The break-up of the confederacy followed a row between the two countries over the question of rotational leadership of the confederation. |
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As with point 1, I don't see what this has to do with strengthening Alberta's place in confederation. |
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On August 1, 1291, three Alpine cantons swore the oath of confederation, an act that later came to be regarded as the foundation of Switzerland. |
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The head of a major labor confederation made the same request, adding that they should all march not as pacifists but as peaceable people. |
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Europe works best as a confederation, with provisional federal powers for acute problems, subject to expiration clauses. |
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The German language has a neat way of distinguishing between a loose confederation and a federal union. |
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The development of modern Switzerland can be traced back to a confederation of several Alpine valley communities and states in the Middle Ages. |
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The Shuswaps are related to other Salish tribes, all of whom could organize themselves into a confederation of Indian nations. |
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In 1397 the chief men of the three countries met at Kalmar to arrange a basis for a permanent legal confederation. |
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Albertans often feel they were sold out to protect Ontario consumers but that's the nature of confederation. |
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Until the end of the twelfth century, the Mongols were little more than a loose confederation of rival clans. |
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Argentina's second-largest trade union confederation, led by teamster's leader Hugo Moyano, organized the protest. |
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The herdsmen and traders of the great Tuareg confederation are found in the south. |
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Instead of the international state system, anarchism proposes a confederation of communes and collectives. |
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Fourier believed a radically egalitarian society could be organized into a confederation of communes or phalansteries. |
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This larger confederation would in turn be a particular state, with its own personality, its own interests, its own physiognomy. |
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The cantons are free to exercise that power as long as the confederation does not make use of its concurrent power. |
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At any rate, this argument is only partially true since the republic set up by the Iroquois confederacy predates Canadian confederation. |
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Membership in the Astronomical League, a confederation of amateurs and their organizations, has doubled in the last decade to 20,000 members. |
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As organizations, each national party is a decentralized and loose confederation of state parties and of other affiliated groups. |
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It's a distinction that chafes Chinwe Okelu, former chair of the Mill Woods Presidents' Council, a confederation of community leagues. |
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The US party system is a loose confederation of parties drawn into a nominal two-party system. |
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Caritas is a confederation of organisations to spread solidarity and social justice throughout the world. |
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I know that the legislation is not supported by the confederation of iwi in Tainu. |
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Obviously Alberta puts a lot more into confederation than they get out, from a purely dollars and cents perspective. |
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The United Arab Emirates is a confederation of seven sheikdoms, or emirates, located on the shore of the Persian Gulf. |
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His tireless advocacy of confederation with Canada paid off when a second referendum on 22 July 1948 closely approved incorporation with Canada. |
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Illiniwek was the name of the loose confederation of Algonquin tribes that once lived in the area. |
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How could a company go from the seventh largest in America to a loose confederation of parcels at the bankruptcy fire sale in a matter of months? |
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This peculiar electoral strategy only makes sense when it is understood that their stated aim is not to form a government but to remove Quebec from confederation entirely. |
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Beginning as a railway in the first century of Canadian confederation, it entered Canada's second century as a multi-model transport, industrial and financial enterprise. |
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The cell's complex inner composition cannot function at all unless all the parts are simultaneously present, working in tightly integrated confederation. |
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Indeed, Pakistani Muslims too are reconsidering their position, increasingly emphasizing their ethnic identities and musing about some kind of confederation with India. |
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The more daring among them even talk about federation or confederation, possibly including the Kingdom of Jordan. |
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The leaves disappeared from the penny only in 1967, when they were replaced by a rock dove to commemorate the hundredth anniversary of confederation. |
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On the surface, a confederation is a union of sovereign states, but, underneath, it holds the possibility of moving from independence to unification. |
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Instead, the two colonies were joined in a confederation, with separate legislatures. |
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Finally, around the middle of the eleventh century, a confederation of tribes called the Almoravids conquered all of Morocco, as well as much of Spain. |
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He was on the French interministerial committee that eventually rejected confederation as likely to loosen political links between France and the new states. |
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The researchers attribute this apparent law-defying behavior to the banding together of variously dispersed magnons into a kind of quantum confederation. |
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It needs an international confederation of loyal, corrupt, authoritarian governments in poorer countries to push through unpopular reforms and quell the mutinies. |
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One of the first things the British did in their zone of Germany was to sponsor a new trade union confederation, the sheet anchor of democracy in the years to come. |
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A pleasing confederation of curves, the Cornish rex has a long, graceful neck that leads to a comparatively small, narrow, somewhat egg-shaped head. |
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A little later the Servian prince Ceslav suceeeded in freeing Servia from the suzerainty of Bulgaria and built up a confederation of which Bosnia formed a part. |
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Rather than continue with an artificial confederation established by the British, the Biafrans sought to form a smaller state with rational borders. |
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It is less than a federation and more than a regime, a kind of confederation but not yet a Gemeinschaft, neither state nor ordinary international organization. |
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Under the SPLM's proposed confederation, the south and north would establish their own constitutions, with a common non-religious political system in the capital city. |
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Canadians in all strata of society became greatly disturbed by this threat and looked for ways to draw the northwestern regions of North America into confederation. |
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The auto unionists account for the largest of the confederation members. |
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At the end of the 20th century the idea of a unitarist and centralist state died together with Communist rule, while the option of a confederation too was rejected. |
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The Articles of confederation had required nine of the 13 states to pass most items, and it was a disaster. |
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The United States once had to move from a confederation to a federation. |
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He called for the abandonment of expansionist politics and the formation of a voluntary confederation of European states to promote international cooperation. |
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One promising arrangement could be a confederation of independently governed areas or cantons, to be established in the territory between the Jordan and the Mediterranean. |
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The Powhatan Confederacy was a confederation of numerous linguistically related tribes in the eastern part of Virginia. |
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The closest entity in the world to a confederation at this time is the European Union. |
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The original confederation of Lakota was made up of seven nations that spoke three dialects of the language classified as Siouan. |
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It began life as an international organisation and gradually developed into a confederation of states. |
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The Hunnic threat remained until Attila's death in 453, when the Hunnic confederation he led fell apart. |
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The Emergency Committee consists of the FIFA President as well as one member from each confederation. |
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The continental confederations are provided for in FIFA's statutes, and membership of a confederation is a prerequisite to FIFA membership. |
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The Holy Roman Empire was a loose confederation of large and petty principalities under the nominal suzerainty of the emperor. |
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Instead, the Kingdom is said to have characteristics of a federal state, a confederation, a federacy, and a devolved unitary state. |
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They were forced by the confederation of the Saxons from the east to move over the Rhine into Roman territory in the fourth century. |
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A confederation of northern Gaelic Chieftains, led by Hugh O'Neill, resisted the imposition of English government in Ulster. |
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Areas of what is today the eastern part of Germany were inhabited by Western Slavic tribes of Sorbs, Veleti and the Obotritic confederation. |
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The Puritan colonies of New England formed a confederation to coordinate military and judicial matters. |
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It is contested by the winners of each of the six FIFA confederation championships, along with the FIFA World Cup champion and the host country. |
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Small Bedouin forces, mainly from the Madh'hij confederation of Marib, attacked Shabwah but were bombed by the British and had to retreat. |
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Palermo and Corleone were the first two cities to found a confederation against the Angevin rule. |
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The referendum campaign of 1948 was bitterly fought, and interests in both Canada and Britain favoured and supported confederation with Canada. |
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Jack Pickersgill, a western Canadian native and politician, worked with the confederation camp during the campaign. |
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Following confederation, Smallwood led Newfoundland for decades as the elected premier. |
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There he took the title of a king and organized a confederation of several neighboring Germanic tribes. |
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In 803, Charlemagne sent a Bavarian army into Pannonia, defeating and bringing an end to the Avar confederation. |
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The confederation had become so close a political alliance that it no longer tolerated separatist tendencies in its members. |
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The Tagsatzung was the confederation council, typically meeting several times a year. |
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This situation, however, does not erase the traits of a confederation in the Belgian system. |
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Until 1848, Austria and its chancellor Prince Metternich unanimously dominated the confederation. |
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Although Bismarck had led the transformation of Germany from a loose confederation into a federal nation state, he had not done it alone. |
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They envisioned a new Arab state, or confederation of states, adjoining the southern Arabian Peninsula. |
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After the Donghu were defeated by Xiongnu king Modu Chanyu, the Xianbei and Wuhuan survived as the main remnants of the confederation. |
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Some Rouran under Tatar Khan migrated east, founding the Tatar confederation, who became part of the Shiwei. |
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The Jin dynasty fell after their defeat against the rising Mongol Empire, a steppe confederation that had formerly been a Jurchen vassal. |
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Her people belonged to the Kipchaks, a confederation of pastoralists and warriors of Turkic origin. |
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Newfoundland rejected confederation with Canada in the 1869 general election. |
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With a prosperous population of 120,000, Newfoundlanders decided to pass in 1869 on joining the new confederation of Canada. |
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He claimed that it was the 'unholy union between London and Ottawa' that brought about confederation. |
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The protagonist of the book is premier Joey Smallwood, with focus on his advocacy of confederation with Canada. |
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Historians of that region refer to these alliances as the Quito Confederation, with the Kingdom of Quito being the leader of this confederation. |
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The church has, however, a highly decentralized structure and characteristics of a confederation. |
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The new government was to be a strong federal national government to replace the relatively weaker confederation of individual states. |
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The confederation was designed largely to coordinate mutual defense, and gained some importance during King Philip's War. |
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Tenskwatawa and Tecumseh formed a confederation of numerous tribes to block American expansion. |
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The radical party agitated for the region to secede from the confederation and establish self-government. |
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His aims of union did not work and the Spanish Crown continued as a confederation of kingdoms. |
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Unlike Arminius' native tribe, the Cherusci, the loyalty of the other tribes in the confederation was at best equivocal. |
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Many lowland indigenous peoples, mostly in the east, entered national politics through the 1990 March for Territory and Dignity organized by the CIDOB confederation. |
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The Huns, a confederation of central Asian tribes, founded an empire. |
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It is generally considered more than a confederation but less than a federation, thus being appropriately classified as an instance of neither political form. |
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The Picts were a tribal confederation of peoples who lived in what is today eastern and northern Scotland during the Late Iron Age and Early Medieval periods. |
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In the 2nd century AD, the Marcomanni entered into a confederation with other peoples including the Quadi, Vandals, and Sarmatians, against the Roman Empire. |
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The major power around the Baltic Sea was the Hanseatic League, a commercial confederation of city states that traded from Western Europe to Russia. |
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Scholars thus today see it as an intermediate form lying between a confederation and a federation, being an instance of neither political structure. |
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In order to improve their chances against the Roman Empire the Ostrogoths and Visigoths began again to unite in what became a loose confederation of Germanic peoples. |
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A confederation, in modern political terms, is usually limited to a permanent union of sovereign states for common action in relation to other states. |
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This time the Protestant cantons won, dominating the confederation. |
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The ideals of the French Revolution found a receptive audience in Vaud, and when Vaud declared itself a republic the French had a pretext to invade the confederation. |
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Slowly, the members began to see the confederation as a unifying entity. |
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Since 1998, constraints have been applied to the draw to ensure that no group contains more than two European teams or more than one team from any other confederation. |
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With this view, the European Union resembles more of a confederation. |
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Constitution was written as a reaction to the Articles of Confederation, under which the United States was a loose confederation with a weak central government. |
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A first period began with confederation, with Smallwood in power. |
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The expansion led to increased power and wealth for the confederation. |
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After declaring their independence, the provinces of Holland, Zeeland, Groningen, Friesland, Utrecht, Overijssel, and Gelderland formed a confederation. |
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The Batavi later merged with other tribes into the confederation of the Salian Franks, whose identity emerged at the first half of the third century. |
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The Silures were a powerful and warlike tribe or tribal confederation of ancient Britain, occupying what is now south east Wales and perhaps some adjoining areas. |
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Based on Chinese historical texts the ancestry of the Mongolic peoples can be traced back to the Donghu, a nomadic confederation occupying eastern Mongolia and Manchuria. |
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Further European integration by some states led to the formation of the European Union, a separate political entity that lies between a confederation and a federation. |
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