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(1) TI:
Integrating Conflict-Resolution Training and Consultation - A
Cyprus Example, AU: Diamond, L., Fisher, RJ, NA: Inst
Multitract Diplomacy Suite 1200,1819 H ST NW,Washington,
DC,20036 Univ. Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK S7N 0W0,CANADA JN:
Negotiation Journal - On the Process of Dispute Settlement,
1995, Vol.11, No.3, pp.287-301 IS: 0748-4526 KP: Party
Consultation
(2) TI: FAMILY
DYNAMICS AND SCHOOL-ACHIEVEMENT IN CYPRUS AU: GEORGIOU_SN NA:
UNIV CYPRUS, DEPT EDUC, KALLIPOLEOS 75,POB 537,NICOSIA,CYPRUS JN:
JOURNAL OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY AND ALLIED
DISCIPLINES, 1995, Vol.36, No.6, pp.977-991 IS: 0021-9630 AB:
The purpose of this study was to examine the extent to which
family cohesion, a functional characteristic of family life, is
related to school achievement. It is already established in the
international literature that such a relationship does exist
between school achievement and a number of structural
characteristics of the family, particularly socioeconomic status
(SES). Demographic data were collected from all the ninth grade
students of two Greek Cypriot high schools, one serving a
suburban and the other serving a rural population. The students
(N = 391) completed a self report questionnaire that was
designed to measure the degree of their family cohesion or the
emotional togetherness that they felt existing among the members
of their family. It was found that the degree of family cohesion
was as able to discriminate them in terms of school achievement
as their family's SES. Both variables produced statistically
significant differences, in contrast to gender and place of
residence (urban vs rural). The results are discussed in
relation to the Greek Cypriot family context. KP: STUDENTS,
COLLEGE, PLANS WA: SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT, FAMILY, CYPRUS, COHESION
(3) TI: THE
CYPRUS ISSUE - A CURRENT PERSPECTIVE - DODD,CH AU: MANGO_A JN:
WORLD TODAY, 1995, Vol.51, No.8-9, p.180 IS: 0043-9134 DT: Book
Review
(4) TI:
BOUTROS-GHALI CYPRUS INITIATIVE IN 1992 - WHY DID IT FAIL AU:
BOLUKBASI_S JN: MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES, 1995, Vol.31, No.3,
pp.460-482 IS: 0026-3206
(5) TI: THE
NEXT MEDITERRANEAN ENLARGEMENT OF THE EUROPEAN-COMMUNITY -
TURKEY, CYPRUS AND MALTA - REDMOND,J AU: WILLIAMS_AM NA: UNIV
EXETER,EXETER EX4 4RJ,DEVON,ENGLAND JN: JOURNAL OF COMMON MARKET
STUDIES, 1995, Vol.33, No.2, pp.297- 298 IS: 0021-9886 DT: Book
Review
(6) TI:
PLANNING FOR SUSTAINABLE TOURISM DEVELOPMENT IN THE MED AU:
GODFREY_KB NA: OXFORD BROOKES UNIV,OXFORD CTR TOURISM &
LEISURE STUDIES,OXFORD OX3 0BP,ENGLAND JN: TOURISM MANAGEMENT,
1995, Vol.16, No.3, pp.243-245 IS: 0261-5177 AB: The Human
Settlements Committee of the United Nations Economic Commission
for Europe held its 18th Meeting of Experts on Human Settlements
Problems in Southern Europe in Nicosia, Cyprus, 6-8 June 1994.
The key theme of discussion concerned the problems and prospects
of planning for sustainable tourism in Mediterranean countries.
Conference delegates were primarily national government
officials concerned with the planning and management of natural
and human habitats in their respective countries.
(7) TI:
ARCHAEOLOGY IN CYPRUS AU: HERSCHER_E NA: 3309 CLEVELAND AVE
NW,WASHINGTON,DC,20008 JN: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY,
1995, Vol.99, No.2, pp.257-294 IS: 0002-9114 KP: AKROTIRI
(8) TI: SEXUAL
AND NATIONAL BOUNDARIES IN TOURISM AU: SCOTT_J NA: 54 BEAUFORT
AVE,BLACKPOOL FY2 9HG,ENGLAND UNIV KENT,CANTERBURY,KENT,ENGLAND
JN: ANNALS OF TOURISM RESEARCH, 1995, Vol.22, No.2, pp.385-403
IS: 0160-7383 AB: This article examines the roles of Turkish
Cypriot and migrant women in tourism employment. While the
participation of Turkish Cypriot women in the tourism labor
force has increased in recent years, migrant women are employed
primarily in those occupations that are considered
''unsuitable'' for local women. It is argued that the division
of female labor, particularly between migrant and local workers,
highlights women's dual role as social actors and symbols of
identity. A case study of a group of Rumanian croupiers examines
how local ideologies of gender and sexuality operate in, and are
in turn influenced by, the incorporation of migrant female
workers into the workplace and the neighborhood where they live.
WA: NORTHERN CYPRUS, MIGRANT WORKERS, BORDERS BOUNDARY,
IDENTITY, GENDER, SEXUALITY
(9) TI: THE
HERITAGE OF NORTH CYPRUS - HANWORTH,R AU: WARREN_J JN:
INTERDISCIPLINARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 1994, Vol.19, No.3, p.264 IS:
0308-0188 DT: Book Review
(10) TI: A
DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS OF NORTH CYPRUS TOURISM AU: AKIS_S,
WARNER_J NA: EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN UNIV,DEPT
ECON,FAMAGUSTA,CYPRUS JN: TOURISM MANAGEMENT, 1994, Vol.15,
No.5, pp.379-387 IS: 0261-5177 AB: Tourism is the main provider
of foreign exchange for the Turkish sector of Cyprus and, as
such, it is important for the Turkish Cypriots to keep their
visitors happy. This paper reports the findings of a survey of
the attitudes of both holiday-makers and suppliers of tourism
services to tourism in North Cyprus. As a consequence of the
survey, suggestions are made for the diversification and further
development of tourism.
(11) TI:
TOURISM IN NORTHERN CYPRUS - PATTERNS, POLICIES AND PROSPECTS
AU: LOCKHART_D NA: KEELE UNIV,DEPT GEOG,STAFFORDSHIRE ST5
5BG,ENGLAND JN: TOURISM MANAGEMENT, 1994, Vol.15, No.5,
pp.370-379 IS: 0261-5177 AB: In contrast with the rapid pace of
tourism development in the Greek Cypriot south of the island,1
tourism has grown only slowly in the Turkish Cypriot north since
inter-communal hostilities in summer 1974 led to the de facto
division of Cyprus. The non-recognition of the Turkish Cypriot
sector has prevented direct air communication except via Turkey
and limited marketing opportunities and inward investment. As a
result only about 10% of visitors to Cyprus, the overwhelming
majority of whom are from Turkey, stay in the north. Recent
seasons have seen increasing numbers of visitors from Europe, a
modest construction boom in the vicinity of Kyrenia and
Famagusta and growth in foreign exchange earnings. So far,
however, the environmental and social impacts of tourism have
been relatively slight. The future prospects for tourism are
outlined. It is suggested that these will be strongly influenced
by the outcome of the latest round of United Nations brokered
negotiations between the leadership of the two communities. KP:
CYCLE
(12) TI:
PROVENANCE STUDIES AND PROBLEM-SOLVING ON BRONZE-AGE CYPRUS AU:
KNAPP_AB NA: MACQUARIE UNIV,N RYDE,NSW 2113,AUSTRALIA JN:
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, 1994, Vol.98, No.2, p.338 IS:
0002-9114 DT: Meeting Abstract
(13) TI: MARONI
- CHANGE IN LATE BRONZE-AGE CYPRUS AU: CADOGAN_G JN: AMERICAN
JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, 1994, Vol.98, No.2, pp.294-295 IS:
0002-9114 DT: Meeting Abstract
(14) TI:
ATHIENOU ARCHAEOLOGICAL PROJECT, 1993 - THE 4TH SEASON OF
INVESTIGATIONS AT ATHIENOU-MALLOURA, CYPRUS AU: TOUMAZOU_MK,
KARDULIAS_PN, YERKES_RW NA: DAVIDSON COLL,DAVIDSON,NC,28036
KENYON COLL,GAMBIER,OH,43022 OHIO STATE UNIV,COLUMBUS,OH,43210
JN: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, 1994, Vol.98, No.2, p.290
IS: 0002-9114 DT: Meeting Abstract
(15) TI:
SYLLABARY AND ALPHABET IN CYPRUS - EVIDENCE FOR THE ROLE OF
SCRIPT IN ANCIENT-SOCIETY AU: BAZEMORE_GB JN: AMERICAN JOURNAL
OF ARCHAEOLOGY, 1994, Vol.98, No.2, p.290 IS: 0002-9114 DT:
Meeting Abstract
(16) TI: THE
LOWER GEOMETRIC CEMETERY OF LAPITHOS IN CYPRUS AU: DONOHOE_JM
NA: UNIV PENN,UNIV MUSEUM,PHILADELPHIA,PA,19104 JN: AMERICAN
JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, 1994, Vol.98, No.2, p.289 IS: 0002-9114
DT: Meeting Abstract
(17) TI:
REGIONAL VARIATION IN MORTUARY RITUAL IN EARLY IRON-AGE CYPRUS
AU: MORDEN_ME NA: UNIV MICHIGAN,ANN ARBOR,MI,48109 JN: AMERICAN
JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, 1994, Vol.98, No.2, p.289 IS: 0002-9114
DT: Meeting Abstract
(18) TI: CYPRUS
- A CRISIS OF CONFIDENCE AU: CRAWSHAW_N JN: WORLD TODAY, 1994,
Vol.50, No.4, pp.70-73 IS: 0043-9134
(19) TI:
CHEMICAL CLASSIFICATION AND PROVENANCE OF SOME ROMAN GLAZED
CERAMICS AU: HATCHER_H, KACZMARCZYK_A, SCHERER_A, SYMONDS_RP NA:
UNIV OXFORD,ARCHAEOL RES LAB,6 KEBLE RD,OXFORD OX1 3QJ,ENGLAND
TUFTS UNIV,DEPT CHEM,MEDFORD,MA,02155 DEPT ANTIQUITES GRECQUES
ETRUSQUES & ROMAINES,F-75058 PARIS,FRANCE MUSEUM
LONDON,LONDON EC2Y 5HN,ENGLAND JN: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF
ARCHAEOLOGY, 1994, Vol.98, No.3, pp.431-456 IS: 0002-9114 AB:
Within the large corpus of publications devoted to Roman
pottery, few provide analyses of the clay body or glaze of
lead-glazed ceramics. To gain some idea if widely separated
workshops used similar glaze formulations we subjected over 100
specimens, mostly recovered from two corners of the Roman world,
Roman Britain and Asia, to spectroscopic analysis. The
variability of glaze compositions is small enough to suggest
that a standard recipe combining lead with the traditional
ingredients developed for alkaline glazes probably served as a
model throughout the Empire. We have detected the first case of
the use of chromite as black underglaze pigment in a pre-
Islamic ceramic. Glaze analyses proved less useful than body
fabric analyses for correlating unprovenanced specimens with
wares from known findspots and known or suspected workshops. The
analytical data are consistent with stylistic arguments that
attribute the overwhelming majority of our Romano-British
fragments to workshops in Gaul. Specimens from the Ionian coast
show affinities with Smyrna wares, which are distinctly
different from vessels from Tarsus. No single origin is
indicated for vessels from Cyprus, Alexandria, or Syria-some may
have come from Italy, others from Tarsus or elsewhere. The
analytical groupings correlate well with stylistic
classifications proposed by Hochuli-Gysel for wares from Asia
Minor.*
(20) TI: THE
SOCIAL-CONTEXT OF ANIMAL HUSBANDRY IN EARLY AGRICULTURAL
SOCIETIES - ETHNOGRAPHIC INSIGHTS AND AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXAMPLE
FROM CYPRUS AU: KESWANI_PS NA: 161 MERCER ST,APT
6B,SOMERVILLE,NJ,08876 JN: JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL
ARCHAEOLOGY, 1994, Vol.13, No.3, pp.255-277 IS: 0278-4165 AB:
Much of the recent literature on faunal analysis is concerned
with the identification of specialized herd management
strategies geared toward maximizing yields of primary and
secondary products (meat, milk, wool, etc.) from domesticated
animals. Models of these strategies can be very useful in the
interpretation of faunal assemblages from state or market-
centered economies, but their applicability to less complex
societies is problematic. A review of the ethnographic
literature suggests that a variety of socioideological and
ritual requirements, rather than utilitarian optimizing
principles, structures patterns of animal husbandry in pre-
state, pre-market (or extra-state, extra-market) societies. The
archaeological implications of this observation are explored in
the context of prehistoric Cyprus, where long-term changes in
the composition of faunal assemblages appear to be closely
linked to transformations in social organization and ritual
practice. (C) 1994 Academic Press, Inc. KP: BRONZE-AGE,
OLD-WORLD, ORIGINS, EUROPE, PASTORALISM, AFRICA
(21) TI: THE
NATIONAL STRUGGLE MUSEUMS OF A DIVIDED CITY AU: PAPADAKIS_Y NA:
UNIV CAMBRIDGE CHURCHILL COLL,CAMBRIDGE CB3 0DS,ENGLAND JN:
ETHNIC AND RACIAL STUDIES, 1994, Vol.17, No.3, pp.400-419 IS:
0141-9870 AB: The article compares the two National Struggle
Museums situated on either side of Nicosia, the divided capital
of Cyprus. Their differences, it is suggested, reflect the
differences of Greek and Turkish nationalism while their
similarities are an outcome of their sharing the same form of
historical representation: the past as a narrative of national
struggle. The structural similarities of the two museums are
thus utilized in order to highlight the specific 'syntax' of
narratives of national struggle, as well as to discuss some of
their implications for multi-ethnic states in which the past is
primarily conceptualized in this way. It is suggested that the
notion of the nation as an 'imagined community' should be
supplemented by a notion of the nation as the central actor and
moral centre of a historical narrative that gives meaning to the
past and indicates future orientations.
(22) TI:
CHRISTIANS AND MUSLIMS IN OTTOMAN CYPRUS AND THE MEDITERRANEAN
WORLD 1571-1640 - JENNINGS,RC AU: AKSAN_V NA: MCMASTER UNIV,DEPT
HIST,HAMILTON L8S 4L8,ONTARIO,CANADA JN: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL
OF MIDDLE EAST STUDIES, 1994, Vol.26, No.3, pp.514-516 IS:
0020-7438 DT: Book Review
(23) TI:
CHRISTIANS AND MUSLIMS IN OTTOMAN CYPRUS AND THE MEDITERRANEAN
WORLD, 1570-1640 - JENNINGS,RC AU: ZILFI_MC NA: UNIV
MARYLAND,COLL PK,MD,20742 JN: AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW, 1994,
Vol.99, No.3, p.947 IS: 0002-8762 DT: Book Review
(24) TI: THE
GREEK-CYPRIOT REFUGEES - PERCEPTIONS OF RETURN UNDER CONDITIONS
OF PROTRACTED EXILE AU: ZETTER_R NA: OXFORD BROOKES
UNIV,OXFORD,ENGLAND JN: INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION REVIEW, 1994,
Vol.28, No.2, pp.307-322 IS: 0197-9183 AB: Constituting a
crucial element in the search for a permanent solution to the
Cyprus problem, the needs and aspirations of the 180,000
refugees are examined in this article. Of the three durable
solutions to refugee crises, repatriation has consistently been
advocated as the only option for the Cypriot situation.
Contrasting the images of temporariness and permanency of exile,
the article examines the extent to which die refugees, in the
light of the dramatic social and economic changes that have
taken place in the refugee community since the exodus of 1974,
might perceive of return as their sole feasible or potential
objective. The article argues that the ambiguous identity of the
refugees, as both insiders and outsiders, and the protracted
political uncertainty of their status give contradictory
messages about the likely scale, processes, and success of their
return.
(25) TI:
COMPOSITIONAL ANALYSIS OF EASTERN SIGILLATA-A AND RELATED WARES
FROM TEL-ANAFA (ISRAEL) AU: SLANE_KW, ELAM_JM, GLASCOCK_MD,
NEFF_H NA: UNIV MISSOURI,DEPT ART HIST & ARCHAEL,109 PICKARD
HALL,COLUMBIA,MO,65211 UNIV MISSOURI,MISSOURI UNIV RES
REACTOR,COLUMBIA,MO,65211 JN: JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE,
1994, Vol.21, No.1, pp.51-64 IS: 0305-4403 KP: ARCHAEOLOGICAL
CERAMICS WA: NAA, EASTERN SIGILLATA-A, POTTERY, CERAMICS,
PROVENANCE, PHOENICIAN, TELANAFA, CYPRUS
(26) TI:
BANDITRY, MYTH, AND TERROR IN CYPRUS AND OTHER MEDITERRANEAN
SOCIETIES AU: CASSIA_PS NA: UNIV DURHAM,DURHAM DH1 3HP,ENGLAND
JN: COMPARATIVE STUDIES IN SOCIETY AND HISTORY, 1993, Vol.35,
No.4, pp.773-795 IS: 0010-4175
(27) TI: THE
NEW UNIVERSITY-OF-CYPRUS - QUESTIONS AND FUTURE IMPLICATIONS AU:
KOYZIS_AA NA: UNIV WISCONSIN,COLL EDUC & HUMAN SERV,DEPT
EDUC FDN,OSHKOSH,WI,54901 JN: INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF EDUCATION,
1993, Vol.39, No.5, pp.435- 438 IS: 0020-8566 DT: Note
(28) TI:
MAMMALS, VEGETATION AND THE INITIAL HUMAN SETTLEMENT OF THE
MEDITERRANEAN ISLANDS - A PALEOECOLOGICAL APPROACH AU: SCHULE_W
NA: UNIV FREIBURG,INST UR & FRUHGESCHICHTE,W-7800
FREIBURG,GERMANY JN: JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 1993, Vol.20,
No.4, pp.399-412 IS: 0305-0270 DT: Review AB: Most suggested
Quaternary land-bridges to Mediterranean islands are
geologically impossible. In an attempt to explain the presence
of the various species, modes and ecological consequences of
Quaternary island colonization by large mammals and man in the
Mediterranean are discusssed from a hypothetical point of view,
as are the reasons for the extinction of the Quaternary fauna.
Small arboricole mammals may have reached the islands on
vegetation-rafts. Some larger mammals, like Myotragus on the
Balearic Islands, Prolagus on Sardinia, and possibly endemic
deer on the Aegean islands, could be relics of the desiccation
of the Mediterranean on the Mio/Pliocene border. Hippos,
elephants and giant deer reached the islands by swimming. At the
arrival of new species, older endemic species became extinct by
ecological competition. Overpopulation consisting of a single or
few species with corresponding damages to the vegetation led to
dwarfing and an adaptation to hard foods. Because of the lack of
carnivores, the genetically fixed behaviour patterns for flight
and attack are lost in island endemics. During the Middle (Corso-Sardinia)
and Upper Pleistocene, suspected or established (Sardinia,
Cyprus, Sicily) invasions of Homo sp. led to the near-complete
extinction of the unwary endemic fauna. Some islands (Sicily,
Corso-Sardinia) were repopulated by swimming ungulates which
were exterminated by later human invasions. For lack of game, a
permanent human settlement was nearly impossible before the
Neolithic. All extant wild ungulates on the Mediterranean
islands are feral domestic animals, or continental game with
intact behavioural patterns introduced for religious or hunting
purposes during the Neolithic or later. None of them has
Pleistocene ancestors on the islands. KP: HUMAN OCCUPATION,
NATIONAL-PARK, SARDINIA, MORTALITY, HISTORY, SIZE WA:
MEDITERRANEAN GEOLOGY, ISLAND COLONIZATION, MAMMALS,
EXTINCTIONS, HUMAN SETTLEMENT, PALEOECOLOGY
(29) TI: THE
COMMONWEALTH IN CYPRUS AU: MAYALL_J NA: UNIV LONDON LONDON SCH
ECON & POLIT SCI,CTR INT STUDIES,LONDON WC2A 2AE,ENGLAND JN:
WORLD TODAY, 1993, Vol.49, No.12, pp.239-241 IS: 0043-9134
(30) TI: CYPRUS
- A PEACEKEEPING PARADIGM AU: MCDONALD_R JN: WORLD TODAY, 1993,
Vol.49, No.10, pp.182-184 IS: 0043-9134 DT: Note
(31) TI:
ETHNIC-CONFLICT AND POLITICAL ACCOMMODATION IN PLURAL SOCIETIES
- CYPRUS AND OTHER CASES AU: RIZVI_G NA: UNIV OXFORD NUFFIELD
COLL,OXFORD OX1 1NF,ENGLAND JN: JOURNAL OF COMMONWEALTH &
COMPARATIVE POLITICS, 1993, Vol.31, No.1, pp.57-83 IS: 0306-3631
(32) TI: THE
KINGDOM OF CYPRUS AND THE CRUSADES, 1191-1374 - EDBURG,PW AU:
NICHOLSON_H JN: HISTORY WORKSHOP-A JOURNAL OF SOCIALIST AND
FEMINIST HISTORIANS, 1993, No.35, pp.225-227 IS: 0309-2984 DT:
Book Review
(33) TI: UNDER
A SPELL - THE STRATEGIC USE OF MAGIC IN GREEK CYPRIOT SOCIETY
AU: ARGYROU_V NA: INDIANA UNIV,BLOOMINGTON,IN,47401 JN: AMERICAN
ETHNOLOGIST, 1993, Vol.20, No.2, pp.256-271 IS: 0094-0496 AB: In
Cyprus, actors who use the notion of magic to explain particular
events and acts are typically labeled ''superstitious'' and
''ignorant.'' The arguments employed to support this accusation
are strongly reminiscent of colonial anthropology and, like it,
they function to legitimate relations of domination. Evidence
from Cyprus suggests that far from signifying superstition,
recourse to the notion of magic is a social strategy. Similarly,
a community's acceptance of magical explanations may be
construed in terms of the ''performative appropriateness'' of
magic in Cyprus. WA: STRATEGY, IDEOLOGY, POWER RELATIONS, MAGIC,
CYPRUS
(34) TI: PUBLIC
AWARENESS AND ATTITUDES TOWARD TRANSPLANTATION IN CYPRUS AU:
KYRIAKIDES_G, HADJIGAVRIEL_M, HADJICOSTAS_P, NICOLAIDES_A,
KYRIAKIDES_M NA: PARASKEVAIDION SURG & TRANSPLANT FDN,POB
4307,NICOSIA,CYPRUS JN: TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS, 1993,
Vol.25, No.3, p.2279 IS: 0041-1345
(35) TI: EARLY
CYPRIOTS AND EXTINCT PYGMY HIPPOPOTAMI AU: SIMMONS_AH NA: UNIV
& COMMUNITY COLL SYST NEVADA,DESERT RES INST,CTR QUATERNARY
SCI,RENO,NV,89506 JN: RESEARCH & EXPLORATION, 1993, Vol.9,
No.1, pp.123-125 IS: 8755-724X DT: Note KP: CYPRUS
(36) TI: CYPRUS
- AN EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH TO CONFLICT-RESOLUTION AU:
HADJIPAVLOUTRIGEORGIS_M, TRIGEORGIS_L NA: HARVARD
UNIV,CAMBRIDGE,MA,02138 BOSTON UNIV,BOSTON,MA,02215 JN: JOURNAL
OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION, 1993, Vol.37, No.2, pp.340-360 IS:
0022-0027 AB: This article presents an evolutionary cooperative
approach to conflict resolution that would lower the fears and
raise the hopes of parties in conflict by proceeding
incrementally in phases that would allow interaction and
reciprocity, learning, and flexibility (through options to
expand or abandon cooperation/integration). With reference to
the Cyprus conflict, although initially maintaining two separate
decentralized zones, the simultaneous creation of a third, joint
federated area to serve as the nucleus of a cooperative,
interactive, centralized federation is proposed. A
''conciliation stage'' should precede a federated structure
''testing'' phase, before expanding and ratifying full-scale
implementation contingent on successful interim cohabitation.
(37) TI: 2 NATO
ALLIES AT THE THRESHOLD OF WAR - CYPRUS - A FIRSTHAND ACCOUNT OF
CRISIS MANAGEMENT, 1965-1968 - HART,PT AU: CRAWFORD_WR JN:
MIDDLE EAST JOURNAL, 1991, Vol.45, No.1, pp.132-133 IS:
0026-3141 DT: Book Review
(38) TI:
ENTANGLED ALLIES - UNITED-STATES-POLICY TOWARD GREECE, TURKEY,
AND CYPRUS - STEARNS,M AU: CRAWFORD_WR JN: MIDDLE EAST JOURNAL,
1992, Vol.46, No.4, pp.692-693 IS: 0026-3141 DT: Book Review
(39) TI:
ENTANGLED ALLIES - UNITED-STATES-POLICY TOWARD GREECE, TURKEY,
AND CYPRUS - STEARNS,M AU: GERNER_DJ NA: UNIV KANSAS,DEPT POLIT
SCI,LAWRENCE,KS,66045 JN: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EAST
STUDIES, 1993, Vol.25, No.2, pp.364-366 IS: 0020-7438 DT: Book
Review
(40) TI: CYPRUS
AND THE INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY - WILSON,R AU: MANGO_A NA: UNIV
LONDON SCH ORIENTAL & AFRICAN STUDIES,LONDON WC1E
7HP,ENGLAND JN: INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 1993, Vol.69, No.2,
pp.397-398 IS: 0020-5850 DT: Book Review
(41) TI:
ENTANGLED ALLIES - UNITED-STATES-POLICY TOWARD GREECE, TURKEY,
AND CYPRUS - STEARNS,M AU: QUANDT_WB JN: FOREIGN AFFAIRS, 1992,
Vol.71, No.4, p.214 IS: 0015-7120 DT: Book Review
(42) TI:
MANUFACTURING EXPORTS, ECONOMIC-GROWTH AND THE CURRENT ACCOUNT
IN A SMALL ISLAND ECONOMY - SIMULATION RESULTS FROM AN
ECONOMETRIC-MODEL FOR CYPRUS AU: DEMETRIADES_P, ALJEBORY_A,
KAMPERIS_G NA: UNIV KEELE,KEELE ST5 5BG,STAFFS,ENGLAND JN: WORLD
DEVELOPMENT, 1993, Vol.21, No.2, pp.259-268 IS: 0305-750X AB:
The paper provides some background information about economic
conditions in Cyprus and presents a dynamic econometric model
for this economy. The model is estimated using the three-stage-
least-squares method. A number of simulation exercises, designed
to uncover the dynamic multipliers in the economy of Cyprus, are
performed. The main finding of this paper is that manufacturing
exports seem to provide a very small impetus to economic growth
and have only a marginal beneficial influence on the current
account balance. Both results can, in fact, be ascribed to the
narrow resource base of a small island economy. This is
reflected in the high import content of manufactured products
since raw materials and machinery required for the production of
these goods are usually imported. As a result the strategy of
diversification through the support of manufacturing seems to be
one with doubtful economic benefits. KP: ERROR CORRECTION,
COINTEGRATION, DEMAND
(43) TI: THE
KINGDOM OF CYPRUS AND THE CRUSADES, 1191-1374 - EDBURY,PW AU:
PETERS_E NA: UNIV PENN,DEPT HIST,PHILADELPHIA,PA,19104 JN:
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EAST STUDIES, 1993, Vol.25,
No.1, pp.136-138 IS: 0020-7438 DT: Book Review
(44) TI: COPPER
AND BRONZE WORKING IN EARLY THROUGH MIDDLE BRONZE-AGE CYPRUS -
BALTHAZAR,JW AU: TATTONBROWN_V NA: BRITISH MUSEUM,DEPT GREEK
& ROMAN ANTIQUITIES,LONDON WC1B 3DG,ENGLAND JN: AMERICAN
JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, 1993, Vol.97, No.1, pp.174-175 IS:
0002-9114 DT: Book Review
(45) TI: THE
MACRODYNAMICS OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION AS A SOCIOCULTURAL
DIFFUSION PROCESS .B. APPLICATIONS AU: DIAMANTIDES_ND NA: KENT
STATE UNIV,DEPT GEOG,POB 5190,KENT,OH,44242 JN: TECHNOLOGICAL
FORECASTING AND SOCIAL CHANGE, 1992, Vol.42, No.4, pp.385-408
IS: 0040-1625 AB: This study formulates a model of the
macrodynamics of international migration using a differential
equation to capture the push-pull forces that propel it. The
model's architecture rests on the functioning of information
feedback between settled friends and family at the destination
and potential emigrants at the origin. The intensity of the
ensuing migratory flow is determined by a nexus of mediators
prevailing in either society and comprising (a) legal
prerogatives such as migration laws, (b) economic prerogatives
measured by the ratio of income per capita between destination
and origin, (c) political prerogatives such as war or other
forms of compulsion, (d) natural stimulants such as climatic
extremes and epidemics, (e) societal conditions such as
job-hierarchy differences and network characteristics, and (f)
causes other than the ones motivating the pool members, such as
the masons of the so-called ''brain drain.'' The mathematical
entity thus constructed is named the mediating factor, and
features both steady-state and transient components that are
accommodated by the model. While the model's architecture is
independent of any geographic or temporal specificity, the model
is capable of portraying migration flow between any given
origin/destination pair and over any designated historical
period-this through the numerical values of the model parameters
derived from the historical, demographic, and economic data of
the case. Two specific paradigms of diverse nature serve to
demonstrate the model's tenets and pertinence, one being Greek
emigration to the United States since 1820, and the other total
out-migration from Cyprus since statehood (1946). KP:
DETERMINANTS, EMIGRATION
(46) TI:
PREHISTORIC ANTIGORITE PROCUREMENT IN CYPRUS AU: HANCOCK_RGV,
FOX_WA NA: UNIV TORONTO,SLOWPOKE REACTOR FACIL,TORONTO M5S
1A4,ONTARIO,CANADA UNIV TORONTO,DEPT CHEM ENGN & APPL
CHEM,TORONTO M5S 1A4,ONTARIO,CANADA ONTARIO MINIST CULTURE &
COMMUN,HERITAGE BRANCH,TORONTO M7A 2R9,ON,CANADA JN:
ARCHAEOMETRY, 1992, Vol.34, No.Pt1, pp.3-10 IS: 0003-813X AB:
The Canadian Palaipaphos Survey Project in the Paphos district
of south-western Cyprus investigated extensive areas of the
Esouzas, Xero, and Dhiarizos River valleys, locating hundreds of
archaeological sites spanning the nine millennia from the
aceramic Neolithic period to the recent era (Rupp et al. 1984
and 1986). Antigorite artefacts were recovered from Neolithic,
Chalcolithic and Bronze Age settlements. A number of geological
sources have been proposed for the material from which these
artefacts were manufactured. The results of neutron activation
analyses of archaeological and geological specimens suggest that
the Troodos ophiolite/Kouris River secondary deposits were the
primary source of antigorite for the prehistoric populations of
the study area. Extreme care must be taken when analysing
antigorite samples to avoid material with grey-black
magnetite-rich inclusions, since these have radically different
trace element chemistries from the pure antigorite. WA: CYPRUS,
NEOLITHIC, CHALCOLITHIC, BRONZE AGE, NEUTRON ACTIVATION
ANALYSIS, ORNAMENT, PEBBLE, ANTIGORITE, PROVENANCE
(47) TI:
ENTANGLED ALLIES - UNITED-STATES-POLICY TOWARD GREECE, TURKEY,
AND CYPRUS - STEARNS,M AU: FOUGNER_T NA: PRIO,OSLO,NORWAY JN:
JOURNAL OF PEACE RESEARCH, 1992, Vol.29, No.4, pp.473-474 IS:
0022-3433 DT: Book Review
(48) TI: THE
KINGDOM OF CYPRUS AND THE CRUSADES, 1191-1374 - EDBURY,PW AU:
POWELL_JM NA: SYRACUSE UNIV,SYRACUSE,NY,13244 JN: AMERICAN
HISTORICAL REVIEW, 1992, Vol.97, No.4, pp.1200-1201 IS:
0002-8762 DT: Book Review
(49) TI: CYPRUS
- A REGIONAL CONFLICT AND ITS RESOLUTION - SALEM,N AU: CLIVE_N
JN: INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 1992, Vol.68, No.4, p.775 IS:
0020-5850 DT: Book Review
(50) TI:
TOURISM DEVELOPMENT AGENTS - THE CYPRIOT RESORT CYCLE AU:
IOANNIDES_D NA: RUTGERS STATE UNIV,DEPT URBAN PLANNING &
POLICY DEV,NEW BRUNSWICK,NJ,08903 JN: ANNALS OF TOURISM
RESEARCH, 1992, Vol.19, No.4, pp.711-731 IS: 0160-7383 AB: Few
applications of Butler's resort cycle have related the role of
the state to the activities of foreign tourism operators and the
indigenous context in determining the evolution of tourism at
various destinations. This paper provides a holistic perspective
of the blend of foreign with indigenous factors in shaping the
Cypriot tourism industry. While the island's tourism is subject
to a considerable degree of influence from transnational firms,
the Government has been a key force responsible for emerging
developmental patterns. This research stresses the importance of
perceiving the growth of tourism at a destination, not as an
actor-less development path, but one contingent on the behavior
of national institutions and their response to international
agents. KP: LIFE-CYCLE, ISLE WA: RESORT CYCLE, TRANSNATIONAL
FIRMS, STATE INTERVENTION, CYPRUS
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