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| | CESS Annual Conference - Paper Abstracts 2004 |
 | | Although the policy decisions made by the two states reflect vastly different goals, I maintain that the greatest impact of these migration policies is not in their effect on the occurrence of internal migration but rather on their effect on the ability of the capital cities to handle the influx of migrants. |
 | | Most of the states have issued stamps that depicted major national symbols, such as maps, flags, coats of arms, and political leaders, and also their national heritage (epics, monuments, and traditional clothing), and nature (wildlife, flowers, butterflies), there have also been variations in the depiction of major individuals (poets, artists, composers), and national parks. |
 | | Stamps are "windows" on the state that reveal what the state wishes to inform its own residents and those outside about what it considers important in its heritage and place in the world. |
| cess.fas.harvard.edu /CESSpg_conf_abstracts2004.html (17795 words) |
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