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Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australia

Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australia
Author: Kenneth S. Cooper
Publisher:
Total Pages: 522
Release: 1984
Genre: Africa
ISBN: 9780382028342

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Old World Continents

Old World Continents
Author: Bruce McClish
Publisher: Heinemann-Raintree Library
Total Pages: 40
Release: 2003
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9781403429872

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This book profiles Europe, Asia, and Africa and looks at the natural and cultural relationships between closely connected landmasses.


Distant Countries

Distant Countries
Author: Isaac Oscar Winslow
Publisher:
Total Pages: 210
Release: 1910
Genre: Africa
ISBN:

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Peace Beyond Borders (Intl)

Peace Beyond Borders (Intl)
Author: Vijay Mehta
Publisher: New Internationalist
Total Pages: 167
Release: 2016-05-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1780263775

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How did the world’s most warlike continent become its most peaceful one? Mehta argues that the process of political integration through the European Union has eliminated the reasons for conflict, and that this same model can be exported to Africa, The Americas, Asia, Australasia, and the Middle East and North Africa region, providing a promising glimpse of world peace.


The Myth of Continents

The Myth of Continents
Author: Martin W. Lewis
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 361
Release: 1997
Genre: Geographical perception
ISBN: 0520207424

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"Despite the recent surge of interest in geographical concepts and ideas, most social, cultural, and political studies are riddled with unexamined spatial assumptions. The Myth of Continents initiates a much-needed consideration of this state of affairs. Through a wide-ranging analysis of such metageographical constructs as East, West, Europe, and Asia, Lewis and Wigen provide provocative insights into the nature and significance of the ways we usually divide up the world. Moreover, they do so in an engaging and highly readable style. Readers of The Myth of Continents will never again see the world regions in quite the same way."--Alexander B. Murphy, author of The Regional Dynamics of Language Differentiation in Belgium "An exciting, thoughtful, engaging, innovative book that demonstrates the need to reexamine commonly held assumptions about the world's division into continents, East/West, First/Second/Third World, etc. Readers will be drawn to its 'big-think' quality of shattering commonly held assumptions and to its up-to-the-minute contemporary feel."--Benjamin Orlove, coeditor of State, Capital, and Rural Society: Anthropological Perspectives on Political Economy in Mexico and the Andes "An important and long overdue housecleaning of old geographical concepts, based upon an impressively wide reading of regional literatures."--Edmund Burke III, editor of Struggle and Survival in the Modern Middle East