;10991004335226107536Diario pavesiano4182633UNISALENTO04285nam 2200853 a 450 991097139410332120240506193845.09786612584695978128258469312825846939780226241111022624111410.7208/9780226241111(CKB)2670000000019435(EBL)534574(OCoLC)635292207(SSID)ssj0000418262(PQKBManifestationID)11297940(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000418262(PQKBWorkID)10369556(PQKB)11442492(StDuBDS)EDZ0000117457(MiAaPQ)EBC534574(DE-B1597)524538(OCoLC)1135590469(DE-B1597)9780226241111(Au-PeEL)EBL534574(CaPaEBR)ebr10389570(CaONFJC)MIL258469(Perlego)1851760(EXLCZ)99267000000001943520030722d2004 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrThe fugitive's properties law and the poetics of possession /Stephen M. Best1st ed.Chicago University of Chicago Pressc20041 online resource (375 p.)Description based upon print version of record.9780226044330 0226044335 9780226044347 0226044343 Includes bibliographical references (p. 277-351) and index.Frontmatter -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Debts -- Introduction: The Slave's Two Bodies -- Pro Bono Publico: Chapter Two. The Fugitive's Properties: Uncle Tom's Incalculable Dividend -- Sine Qua Non: Chapter Three. Counterfactuals, Causation, and the Tenses of "Separate but Equal" -- Conclusion: The Rules of the Game -- Notes -- IndexIn this study of literature and law before and since the Civil War, Stephen M. Best shows how American conceptions of slavery, property, and the idea of the fugitive were profoundly interconnected. The Fugitive's Properties uncovers a poetics of intangible, personified property emerging out of antebellum laws, circulating through key nineteenth-century works of literature, and informing cultural forms such as blackface minstrelsy and early race films. Best also argues that legal principles dealing with fugitives and indebted persons provided a sophisticated precursor to intellectual property law as it dealt with rights in appearance, expression, and other abstract aspects of personhood. In this conception of property as fleeting, indeed fugitive, American law preserved for much of the rest of the century slavery's most pressing legal imperative: the production of personhood as a market commodity. By revealing the paradoxes of this relationship between fugitive slave law and intellectual property law, Best helps us to understand how race achieved much of its force in the American cultural imagination. A work of ambitious scope and compelling cross-connections, The Fugitive's Properties sets new agendas for scholars of American literature and legal culture.American literature19th centuryHistory and criticismSlavery in literatureFugitive slavesLegal status, laws, etcUnited StatesLaw and literatureHistory19th centuryAfrican Americans in literatureFugitive slaves in literatureProperty in literatureRace in literatureAmerican literatureHistory and criticism.Slavery in literature.Fugitive slavesLegal status, laws, etc.Law and literatureHistoryAfrican Americans in literature.Fugitive slaves in literature.Property in literature.Race in literature.810.9/3552Best Stephen Michael1804367MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910971394103321The fugitive's properties4352349UNINA10704oam 22007215 450 991097355780332120240418090543.09781464804939146480493110.1596/978-1-4648-0492-2(CKB)3710000000475737(DLC) 2016299609(Au-PeEL)EBL3572452(CaPaEBR)ebr11092738(CaONFJC)MIL826858(OCoLC)919873489(The World Bank)210492(US-djbf)210492(MiAaPQ)EBC3572452(Perlego)1484171(EXLCZ)99371000000047573720020129d2015 uf 0engurcn|||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Extractive Industries Sector : Essentials for Economists, Public Finance Professionals, and Policy Makers. /Halland, Havard1st ed.Washington, DC :World Bank,2015.1 online resource (148 pages)"A World Bank study."9781464804922 1464804923 9781464806056 1464806055 Includes bibliographical references.Front Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Abbreviations -- Overview -- What Should We Know about the Extractive Industries Sector? -- Notes -- Organization of this Volume -- Chapter 1 Defining Sector Policy Objectives -- The Extractive Industries Value Chain -- Improving Revenue Mobilization -- Generating Extractive-Based Economic and Social Development -- Note -- Chapter 2 The Economics of the Extractive Industries Sector -- Accounting for Physical Stocks: Resources, Reserves, and the Economic Interpretation of Ore -- Theory of Rents and Valuation of Subsoil Assets -- Structure of Energy and Mineral Markets -- Notes -- Chapter 3 Institutional Framework -- Mandates and Coordination -- Role of the Sector Ministry -- Roles of the Ministry of Finance and Revenue-Collecting Agencies -- Role of the National Resource Company -- Roles of Other Ministries and Government Agencies -- Note -- Chapter 4 Investment and Production Cycles -- Characteristics of Extractive Industry Investments -- The Mining Cycle -- The Oil and Gas Cycle -- Chapter 5 Extractive Industries Policy -- Policy and Regulatory Frameworks -- Sector Financing, Ownership, and Liabilities -- Mineral Legislation, Regulation, and Contracting Regimes -- Establishing and Maintaining a Geodata Information Base -- Mineral Rights Cadastre -- Overview of Extractive Industries Tax and Royalty Regimes -- Enhancing Competitiveness and Productivity -- Note -- Chapter 6 Monitoring and Enforcing Contracts: Legal Obligations and Institutional Responsibilities -- Legal and Contractual Regimes -- Building Transparency and Accountability in Contract and Revenue Management -- Monitoring and Enforcing Fiscal Regimes for the Extractive Sector -- Environmental Safeguards: Financial Sureties for Decommissioning -- Social Safeguards: Community Foundations, Trusts, and Funds.Chapter 7 Public Infrastructure and Investment -- From Subsoil Assets to Above-Ground Investment -- Infrastructure Investment -- Chapter 8 Economic Diversification and Local Content Development -- Developing Linkages -- Appendix A Resource Classification Frameworks -- The Four Classification Codes -- Committee for Mineral Reserves International Reporting Standards (CRIRSCO) -- The Society of Petroleum Engineers-Petroleum Resources Management System (SPE-PRMS) -- United Nations Framework Classification for Fossil Energy and Mineral Reserves and Resources 2009 -- System of Environmental-Economic Accounting 2012 -- Appendix B Types of Economic Rents -- Hotelling Rents, or User Costs -- Ricardian Rents -- Quasi-Rents -- Appendix C Impact of Income Changes on Commodity Demand -- How Does Demand for Commodities Adjust? -- Notes -- Appendix D Effective Resource Contract Enforcement: A Checklist of Guidelines -- Why Use a Checklist? -- Resource Revenue Collection -- Resource Revenue Projections and Macrofiscal Planning -- Management of Expenditure and Contingent Liabilities -- References -- Boxes -- 3.1 Insufficient Institutional Coordination and Its Impact: The Case of Ghana -- 5.1 Mineral Policy -- 5.2 Modes of State Participation -- 5.3 Mining Law -- 5.4 Mining Regulations -- 5.5 Mining Contracts and Licenses -- 6.1 Establishing the Extractive Industries Tax Base: Generating Production Data -- 6.2 South Africa: Large State Liabilities Resulting from Inadequate Decommissioning -- 6.3 Financing for Community Benefit Sharing: Examples -- 6.4 Developing Local Investment Capacity in Peru -- 7.1 Effective Public Investment Management -- 7.2 A Discussion of Resource-Financed Infrastructure -- 8.1 The Diversification of Norway's Oil and Gas Value Chain -- 8.2 International Experience in Promoting Downstream Mineral Processing.8.3 Institutional Infrastructure for Nonresource Diversification in Chile -- A.1 CRIRSCO Classification System Definitions -- A.2 SPE-PRMS Classification Definitions -- B.1 Rents Outlined in David Ricardo's 1821 Treatise On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation -- C.1 Secular Growth and Structural Change in China: An Application of the Intensity-of-Use Approach -- Figures -- 1.1 The Extractive Industries Value Chain: A Framework for Governance -- 2.1 Graphical Representation of How a Change in Royalty Would Affect the Cutoff Grade and Economic Feasibility of Zambia's Lumwana-Chimiwungo Resource -- 2.2 Cost Curve of Copper Mine Production, Selected Projects, Zambia -- 2.3 Conceptual Depiction of Ricardian and Hotelling Rents -- 2.4 Three-Month Copper Prices Compared with Three-Month Aluminum Prices, 1990-2012 -- 2.5 Illustrative Demand Curves in the Immediate, Short, Long, and Very Long Run -- 2.6 Illustrative Supply Curves in the Immediate, Short, Long, and Very Long Run -- 2.7 World Gold Exploration Expenditures versus Gold Prices, 1975-2012 -- 3.1 Proposed Model for the Organization of Afghanistan's Ministry of Mines -- 4.1 The Four Stages of the Mining Cycle -- 5.1 Sharing Costs of Geodata between the Private and Public Sectors -- 5.2 Stylized Representation of Volume-, Value-, and Profit-Based Taxes -- 5.3 Production-Sharing Agreements -- 6.1 Managing Financial Sureties upon Site Closure: Four Administrative Steps -- 7.1 Revenue Leakages -- 7.2 Stages in Public Investment Management -- 8.1 Connecting Extractive Industries with the Larger Economy: Five Types of Linkages -- B.8.2.1 Global Copper Production, Refining, and Consumption Trends, 2013 -- A.1 CRIRSCO Framework for Mineral Reserves and Resource Classification -- A.2 SPE-PRMS Hydrocarbon Resources Classification Framework -- A.3 UNFC-2009 System: Key Principles.C.1 The "Kuznets Facts," Illustrated by the Share of U.S. Employment in Agriculture, Manufacturing, and Services, 1800-2000 -- C.1.1 Indexed Intensity of Use in China for Various Commodities -- C.1.2 Steel Intensity and Gross Domestic Product in Selected Countries, 1900-2011 -- Tables -- 2.1 Preliminary Assessment of How Various Royalty Levels Would Affect the Cutoff Grade and Economic Feasibility of Zambia's Lumwana-Chimiwungo Resource -- 2.2 Summary of Constraints to Demand and Supply across Time Periods -- 2.3 Selected Copper Supply Disruptions in 2014 -- 4.1 The Mining Cycle -- 4.2 Feasibility Studies: An Overview -- 5.1 Separation of Key Functions in the Extractive Sector -- 5.2 The Components of an Extractive Industries Sector Program -- 5.3 Types and Characteristics of Mineral Rights Awards -- 6.1 Key Contractual Obligations: Enforcement and Budgetary Impacts -- 6.2 Evaluation of Commonly Used Financial Surety Instruments -- A.1 SEEA-2012 Classes and Relevant UNFC-2009 Categories -- Back Cover.The extractive industries (EI) sector occupies an outsize space in the economies of many developing countries. Economists, public finance professionals, and policy makers working in such countries are frequently confronted with issues that require an in-depth understanding of the sector; its economics, governance, and policy challenges; as well as the implications of natural resource wealth for fiscal and public financial management. The objective of the two-volume Essentials for Economists, Public Finance Professionals, and Policy Makers, published in the World Bank Studies series, is to provide a concise overview of the EI-related topics these professionals are likely to encounter. This first volume, The Extractive Industries Sector, provides an overview of issues central to EI economics; discusses key components of the sector's governance, policy, and institutional frameworks; and identifies the public sector's EI-related financing obligations. Its discussion of EI economics covers the valuation of subsoil assets, the economic interpretation of ore, and the structure of energy and mineral markets. The volume maps the responsibilities of relevant government entities and outlines the characteristics of the EI sector's legal and regulatory frameworks. Specific key functions of the sector are briefly discussed, as are the financial structures that underpin environmental and social safeguards; investment of public revenues generated from oil, gas, or minerals; as well as extractive-based economic diversification. The authors hope that, economists, public finance professionals, and policy makers working in resource-rich countries "including decision makers in ministries of finance, international organizations, and other relevant entities" will find the study useful to their understanding and analysis of the EI sector.World Bank e-Library.Mineral industriesSocial aspectsMineral industriesEnvironmental aspectsMineral industriesEnvironmental aspectsDeveloping countriesSustainable developmentDeveloping countriesEconomic development projectsDeveloping countriesEvaluationMineral industriesSocial aspects.Mineral industriesEnvironmental aspects.Mineral industriesEnvironmental aspectsSustainable developmentEconomic development projectsEvaluation.338.2Halland Havard1171143Lokanc MartinNair ArvindDJBFDJBFBOOK9910973557803321The Extractive Industries Sector4367302UNINA