Academic literature on the topic 'Bill Richardson'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bill Richardson"

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Mervis, J. "Bill Richardson." Science 319, no. 5859 (2008): 28–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.319.5859.28b.

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Eldergill, Anselm. "IS ANYONE SAFE? Civil Compulsion under the Draft Mental Health Bill." International Journal of Mental Health and Capacity Law, no. 8 (September 8, 2014): 331. http://dx.doi.org/10.19164/ijmhcl.v0i8.341.

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<p>The British Government published a draft Mental Health Bill for England and Wales on 26 June 2002. Its publication was preceded by a White Paper in December 2000, a Green Paper in November 1999, and a report prepared by a committee chaired by Professor Genevra Richardson.</p><p>The focus of the Bill is on risk management and compulsion in the community. It has been widely condemned by professional bodies, and by carers and patient groups. The nature of the criticism is that the proposals are unprincipled and impractical.</p><p>It is important to establish whether this is so. The purpose of this paper is to analyse the Government’s case for change and, having done that, to analyse the new civil powers of detention and compulsory treatment.</p>
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Latimer, B. "Samuel Richardson and the 'Jew Bill' of 1753: A New Political Context for Sir Charles Grandison." Review of English Studies 66, no. 275 (2015): 520–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/res/hgu112.

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Mulenburg, Gerald. "Thinking on Purpose for Project Managers: Outsmarting Evolution Bill Richardson. Oshawa, ON: Multi-Media Publications Inc., 2009. 328 pages. US$39.95." Journal of Product Innovation Management 29, no. 3 (2012): 509–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-5885.2012.00920_3.x.

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Griffiths, Martin. "Student problems from the Mathematical Gazette, edited by Bill Richardson. Pp. 96. £8 (members), £12 (non-members). 2002. ISBN 0 906588 49 9. (The Mathematical Association)." Mathematical Gazette 87, no. 509 (2003): 405–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025557200173450.

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Vallone, Lynne. "FERTILITY, CHILDHOOD, AND DEATH IN THE VICTORIAN FAMILY." Victorian Literature and Culture 28, no. 1 (2000): 217–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150300281138.

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GEORGE ELIOT’S MIDDLEMARCH concludes with the summing up of the lives of her most visionary characters, bringing them to either happy fulfillment or early demise according, not to the worth of their dreams but, in part, to their success or failure in choosing a domestic partner. For Dorothea Brooke, Middlemarch’s most luminous and large-souled citizen, Eliot can finally justify no other existence than that of a devoted wife and mother. Eliot defends this apparent demotion of her heroine from modern Saint Theresa to London matron by arguing that her “study of provincial life” was of necessity the story of domestic times, when, in fact, the “heroics” of raising a family and offering “wifely help” to a husband were more noble than sororal obligation or religious mysticism. Though the novel is set in the late Georgian period just before the first Reform Bill of 1832, it was published in 1871–72, at the height of the Victorian era and is thoroughly Victorian in character. For the Victorians, the “reformed rakes” of Richardson and Fielding are no longer desirable as heads of households. The Queen herself seemed to offer a model of perfect domesticity in her large family, middle-class values, and reliance on her husband. In fact, just as Eliot concedes the dominance of the “home epic” (890), the myth of the Victorian family continues to maintain a powerful presence within contemporary American culture. Questions that still consume us today — What makes a good mother?
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Capobianco, Richard. "Bill Richardson’s (Future) Legacy." Heidegger Circle Proceedings 50 (2016): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/heideggercircle2016501.

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Bill Richardson’s masterwork Heidegger: Through Phenomenology to Thought was first published in 1963. What follows is fully informed by his guiding and enduring insight: the “turn” (die Kehre) in Heidegger’s thinking, which, Bill referred to—in his memorable heuristic expression—as “Heidegger I” and “Heidegger II.” From his book: “For the shift of focus from There-being to Being…was demanded…as soon as it became clear [to Heidegger] that the primacy of the Being-process belongs to Being itself” (HTPT, 624). Let us see how Bill’s basic reading is further borne out and underscored in the recently published Black Notebooks.
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Richards, Diana. "Harold Joseph (Bill) Richards MB BS, FRCS, FRACS." Medical Journal of Australia 170, no. 4 (1999): 185. http://dx.doi.org/10.5694/j.1326-5377.1999.tb127723.x.

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Hattersley-Smith, Geoffrey. "Obituary." Polar Record 39, no. 3 (2003): 269. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s003224740321319x.

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Walter George Richards, who died in Stanley, Falkland Islands, in October 2002 aged 73, served as a ‘handyman’ with the Falklands Islands Dependencies Survey from 1948 to 1950. He was long known by his nickname ‘Bill.’
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Masom, Grant. "‘Old-Time Religion in a New-Fashioned Way’: The Ministry of ‘Billy’ Richards, 1943–74." Studies in Church History 57 (May 21, 2021): 341–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/stc.2021.17.

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In 1943 a twenty-six-year-old Pentecostal pastor arrived in Slough, a fast-growing industrial town that many church leaders found spiritually tough. Over the next thirty years Billy Richards built a thriving church with six hundred adult members and a thousand children attending groups across the town. His ministry extended beyond Slough through books, radio broadcasts, correspondence courses and international speaking tours. His methods embraced modern media, new forms of worship, conservative theology and a focus on the active work of the Holy Spirit. One local newspaper characterized it as ‘Old-Time Religion in a New-Fashioned Way’. This article explores the inspirational aspects of Richards's ministry, how these took institutional expression in his lifetime, and why that institution continues to be influential today. His ministry provides one example of how local churches could adapt successfully to the changing social and cultural landscape of late twentieth-century Britain. This has implications for the understanding of urban mission and the contribution made by the agency of organized religious institutions to twentieth-century secularization.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bill Richardson"

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Maxwell, Joshua Alexander. "An Exploration of Latin American Leadership as Seen Through the Theoretical Models of Charles Ramírez Berg and Juana Bordas." Marietta College Honors Theses / OhioLINK, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=marhonors1303502439.

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Oakshott, Stephen Craig School of Information Library &amp Archives Studies UNSW. "The Association of Libarians in colleges of advanced education and the committee of Australian university librarians: The evolution of two higher education library groups, 1958-1997." Awarded by:University of New South Wales. School of Information, Library and Archives Studies, 1998. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/18238.

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This thesis examines the history of Commonwealth Government higher education policy in Australia between 1958 and 1997 and its impact on the development of two groups of academic librarians: the Association of Librarians in Colleges in Advanced Education (ALCAE) and the Committee of Australian University Librarians (CAUL). Although university librarians had met occasionally since the late 1920s, it was only in 1965 that a more formal organisation, known as CAUL, was established to facilitate the exchange of ideas and information. ALCAE was set up in 1969 and played an important role helping develop a special concept of library service peculiar to the newly formed College of Advanced Education (CAE) sector. As well as examining the impact of Commonwealth Government higher education policy on ALCAE and CAUL, the thesis also explores the influence of other factors on these two groups, including the range of personalities that comprised them, and their relationship with their parent institutions and with other professional groups and organisations. The study focuses on how higher education policy and these other external and internal factors shaped the functions, aspirations, and internal dynamics of these two groups and how this resulted in each group evolving differently. The author argues that, because of the greater attention given to the special educational role of libraries in the CAE curriculum, the group of college librarians had the opportunity to participate in, and have some influence on, Commonwealth Government statutory bodies responsible for the coordination of policy and the distribution of funding for the CAE sector. The link between ALCAE and formal policy-making processes resulted in a more dynamic group than CAUL, with the university librarians being discouraged by their Vice-Chancellors from having contact with university funding bodies because of the desire of the universities to maintain a greater level of control over their affairs and resist interference from government. The circumstances of each group underwent a reversal over time as ALCAE's effectiveness began to diminish as a result of changes to the CAE sector and as member interest was transferred to other groups and organisations. Conversely, CAUL gradually became a more active group during the 1980s and early 1990s as a result of changes to higher education, the efforts of some university librarians, and changes in membership. This study is based principally on primary source material, with the story of ALCAE and CAUL being told through the use of a combination of original documentation (including minutes of meetings and correspondence) and interviews with members of each group and other key figures.
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Malchiodi, Emmanuel William. "Paul Verhoeven, media manipulation, and hyper-reality." Honors in the Major Thesis, University of Central Florida, 2011. http://digital.library.ucf.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ETH/id/467.

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Does the individual really matter in the post-modern world, brimming with countless signs and signifiers? My main objective in this writing is to demonstrate how this happens in Verhoeven's films, exploring his central themes and subtext and doing what science fiction does: hold a mirror up to the contemporary world and critique it, asking whether our species' current trajectory is beneficial or hazardous.; Dutch director Paul Verhoeven is a polarizing figure. Although many of his American made films have received considerable praise and financial success, he has been lambasted on countless occasions for his gratuitous use of sex, violence, and contentious symbolism--1995s Showgirls was overwhelmingly dubbed the worst film of all time and 1997s Starship Troopers earned him a reputation as a fascist. Regardless of the controversy surrounding him, his science fiction films are a move beyond the conventions of the big blockbuster science fiction films of the 1980s (E.T. and the Star Wars trilogy are prime examples), revealing a deeper exploration of both sociopolitical issues and the human condition. Much like the novels of Philip K. Dick (and Verhoeven's 1990 film Total Recall--an adaptation of a Dick short story), Verhoeven's science fiction work explores worlds where paranoia is a constant and determining whether an individual maintains any liberty is regularly questionable. In this thesis I am basically exploring issues regarding power. Although I barely bring up the term power in it, I feel it is central. Power is an ambiguous term; are we discussing physical power, state power, objective power, subjective power, or any of the other possible manifestations of the word? The original Anglo-French version of power means "to be able," asking whether it is possible for one to do something. In relation to Verhoeven's science fiction work each demonstrates the limitations placed upon an individual's autonomy, asking are the protagonists capable of independent agency or rather just environmental constructs reflecting the myriad influences surrounding them.<br>B.A.<br>Bachelors<br>Arts and Humanities<br>Humanities
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Books on the topic "Bill Richardson"

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Bill Richardson. Mason Crest Publishers, 2008.

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Richardson, Bill. A Gestao Estrategica / Bill Richardon, Roy Richardson. Editorial Presenca, 1992.

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Bill Richardson nomination: Hearing before the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, second session, on the nomination of Bill Richardson to be Secretary of Energy, July 22, 1998. U.S. G.P.O., 1998.

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Office, General Accounting. BIA appropriations: Fiscal year 1983 and 1984 appropriated funds provided to Southern Pueblos : report to the Honorable Bill Richardson, House of Representatives. The Office, 1985.

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Richardson, John. Speech of Mr. Richardson in the House of Assembly, on the 12th April, 1808, previous to moving for printing the bill for establishing a bank in Lower Canada. Printed at the New Printing Office, 1987.

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Nomination of Hon. Bill Richardson of New Mexico to be the U.S. representative to the United Nations with the rank of ambassador and the U.S. representative in the Security Council of the United Nations: Hearing before the Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, first session, January 29, 1997. U.S. G.P.O., 1997.

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Zannos, Susan, Valerie Menard, and Barbara Marvis. Famous People of Hispanic Heritage: Volume Ten; Rebecca Lobo, Bill Richardson, L (Famous People of Hispanic Heritage). Tandem Library, 1998.

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Bill, Richardson, and United States. General Accounting Office., eds. Natural gas regulation: Pipeline transportation under FERC order 436 : briefing report to the honorable Bill Richardson, House of Representatives. GAO, 1987.

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George Richardson: An appreciation. 1988.

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US GOVERNMENT. Bill Richardson nomination: Hearing before the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, United States Senate, One Hundred Fifth Congress, second session, ... Secretary of Energy, July 22, 1998 (S. hrg). For sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., Congressional Sales Office, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bill Richardson"

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Scott, Charles E. "Letter to Bill Richardson." In From Phenomenology to Thought, Errancy, and Desire. Springer Netherlands, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-1624-6_15.

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Leape, Lucian L. "When the IOM Speaks: IOM Quality of Care Committee and Report." In Making Healthcare Safe. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-71123-8_9.

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AbstractOn July 7, 1998, I received an invitation from the Institute of Medicine (IOM) to become a member of the Committee on Quality of Health Care in America. The Committee, chaired by Bill Richardson of the Kellogg Foundation, was an outgrowth of an IOM Roundtable on Quality of Care, chaired by Mark Chassin and Robert Galvin.
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Rudolph, Nathalie. "Das Bild Richards II. in der Chronica maiora des Thomas Walsingham." In Wahrnehmung und Realität. V&R unipress, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.14220/9783737002967.41.

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"Bill Richardson, Managing Director Vickers Armstrong, Barrow and Walker on Tyne, Deputy Managing Director, Swan Hunter, Board Member British Shipbuilders." In Crossing the Bar, edited by Anthony Slaven and Hugh Murphy. Liverpool University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5949/liverpool/9781927869017.003.0026.

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Interview with Bill Richardson, Managing Director Vickers Armstrong, Barrow and Walker on Tyne, Deputy Managing Director, Swan Hunter, Board Member British Shipbuilders. Details experience working in Barrow-in-Furness.
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"Patterns of Place and Space in the Work of Juan Rulfo bill richardson." In Rethinking Juan Rulfo's Creative World. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315559704-12.

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Ding, Amy Wenxuan. "Security Inspection Model of Critical Infrastructure." In Social Computing in Homeland Security. IGI Global, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60566-228-2.ch011.

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This chapter presents an approach that can be used to assist in border patrol and security management. On August 12, 2005, New Mexico governor Bill Richardson announced a state of emergency in four counties along the New Mexico-Mexico border in response to the booming smuggling of drugs and illegal immigrants, kidnapping, murder, and destruction of property and livestock (CNN, 2005). Three days later, Arizona governor Janet Napolitano issued a similar declaration (Media, 2005). Both states immediately released emergency funds to help patrol their borders by hiring additional law enforcement officers and paying them overtime. In addition to building fences along the US-Mexico border (Media, 2006) and drawing attention to the political issues involved, such as immigration law, these two announcements indicate the urgency and importance of planning and implementing an effective border patrol. The border patrol, an important component of the nation’s security system, requires daily, around the clock operation and is frequently overt while illegal border-crossings and other criminal events are covert. When an illegal crossing is discovered, a decision must be made immediately whether to track the illegal crossers, to continue patrolling the rest of the assigned areas, or to attempt to do both together. This decision is based largely on whether the unit of border agents itself, or the border patrol station to which it belongs, has an adequate number of guards at the time of the incident. With sufficient forces, both pursuing and patrolling can be handled immediately. Otherwise, a dilemma arises as either the assigned area of the border is left unguarded (i.e., out of control) if the choice is to track the illegal crossers only, or if the decision is to continue patrolling without interruption the team neglects its duty. The border counties mentioned in the two announcements have expressed a desire to expand the number of patrol agents on the border in addition to needing different detection devices. For example, one proposal from Arizona Senator Jon Kyl in a bill is to authorize 10,000 new Border Patrol agents (Carroll &amp; Gonzalez, 2005). On May 15, 2006, President George W. Bush announced sending 6,000 National Guard troops to help secure the southern border (CNN, 2006).
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Smith, Gary. "Introduction." In The AI Delusion. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198824305.003.0002.

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The Democratic Party’s 2008 presidential nomination was supposed to be the inevitable coronation of Hillary Clinton. She was the most well-known candidate; had the most support from the party establishment, and had, by far, the most financial resources. Two big names (Al Gore and John Kerry) considered running, but decided they had no hope of defeating the Clinton machine. That left an unlikely assortment of lesser-knowns: a U.S. Representative from Ohio (Dennis Kucinich), the Governor of New Mexico (Bill Richardson), and several U.S. Senators: Joe Biden (Delaware), John Edwards (North Carolina), Chris Dodd (Connecticut), Mike Gravel (Alaska), and Barack Obama (Illinois). The nomination went off script. Obama was a first-term senator, a black man with an unhelpful name, but he excited voters. He raised enough money to be competitive in the Iowa caucuses and he persuaded Oprah Winfrey to campaign for him. Obama defeated Clinton by eight percentage points in Iowa and the race was on. Obama won the Democratic nomination and, then, the presidential election against Republican John McCain because the Obama campaign had a lot more going for it than Obama’s eloquence and charisma: Big Data. The Obama campaign tried to put every potential voter into its data base, along with hundreds of tidbits of personal information: age, gender, marital status, race, religion, address, occupation, income, car registrations, home value, donation history, magazine subscriptions, leisure activities, Facebook friends, and anything else they could find that seemed relevant. Some data were collected from public data bases, some from e-mail exchanges or campaign workers knocking on front doors. Some data were purchased from private data vendors. Layered on top were weekly telephone surveys of thousands of potential voters which not only gathered personal data, but also attempted to gauge each person’s likelihood of voting—and voting for Obama. These voter likelihoods were correlated statistically with personal characteristics and extrapolated to other potential voters based on their personal characteristics. The campaign’s computer software predicted how likely each person its data base was to vote and the probability that the vote would be for Obama. This data-driven model allowed the campaign to microtarget individuals through e-mails, snail mail, personal visits, and television ads asking for donations and votes.
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West-Eberhard, Mary Jane. "Environmental Modifications." In Developmental Plasticity and Evolution. Oxford University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195122343.003.0034.

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In Democracy (1985), a novel by Joan Didion, there is a dramatic scene where a woman strikes her grown son and then abruptly leaves the room. Later, the narrator reflects on the causes of that behavior: . . . Billy Dillon once asked me if I thought Inez would have left that night had Jack Lovett not been there. Since human behavior seems to me essentially circumstantial I have not much feeling for this kind of question. The answer of course is no, but the answer is irrelevant, because Jack Lovett was there,. . . In one short passage, Didion reveals a grasp of environmental influence on the unfolding of events that has eluded most biologists. Behavior, like every other aspect of the phenotype, is essentially circumstantial. A particular organismic form or event could not exist without particular environmental circumstances any more than it could exist without particular genes. In evolutionary biology, environmentally induced modifications come under unfinished business (e.g., see May, 1977). There have been repeated assertions of both their importance and their triviality, a lot of discussion with no consensus. More than 60 years ago Robson and Richards (1936) remarked, “This subject [the inheritance of induced modifications] has been discussed almost ad nauseum.” Yet the debate has continued over such concepts as genetic assimilation, the Baldwin effect, organic selection, morphoses, and somatic modifications. So much controversy over the span of a century suggests that a problem of major significance remains unsolved. Meanwhile, “biology lacks a theory of organization” (Fontana et al., 1994). I believe that there is a connection between these two things—between continued controversy regarding the evolutionary significance of environmental modifications, and the shortcomings of a biological theory of organization and development based primarily on genes. The growing awareness of the importance of development in evolution has not automatically secured a place for the environment as a source of evolutionary novelties. In developmental biology it is common to assume genetic determination of phenotypic change.
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