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Some Related Sentences

Nationalization and also
Ripley was also a mining community with collieries owned until the Coal Nationalization Act of 1947 by Butterley Company.
# Nationalization of Forests and Pasturelands: Introduced many measures, not only to protect the national resources and stop the destruction of forests and pasturelands, but also to further develop and cultivate them.
Nationalization usually refers to private assets, but may also mean assets owned by lower levels of government, such as municipalities, being transferred to the public sector to be operated and owned by the state.
It was also reissued by, amongst others, Henry Hyndman under the title of The Nationalization of the Land in 1795 and 1882.

Nationalization and private
Nationalization reduced the relative importance of the private sector.
This was done through the Decree on Nationalization that declared the nationalization of all large-scale private enterprises while requisitioning grain away from peasants and providing it to workers in cities and Red soldiers fighting the Whites.
* October 1, 1907: Completion of nationalization of 17 private railways under 1906 Railway Nationalization Act
Nationalization ( British English spelling nationalisation ) is the process of taking a private industry or private assets into public ownership by a national government or state.
Nationalization has been used to refer to either direct state-ownership and management of an enterprise or to a government acquiring a large controlling share of a nominally private, publicly listed corporation.
In Japan, the Railway Nationalization Act of 1906 brought most of the country's private railway lines under public control.

Nationalization and .
Nationalization, even during the Soilih years, has been limited.
Nationalization would be the first step in a long-term process of socializing production: introducing employee management and reorganizing production to directly produce for use rather than profit.
The Immigration and Nationalization Service advises that “ in some cases, it may be to a couple's advantage to pursue a K-1 fiancee visa before getting married.
The railway was acquired by the national government in 1907 under the 1906 Railway Nationalization Act.
* The Nationalization of a Language: Filipino by C. J. Paz, University of the Philippines
# Nationalization of all Water Resources, introduction of projects and policies in order to conserve and benefit from Iran's limited water resources.
Noteworthy bills passed by the Parliament under the Pahlavi Dynasty include the Oil Nationalization Bill ( 15 March 1951 ) and the Family Protection Law ( 1967 ), which gave women many basic rights such as custody of children in the case of divorce.
** Remedy for National Poverty Impending Nationalization.
Mosse claims however that it was not until his book The Nationalization of the Masses ( 1975 ), which dealt with the sacralization of politics, that he began to put his own stamp upon the analysis of cultural history.
* The Nationalization of the Masses: Political Symbolism and Mass Movements in Germany from the Napoleonic Wars through the Third Reich, 1975.
Nationalization, as a tool of modernization, was imparted on Africa by colonialists who wanted to westernize and modernize tribal Africa.
Although today Portuguese prevails, mostly as a result of the campaign of the " Nacionalização " ( Nationalization ) forcefully imposed on all German and Italian settled areas of southern Brazil by president and dictator Getúlio Vargas in the 1940s.
Those included were the State Bank of Pakistan Act, 1956, Banking Companies Ordinance, 1962 and Banks Nationalization Act, 1974.
Nationalization was one of the major strategies advocated by socialists for transitioning from capitalism to socialism.
Nationalization may occur with or without compensation to the former owners.
Nationalization is distinguished from property redistribution in that the government retains control of nationalized property.

also and forcibly
Copts also believe that the Pope of Alexandria was forcibly prevented from attending the third congregation of the council from which he was ousted, apparently the result of a conspiracy tailored by the Roman delegates.
Qutb preached that Muslims must engage in a two-pronged attack of converting individuals while also waging jihad to forcibly eliminate the " structures " of Jahiliyya – not only from the Islamic homeland but from the face of the earth.
Richard also allied with Humphrey IV of Toron, Isabella's first husband, from whom she had been forcibly divorced in 1190.
These slaves were also forcibly relocated during the process of removal.
In 2010, the Israel Defense Forces forcibly boarded an Irish aid ship destined for the Gaza Strip which resulted in worsened relations, Israel's Mossad was also involved in the counterfeiting of Irish passports, 2 members of the Israeli ambassador's security staff in Dublin were subsequently deported.
They also listed real-estate records for Berlin property that had been forcibly taken by the Nazis, placed in Swiss accounts, and then claimed to be owned by UBS.
The Maharajah, who was also forcibly entranced by the " Blood of Kali ", attempts to sabotage Indiana with a voodoo doll.
Permission to forcibly medicate Wanda Barzee was also sought, relying upon the U. S. Supreme Court's decision in Sell v. United States ( 2003 ), which permits compulsory medication when the state can demonstrate a compelling interest is served by restoring a person's competence and that medication would not harm the person or prevent him from defending himself.
On December 12, 2008, it was reported that Mitchell could not legally be forcibly medicated by the State of Utah to attempt to restore his mental competency, also claiming that it is " unnecessary and needlessly harsh ," and therefore a violation of the Utah state constitution, to prolong trial proceedings to this length.
Primitivists also feel that it is important to understand that all humans have come from earth-based peoples forcibly removed from our connections with the earth, and therefore have a place within anti-colonial struggles.
In exchange for his oath of loyalty, Paul I also freed some 20, 000 Polish political prisoners held in Russian prisons and forcibly settled in Siberia.
They also forcibly removed huge numbers of people.
At the conclusion of the war, correctly anticipating their likely fate at the hands of Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union, Denikin attempted to persuade the Western Allies not to forcibly repatriate Soviet POWs ( see also Operation Keelhaul ).
Ethnic unrest in the Mauritanian armed forces also strongly contributed to the ineffectiveness of the army: forcibly conscripted black Africans from the south of the country resisted getting involved in what they viewed as a northern intra-Arab dispute, and the Moors and Sahrawis of northern Mauritania often sympathized with Polisario, fearing the regional ambitions of Morocco, and Daddah's increasing dependence on Moroccan military support.
The Protestant princes had also blamed him for the religious clause in the treaty, which stipulated that the lands of the Reunions that France was to surrender would remain Catholic, even those that had been forcibly converted — a clear defiance of the Westphalia settlement.
This scheduler can be preemptive, implying that it is capable of forcibly removing processes from a CPU when it decides to allocate that CPU to another process, or non-preemptive ( also known as " voluntary " or " co-operative "), in which case the scheduler is unable to " force " processes off the CPU.
In turn, much later, during the 18th century, some Moriscos ( Muslim and Jewish Spaniards forcibly converted to Catholicism ) also moved to Livorno from Spain.
He also pointed out that YouTube embeds hosted on Spike. com did not link back to YouTube, and any sort of video hyperlinking was forcibly disabled, contradicting YouTube's Terms of Use.
There is also a Polish minority in Russia which includes indigenous Poles as well as those forcibly deported during and after World War II ; the total number of Poles in what was the former Soviet Union is estimated at up to 3 million.
Emicho, or his followers in separate groups, also went to Worms, Mainz, Cologne, Trier, and Metz, where they forcibly converted the Jewish communities, and massacred those who resisted.
The Norwegian government also made plans to forcibly deport 8000 children and their mothers to Australia.
It also found that the Bushmen were " forcibly and wrongly deprived of their possessions " by the government.
He also examined the copper industry in Arizona, where industry bosses solved industrial relations problems by having more than 1, 000 strikers forcibly deported to New Mexico.
America and Holland might also have a peaceful transformation, but not in France, where Marx believed there had been " perfected ... an enormous bureaucratic and military organisation, with its ingenious state machinery " which must be forcibly overthrown.

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