Chap., §
1 1, 1| well-being for the more developed countries. But they can also bring
2 1, 2| convulsed many European countries and, at least partially,
3 1, 2| and, at least partially, countries in other continents. It
4 1, 2| and the existence of some countries and continents that are
5 2, 7| both within individual countries and in the wider field of
6 2, 8| working world. This is true in countries which have completed a certain
7 2, 8| revolution. It is also true in countries where the main working milieu
8 2, 8| the world, in the various countries, and in the relationships
9 3, 11| institutions in the various countries or by organizations devoting
10 3, 14| into pratice in various countries in the decades following
11 3, 14| various new independent countries that have arisen, especially
12 4, 16| peace both within individual countries and societies and in international
13 4, 17| the highly industrialized countries, and even more the businesses
14 4, 17| between most of the richest countries and the poorest ones is
15 4, 17| obviously, of the poor countries. Evidently this must have
16 4, 21| situations. In certain developing countries, millions of people are
17 4, 21| the economically developed countries, where scientific research,
|