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NONJA PETERS<br />

35 Peters, N, Trading Places<br />

36 http://diaspora.iom.int/mandasoldiacasait-first-italian-website-remittances-transfer<br />

37 Wyman, Mark, Round Trip To America (Ithaca:<br />

Cornell University Press), 1993, 61.<br />

38 Keeling, 34.<br />

39 Peters, N., Trading Places, Italian, greek, Dutch<br />

and Vietnames Enterprise in Westen Australia,<br />

PhD, University Western Australia, 2000.<br />

40 Forster, Robert, The Italian Emigration of Our<br />

Times, New York: Russell & Russell, 1919, 374.<br />

41 Ibid.<br />

42 http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-12-18/an-remittances-call/5165928<br />

43 http://opportunity.org.au/what-we-do/microfinance-approach/remittances<br />

44 http://www.australiancentre.com.au/News/remittances-their-role-trends-and-australian-opportunities<br />

45 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remittance#cite_<br />

note-12<br />

46 World Bank, 2006); Una Okonkwo Osili “Understanding<br />

Migrants’ Remittances: Evidence<br />

from the U.S.-Nigeria Migration Survey, Understanding<br />

Migrants’ Remittances: Evidence from<br />

the U.S.-Nigeria Migration Survey’, Department<br />

of Economics Indiana University Purdue University<br />

Indianapolis<br />

Feb 2007; http://www.imi.ox.ac.uk/pdfs/projects/<br />

african-migrations-workshops-pdfs/rabat-workshop-2008/una-osili-amw-08<br />

47 https://books.google.com.au/books?id=R-<br />

Do9AQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA44&lpg=RA1-PA44&dq=he+annual+drain+on+India+in+remittances+to+England&source=bl&ots=3xHyKV8umB&sig=AfewqxsuVp_s5L32GDTMNqiCrTw&hl=en&sa=X-<br />

&ei=PHovVbCuK8HAmAX0soDAD-<br />

Q&ved=0CCwQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=he%20annual%20drain%20on%20<br />

India%20in%20remittances%20to%20England&f=false;<br />

http://www.jwsr.org/wp-content/<br />

uploads/2013/09/Ziltener_Kuenzler_vol19_no2.<br />

pdf<br />

48 ibid.<br />

49 Maddison, A., ‘The Economic and Social Impact<br />

of Colonial Rule in India of Class Structure and<br />

Economic Growth: India & Pakistan since the Moghuls,<br />

1971: http://www.ggdc.net/maddison/articles/moghul_3.pdf<br />

50 Maddison, 20.<br />

51 Madison, 1971.<br />

52 Vanderheide Publishing Co. Ltd., 1995.<br />

53 Zanden J. L., Agriculture and Economic Development<br />

in Europe Since 1870, edited by Pedro Lains,<br />

Vicente Pinilla, 1998; https://books.google.com.<br />

131<br />

au/books?id=RLZ9AgAAQBAJ&pg=PA9&lpg=PA9&dq=Zanden+J.+L.,+1998.&source=bl&ots=tXl0EUxMwE&sig=V4R4B6vWv6TqAgA0emkb-VW_46o&hl=en&sa=X&ei=l-BAVc-<br />

6JL-LCmAXMl4DoDg&ved=0CB4Q6A-<br />

EwAA#v=onepage&q=Zanden%20J.%20<br />

L.%2C%201998.&f=false<br />

54 http://emergingequity.org/2015/03/31/modis-rival-to-chinas-silk-road-indias-cotton-route/<br />

55 Since October 1945, more than 7.5 million people<br />

have migrated to Australia—over 800 000<br />

arrived under the Humanitarian Program. Australia’s<br />

population has increased from seven million<br />

in October 1945 to 23 589 200 million as at<br />

15 April 2015. Currently, one in four of Australia’s<br />

population were born outside Australia. Australia’s<br />

economic development is on the backs of its<br />

migrants.<br />

56 Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT)<br />

county fact sheets: http://dfat.gov.au<br />

57 http://dfat.gov.au/geo/netherlands/Pages/netherlands-country-brief.aspx<br />

58 http://emergingequity.org/2015/03/31/modis-rival-to-chinas-silk-road-indias-cotton-route/<br />

59 http://www.dsalert.org/news-bank/press-releases/1088-international-conference-on-maritimetrade-and-civilisational-linkages-among-ior-countries-to-be-held-in-march-2015-in-bhubaneswar<br />

60 http://emergingequity.org/2015/03/31/modis-rival-to-chinas-silk-road-indias-cotton-route/<br />

61 http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/articles/w/what_are_the_elgin_marbles.<br />

aspx :The ‘Elgin Marbles’ is a popular term that in<br />

its widest use may refer to the collection of stone<br />

objects – sculptures, inscriptions and architectural<br />

features – acquired by Lord Elgin during his time<br />

as ambassador to the Ottoman court of the Sultan<br />

in Istanbul. More specifically, and more usually, it<br />

is used to refer to those sculptures, inscriptions and<br />

architectural features that he acquired in Athens<br />

between 1801 and 1805. These objects were purchased<br />

by the British Parliament from Lord Elgin<br />

in 1816 and presented by Parliament to the British<br />

Museum. The collection includes sculptures from<br />

the Parthenon, roughly half of what now survives:<br />

247 feet of the original 524 feet of frieze; 15 of 92<br />

metopes; 17 figures from the pediments, and various<br />

other pieces of architecture. It also includes<br />

objects from other buildings on the Acropolis:<br />

the Erechtheion, the Propylaia, and the Temple of<br />

Athena Nike. In the nineteenth century the term<br />

‘Elgin Marbles’ was used to describe the collection,<br />

which was housed in the Elgin Room at the British<br />

Museum, completed in 1832, where it remained<br />

until the Duveen Gallery was built; seE also<br />

http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/

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