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Contemporary Review

Founded in 1866, Contemporary Review is a scholarly journal published quarterly. Contemporary Review Company Ltd. owns and publishes this journal, and its editorial headquarters is in Oxford, United Kingdom.Contemporary Review covers a number of topics, including politics, international affairs, literature, art and art history. Its region and its audience are international. Dr. Richard Mullen is the editor; Dr. Alex Kerr is the managing editor; Dr. James Munson is the literary editor; and Anselma Bruce is the associate editor. James LoGerfo, Robin Findlay and Charles Foster are the editorial advisers.

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Articles from Vol. 280, No. 1634, March

Challenges Facing the Pharmaceutical Industry
THE pharmaceutical industry is faced with the challenge of surviving and succeeding in an environment that has become more complicated and uncertain, and one that is characterised by rapid developments in science and technology, and organisational...
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China's Olympics
LATE on the evening of Friday 13 July, 2001, in Beijing a long, deep-throated roar greeted with tumultuous joy the announcement from Moscow that the Chinese capital had won the vote to host the 2008 Olympic Games. Instantly the sky was ablaze with...
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Churchill and the Revisionist Historians
IN 1950 Time magazine then at the height of its power and influence named Winston Churchill 'Man of the Half Century'. His reputation was at a peak because of his leadership of the Allied cause in World War II and his role in alerting the Free World...
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Matthew Arnold and the Role of the State
MATTHEW Arnold, one of the Victorian age's great poets, education-alists, literary, political, social, and religious critics, passionately believed that England was in dire need of more State involvement at many levels of society. His views on the...
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New and Noteworthy
Last year marked the 132nd anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi's birth and two new titles have appeared to mark the event. The first, David Arnold's Gandhi ([pounds sterling]14.99 p. b.) is published by LONGMAN as part of their 'Profiles in Power' series....
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Rewriting Hungary's Past
EASTERN European history text books have been rewritten more often than the long-suffering schoolchildren of the region care to remember. National heroes and despised bogeymen have been made to switch roles in the curricula as well as public sentiment;...
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The Future of Self-Determination
THE ideal of self-determination, having once enjoyed considerable influence in world politics appears to have stumbled upon itself by over extension. Originally popularised in the days of the American Declaration of Independence (1776) and the...
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The Next Archbishop of Canterbury
AS I write, the race is on to become the successor of St Augustine of CANTERBURY, St Thomas a Becket and 101 other holders of the second most important ceremonial position in England, ranking as the first of all dukes, with precedence immediately...
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The Terrorist Crisis: The View from Canada
Editor's Note: The terrorist attacks of September 11, and the events that followed, provoked worldwide interest. In the next few months we will be having a series about the reactions in different countries. We begin with the view from the United...
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Zambia's Future-After Its Elections
ZAMBIA is a landlocked and sparsely populated country, with ten million people, made up of more than seventy ethnic groups, living in an area the size of France, the Netherlands, Belgium and Switzerland combined. At independence from Britain in...
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