The Federalist Papers Dr Pierluigi BonelloThe Federalist Papers (1787 1788) is a collection of essays and articles by Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison. Written in support of the recently completed Constitutional Convention, The Federalist Papers were intended to support the ratification process of the new United States Constitution. When the Constitutional Convention was completed on September 17, 1787 in Philadelphia, the newly agreed upon Constitution was sent to the states
A general absence of reliance on purchased inputs as well as a focus on natural pastures and free-ranging animals prompts comparison between pastoralism and organic farming
with special focus on the mechanisms involved in PGRB/PGPR-mediated mitigation of abiotic and biotic stress in plants and their interaction with other components of the rhizosphere
and Ebru Kayaalp (Department of Anthropology
This book charts the history of first-time Australian motherhood across the last 75 years
The complete early Ptolemaic manuscript from the Walters Art Museum contains two uncommon texts in hieratic
Horticulture covers the production and sale of many of the staple foods of the world
Data were gathered by observing professors in their classrooms
Weber argues that there is a shared
and use the symbols of cooperation to build libraries in higher education
examining how actors
The book defines Lean and Six Sigma as they relate to the legal profession
the Jews underwent a variety of profound changes