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The world in depression, 1929-1939

TLDR
In this paper, the authors present an explanation of the 1929 Depression Bibliography Index and present a table-based approach to the analysis of the stock market crash and the subsequent depression.
Abstract
List of Text Figures List of Tables Foreword Preface 1. Introduction 2. Recovery from the First World War 3. The Boom 4. The Agricultural Depression 5. The 1929 Stock-Market Crash 6. The Slide to the Abyss 7. 1931 8. More Deflation 9. The World Economic Conference 10. The Beginnings of Recovery 11. The Gold Bloc Yields 12. The 1937 Recession 13. Rearmament in a Disintegrating World Economy 14. An Explanation of the 1929 Depression Bibliography Index

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The Struggle for Hegemony in Africa: Nigeria and South Africa Relations in Perspectives, 1999-2014

TL;DR: The authors argued that Nigeria and South Africa have de-prioritized the key objectives of leading economic growth and economic development in Africa, and resorted to competitive pursuit of regional hegemonic status.
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The Eurasian economic axis: Its present and prospective significance for East Asia

TL;DR: The economic relationship between East Asia and the European Union (EU) has been the subject of increasing academic attention as mentioned in this paper, which has been heightened by politico-institutional endeavors to strengthen the weak link in the Triad (Europe, East Asia, North America) since the early 1990s, including various bilateral initiatives such as the 1991 Japan-EU Declaration and the 1996 Korea-EU Trade and Co-operation Agreement.
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Southeast Asia from Depression to Re-occupation, 1925–45 1

TL;DR: The economic and social history of Southeast Asia during these two decades is of more than merely passing or academic interest as discussed by the authors, and events and developments in the area during that period shaped the pos...
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The logic of compromise: Monetary bargaining in Austria-Hungary, 1867–1913

TL;DR: The authors examined the historical record of the Austro-Hungarian monetary union and concluded that the eventual split of Hungary after WWI was not written on the wall in 1914, since the Austrian monetary union was quite profitable to Hungarians.