International Journal of Turkish Studies, Zväzky 1–2University of Wisconsin, 1980 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 3 z 47.
Strana 48
... percent of males and 89 percent of female workers , being in this category , while in Australia 79 percent of Turkish employed males and 77 percent of employed females work in trade or in the production - processing field . This is an ...
... percent of males and 89 percent of female workers , being in this category , while in Australia 79 percent of Turkish employed males and 77 percent of employed females work in trade or in the production - processing field . This is an ...
Strana 52
... percent ) or unpaid family helpers ( 41 percent ) ; in con- trast , those in non - agricultural employment included only 26 percent self - employed or employers and 71 percent employees . " In Australia the majority of Turkish workers ...
... percent ) or unpaid family helpers ( 41 percent ) ; in con- trast , those in non - agricultural employment included only 26 percent self - employed or employers and 71 percent employees . " In Australia the majority of Turkish workers ...
Strana 61
... percent of all female agricultural workers are wage earners , ' and 87 percent of all working women are unpaid family workers . Of the active female population in Turkey , 88 percent is involved in agriculture , compared with 4 percent ...
... percent of all female agricultural workers are wage earners , ' and 87 percent of all working women are unpaid family workers . Of the active female population in Turkey , 88 percent is involved in agriculture , compared with 4 percent ...
Obsah
Foreword Kemal H Karpat | 19 |
Century Anatolia Suraiya Faroqhi | 54 |
Southeast Europe Gale Stokes | 68 |
Autorské práva | |
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according activities administrative agricultural American Anatolia appeared Arab authority ayans became beginning Bosnia British central century China collection concerning constitution continued court cultural Damascus direct documents early East economic established Europe European example fact figures force foreign French given Greek groups important increased interests internal Islamic Istanbul kanun Konya land later less literature major materials means merchants military Muslim nationalist nineteenth century officials opium organization Ottoman Empire particularly party percent period Persian persons political population Porte position present problems production provinces question records reforms relations remained reports result role rule Russian social society sources Sultan Syria Table tion towns trade traditional Turkey Turkish Turks University values various villages Western women