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CLASS CONFLICT (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   039977


Class conflict in Egypt 1945-1970 / Hussein, Mahmoud 1973  Book
Hussein Mahmond Book
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Publication New York, Monthly Review Press, 1973.
Description 379p.hbk
Standard Number 0853452334
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
013148962.052/HUS 013148MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   052559


Dyanamics of conflict and system change: the great transformati / Halperin, Sadra June 2004  Journal Article
Halperin, Sadra Journal Article
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Publication June 2004.
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3
ID:   121957


Tax reform as social policy: adjusting to change in interwar Japan / Revelant, Andrea   Journal Article
Revelant, Andrea Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract In the wide domain of finance, taxation is one of the issues to which public opinion is most sensitive. This paper explores why tax reform was hotly debated in Japan throughout the 1920s, focusing on the policies of the two main political parties. Though a topic rarely treated by historians, this controversy reveals a wealth of information on the concerns that lay behind policy choices in years that were marked by economic instability and social unrest; it shows, in particular, how the ruling elites tried to attenuate class conflict by enhancing the redistributive function of taxes, which had thus far been subordinated to the encouragement of rapid economic growth and the financing of state investment. While these attempts deserve attention as tentative steps towards the development of a welfare state, their limits indicate that the parties, in spite of extending the suffrage during this period, retained strong links with a restricted network of established constituents. This paper dwells especially on the earliest and least studied phase of the dispute on tax reform, in order to prove that the emergence of distinct party platforms did not stem simply from tactical considerations, but was rooted in broader policy visions.
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