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Are you an interested in planning to start an online business or do you just want to start an online shop ? Peter Kent and Jill K Finlayson, in their top selling book “How to Make Money Online with eBay, Yahoo!, and Google” (ISBN: 978-0072262612), introduce you to a step-by-step plan to generate revenue online and maximize profits. It helps you reach targeted buyers using strategic search engine placements ....

Title: Slovakia: The Escape for Invisability (Postcommunist States & Nations)
Author: Karen Henderson
ISBN: 0415274362
EAN: 9780415274364
1. Edition
176 Pages
Publisher: Routledge
Binding: Hardcover
Publication date: 2002-08-15
Author: Karen Henderson
ISBN: 0415274362
EAN: 9780415274364
1. Edition
176 Pages
Publisher: Routledge
Binding: Hardcover
Publication date: 2002-08-15
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This book provides a unique and thorough introduction to Slovakia and will enable the reader to understand its multi-faceted nature. It includes chapters on Twentieth Century History, Politics, Economy and International Relations.
Slovakia is one of the least known countries of Central Europe, although it is easily accessible to the western visitor: its capital city, Bratislava, is only an hours drive from Vienna. As the country's accession to the EU draws near, it becomes vitally important to close the knowledge gap, and supply a diverse audience with balanced information about Slovakia as an independent state. The book begins by outlining the history of Slovakia over the last hundred years, and explains the importance of it's Hungarian roots, as well as its development in a common sense with the Czechs. It then examines Slovakia's political development since independence in 1993, and traces the elements of democratic stability which were a backdrop to the more dramatic and turbulent events of the 1990s. Henderson looks at independent Slovakia's international relations, and traces its path to Euro-Atlantic integration amidst the diversions of squabbling with it's neighbours and summarises Slovakia's economic progress, looking at underlying positive trends as well as the more sensational aberrations in its rapid construction of a functioning market economy.This book breaks through the stereotypi portrayal of Slovakia as a 'problem case' among the four Visegard states of East Central Europe. It prevents not just fact but also analysis designed to enable academic, professional and general audiences to evaluate the Slovakia Republic as an actor in the new united Europe, and also to understand its future role in the development of the continent. It portrays Slovakia as a complex, modern state, where a multitude of domestic and external influences interact to produce a fascinating picture of conflict and consensus. Slovakia should be of particular interest to students of East Central Europe, EU eastward enlargement and post-communist democratisation.
Slovakia is one of the least known countries of Central Europe, although it is easily accessible to the western visitor: its capital city, Bratislava, is only an hours drive from Vienna. As the country's accession to the EU draws near, it becomes vitally important to close the knowledge gap, and supply a diverse audience with balanced information about Slovakia as an independent state.
The book begins by outlining the history of Slovakia over the last hundred years, and explains the importance of it's Hungarian roots, as well as its development in a common sense with the Czechs. It then examines Slovakia's political development since independence in 1993, and traces the elements of democratic stability which were a backdrop to the more dramatic and turbulent events of the 1990s. Henderson looks at independent Slovakia's international relations, and traces its path to Euro-Atlantic integration amidst the diversions of squabbling with it's neighbours and summarises Slovakia's economic progress, looking at underlying positive trends as well as the more sensational aberrations in its rapid construction of a functioning market economy.
This book breaks through the stereotypical portrayal of Slovakia as a 'problem case' among the four Visegard states of East Central Europe. It prevents not just fact but also analysis designed to enable academic, professional and general audiences to evaluate the Slovakia Republic as an actor in the new united Europe, and also to understand its future role in the development of the continent. It portrays Slovakia as a complex, modern state, where a multitude of domestic and external influences interact to produce a fascinating picture of conflict and consensus. Slovakia should be of particular interest to students of East Central Europe, EU eastward enlargement and post-communist democratisation.
The book begins by outlining the history of Slovakia over the last hundred years, and explains the importance of it's Hungarian roots, as well as its development in a common sense with the Czechs. It then examines Slovakia's political development since independence in 1993, and traces the elements of democratic stability which were a backdrop to the more dramatic and turbulent events of the 1990s. Henderson looks at independent Slovakia's international relations, and traces its path to Euro-Atlantic integration amidst the diversions of squabbling with it's neighbours and summarises Slovakia's economic progress, looking at underlying positive trends as well as the more sensational aberrations in its rapid construction of a functioning market economy.
This book breaks through the stereotypical portrayal of Slovakia as a 'problem case' among the four Visegard states of East Central Europe. It prevents not just fact but also analysis designed to enable academic, professional and general audiences to evaluate the Slovakia Republic as an actor in the new united Europe, and also to understand its future role in the development of the continent. It portrays Slovakia as a complex, modern state, where a multitude of domestic and external influences interact to produce a fascinating picture of conflict and consensus. Slovakia should be of particular interest to students of East Central Europe, EU eastward enlargement and post-communist democratisation.
Karen Henderson has been lecturer in Politics at the University of Leicester since 1990. She has followed Slovak politics closely since studying in Bratislava in 1987, and has also written extensively on EU eastward enlargement.
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