Academic literature on the topic 'Birmingham Society of Artizans'

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Journal articles on the topic "Birmingham Society of Artizans"

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Reichenfeld, Hans F. "The Lunar Society of Birmingham Revisited." Bulletin of Anesthesia History 16, no. 3 (July 1998): 18–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1522-8649(98)50051-0.

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King, Nicola. "Society of Indexers Conference, Birmingham, 13 September 2016." Indexer: The International Journal of Indexing 34, no. 4 (December 2016): 167–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/indexer.2016.50.

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Perkins, Pam. "Scientific Amusements: Literary Representations of the Birmingham Lunar Society." Lumen: Selected Proceedings from the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 25 (2006): 57. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1012077ar.

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Larkham, Peter J. "Replanning post-war Birmingham." Architectura 46, no. 1 (December 30, 2016): 2–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/atc-2016-0002.

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AbstractThe problems and opportunities of post-war reconstruction in the UK are well demonstrated by the city of Birmingham, although what happened there is hardly typical of the country overall. The city was badly bombed, although damage was diffuse. Unusually, no formal ›reconstruction plan‹ was produced because city managers distrusted ›big plans‹, and because there were existing slum clearance plans and ring road aspirations. A new ring road and precinct developments dominated the rebuilt city centre, though the development process was slow and generated very mixed public responses. The architectural and urban forms created were also mixed, but concrete and brutalism reshaped the city’s image. Some of the buildings have not lasted well and were redeveloped after relatively short lives, and the technocentric, car-dominated approach has also failed, with sections of ring road also being redeveloped. This paper demonstrates that even a determined, single-minded approach to reconstruction takes decades to implement; and that changes in fashion and society may very quickly render that reconstruction obsolete
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Sibanda, Nyasha. "The Press, Society and the Coming of Sound to Birmingham." Journal of British Cinema and Television 17, no. 2 (April 2020): 233–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/jbctv.2020.0521.

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The arrival of sound on British cinema screens is perhaps more accurately described as the arrival of American sounds. Almost overnight, the sounds of American voices, accents, slang and vernacular became commonplace throughout the country. This article uses linguistic and social economic frameworks to explore the ways in which American sound films challenged the legitimacy and dominance of hegemonic forms of language within Britain. Taking the mainstream provincial press as a primary source, it discusses the ways in which the arrival of sound was seen as a nationalist threat to both industry and culture. The article uses Birmingham as a focal point and uncovers nuanced ways in which language was negotiated and deployed both by mainstream institutions as well as young people and the working classes. It argues that dominant social actors within British society – such as the press, the Church and educationists – saw talkies as almost invariably threatening, while marginalised social actors like children, teenagers and working-class Northern and Midland audiences were able to use the othered displacement of American talkies as a class-neutral space where their own social capital was bolstered.
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Henderson, L. M. "The British Society for Clinical Neurophysiology, Birmingham, 27 March 1998." Clinical Neurophysiology 112, no. 10 (October 2001): 1958–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1388-2457(01)00611-3.

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Thompson, Chris. "Royal College Golf Society." Psychiatric Bulletin 23, no. 12 (December 1999): 750–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.23.12.750-b.

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Sir: On the last evening of the Annual General Meeting in Birmingham a small group of intrepid golfers made their way beyond the M40 to the Forest of Arden Golf Course for the inaugural meeting of the Royal College Golf Society. With the addition of a very small number of interloping general practitioners we made up a multi-disciplinary band of 24 golfers all intent on a brief period of relaxation after the academic rigours of the meeting. Unfortunately we could not persuade the Continuing Professional Development office to offer us credits for sports psychology, so the altruism of all those who took part is to be applauded.
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Moore, D., and J. Hedger. "6th Society General Meeting University of Birmingham, 18 – 21 April 1988." Mycologist 3, no. 1 (January 1989): 53–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0269-915x(89)80031-x.

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Hart-Davis, A. "ESSAYS ON SCIENCE AND SOCIETY: James Watt and the Lunaticks of Birmingham." Science 292, no. 5514 (April 6, 2001): 55–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1060460.

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Gerlach, Gary G. "Cooperative Education and Internships at the Birmingham Botanical Gardens." HortScience 32, no. 4 (July 1997): 591C—591. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.32.4.591c.

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The BBG is a facility of the City of Birmingham Park and Recreation Board and operates as a coalition of the City's professional staff and resources as well as those of the Botanical Society (Friends), Alabama Cooperative Extension System (both groups maintaining offices at the BBG), 2 local community colleges, 12 specialized plant societies (that aid in the maintenance of collections), 100+ garden clubs, numerous related groups, and a strong community support. Current discussions with the University of Alabama in Birmingham will lead to certified programs at the Gardens. There are no formal contracts but informal agreements that are formed for each project. The Society sponsored the 1980 Master Plan and updates it every 10 years, employs a professional educator, and sponsors numerous special activities and programs, many in conjunction with the previously mentioned groups. Internships are hired and paid through the City. Students are rotated weekly through the various operations of the Gardens, including administration, education, taxonomy, and the Library. A special project is done in the area of interest to the student.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Birmingham Society of Artizans"

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Rowley, Andrew S. "Professions, class and society: solicitors in 19th century Birmingham." Thesis, Aston University, 1988. http://publications.aston.ac.uk/12184/.

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The thesis provides an analysis of an occupation in the process of making itself a profession. The solicitors' profession in Birmingham underwent a great many changes during the 19th century against a background of industrialisation and urbanisation. The solicitors' conception of their status and role, in the face of these challenges, had implications for successful strategies of professionalisation. The increased prestige and power of the profession, and especially its elite, are examined in their social context rather than in terms of a technical process, or educational and organisational change. The thesis argues that -the profession's social relationships and broad concerns were significant in establishing solicitors as "professional men". In particular these are related to the profession's efforts to gain control of markets for legal services and increase social status. In the course of achieving these aims a concept of profession and a self-image were articulated by solicitors in order to persuade society and the state of the legitimacy of their claims. The concept of the gentlemanly professional was of critical importance in this instance. The successful creation of a provincial professional "community" by the end of the 19th century rested principally on a social and moral conception of professionalism rather than one which stressed specialised training and knowledge, professional organisations and credentials.
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Smith, Harry John. "Propertied society and public life : the social history of Birmingham, 1780-1832." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2013. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:608bf88d-87af-4dba-993e-8772b86afd71.

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Social history has been much criticised over the past thirty years. This criticism and the consequent turn to cultural history have brought many advances, developing our understanding of the language, discourse, ritual and culture. However, it has also led to a neglect of structural factors and a turn away from the study of collectivities. This has meant that many subjects that class used to explain (social difference, social relationships and collective actions) are often ignored or undertheorized in current historical scholarship. This thesis examines one of these issues: how should historians understand and analyse the process of social-group formation? It does this through a case study of propertied society in Birmingham between 1780 and 1832. Propertied society is a loose category that does not have the connotations of concepts such as ‘middle class’. This thesis suggests that there were many different types of social group and that historians need to differentiate between them when analysing past societies. The most important distinction is between groups who shared attributes and groups that acted together. However, there was no simple relationship between attributes and actions; individuals who shared attributes did not necessarily act in the same way. The first part of the thesis (chapters 1-3) discusses who was included within the category of propertied society and the social and geographical understandings of those individuals. The second part of the thesis (chapters 4-6) moves from the general material and cultural structures of propertied society to consider three case studies that examine a number of processes by which individuals came together to form groups focused on particular discourses, institutions and events. The three case studies discuss the family and the transfer of social knowledge (chapter 4), local government and the nature of elites (chapter 5), and the process of politicization through examining membership of the Birmingham Political Union (chapter 6).
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Clagett, Martin Richard. "William Small 1734-1775: Teacher, Mentor, Scientist." VCU Scholars Compass, 2003. http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/731.

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Several studies have examined the life of William Small but only in respect to certain phases of his life, particularly Small's connections to Thomas Jefferson, James Watt, or the Birmingham Lunar Society. In 1758 William Small was recruited for the post of professor of mathematics at the College of William and Mary. From 1760 through 1762, he was Thomas Jefferson's only professor at the College of William and Mary. In 1764 Small returned to England and, with the assistance of Benjamin Franklin and others, became physician and scientific advisor to Matthew Boulton, a wealthy industrialist. Small, Boulton, and Erasmus Darwin established the celebrated Birmingham Lunar Society, which played an important role in the industrialization of Britain in the late eighteenth century. In 1767, Small met James Watt and thus began a collaboration that produced the steam engine. While American scholars have concentrated on Small's influence on Thomas Jefferson, British scholars have focused on Small's role in the Birmingham Lunar Society or his role in the development of the steam engine. This study examines Small's life in its entirety. Areas of Small's life overlooked by previous studies include his early life and education, the substance of his teaching career at the College of William and Mary, and his medical career. The true extent of Small's influences and the connections that he maintained between British and American intellectuals can only be seen by examining his life in its entirety. This study sought to bring together the disparate elements of Small's life in order to make clearer his place in history.
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Wan, Connie. "Samuel Lines and sons : rediscovering Birmingham's artistic dynasty 1794-1898 through works on paper at the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists : Volume 1, Text ; Volume 2, Catalogue ; Volume 3, Illustrations." Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2012. http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/3645/.

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This thesis is the first academic study of nineteenth-century artist and drawing master Samuel Lines (1778-1863) and his five sons: Henry Harris Lines (1800-1889), William Rostill Lines (1802-1846), Samuel Rostill Lines (1804-1833), Edward Ashcroft Lines (1807-1875) and Frederick Thomas Lines (1809-1898). The thesis, with its catalogue, has been a result of a collaborative study focusing on a collection of works on paper by the sons of Samuel Lines, from the Permanent Collection of the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists (RBSA). Both the thesis and catalogue aim to re-instate the family’s position as one of Birmingham’s most prominent and distinguished artistic dynasties. The thesis is divided into three chapters and includes a complete and comprehensive catalogue of 56 works on paper by the Lines family in the RBSA Permanent Collection. The catalogue also includes discursive information on the family’s careers otherwise not mentioned in the main thesis itself. The first chapter explores the family’s role in the establishment of the Birmingham Society of Arts (later the RBSA). It also explores the influence of art institutions and industry on the production of the fine and manufactured arts in Birmingham during the nineteenth century. The second chapter discusses the Lines family’s landscape imagery, in relation to prevailing landscape aesthetics and the physically changing landscape of the Midlands. Henry Harris Lines is the main focus of the last chapter which reveals the extent of his skills as archaeologist, antiquarian and artist.
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Tavares, Luiz Alberto. "James Watt: a trajetória que levou ao desenvolvimento da máquina a vapor vista por seus biógrafos e homens de ciências." Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, 2008. https://tede2.pucsp.br/handle/handle/13407.

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Made available in DSpace on 2016-04-28T14:16:37Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Luiz Alberto Tavares.pdf: 408610 bytes, checksum: 05f9a9d3fd1807fe6b040c1ebd820478 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2008-10-15
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The aim of this paper is to discuss the Scotch James Watt s work in the improvement of the steam engine. This research considered studies of historians from the Nineteenth-Century contemporary with him and historians from the Twentieth-Century who saw him in a more critical way. We also consider the relationship between Watt and his partners at the University of Glasgow and at the Lunar Society, as well as his partnership with Thomas Boulton for the commercialization of the steam engine. Another point of this work is the building of his image as the main inventor of the steam engine
Esta dissertação tem por objetivo a abordagem do trabalho do escocês James Watt no aperfeiçoamento da máquina a vapor. Este levantamento foi feito a partir de estudos de historiadores do século XIX contemporâneos a Watt e historiadores do século XX que vêem Watt de forma mais crítica. Abordamos também o relacionamento de Watt com seus parceiros, tanto na Universidade de Glasgow, como na Lunar Society, além de sua parceria com Thomas Boulton estabelecida para a comercialização da máquina. Abordamos também a projeção da sua imagem como principal inventor da máquina a vapor
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Books on the topic "Birmingham Society of Artizans"

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Royal Birmingham Society of Artists. Royal Birmingham Society of Artists exhibition catalogue. Birmingham: Royal Birmingham Society of Artists, 2000.

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Artists, Royal Birmingham Society of. Royal Birmingham Society of Artists exhibition catalogue. Birmingham: Royal Birmingham Society of Artists, 2000.

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Rowley, Andrew Swann. Professions, class and society: solicitors in 19th century Birmingham. Birmingham: Aston University. Management centre, 1988.

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Landscape of transformations: Architecture and Birmingham, Alabama. Knoxville [Tenn.]: University of Tennessee Press, 2010.

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Cohen, R. A. One hundred years: A history of the University of Birmingham Dental Students' Society. [Birmingham]: [s.n.], 1986.

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Cohen, R. A. One hundred years: A history of the University of Birmingham Dental Students' Society. Birmingham: Dental Students' Society, 1986.

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Jones, Goronwy Tudor. The Lunar Society of Birmingham and the history of medicine. [Birmingham]: University of Birmingham, School of Continuing Studies, 1994.

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Society of University Dental Instructors. International Conference. Society of University Dental Instructors 23rd International Conference, University of Birmingham Dental School, Birmingham, 4th-6th April, 1991. [Birmingham]: [University of Birmingham Dental School], 1991.

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Market Research Society. (38th 1995 Birmingham). The Market Research Society 38th annual conference, International Convention Centre, Birmingham. London: Market Research Society, 1995.

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Making a place for Islam in British society: Muslims in Birmingham. Coventry: Centre for Research in Ethnic Relations, Arts Building, University of Warwick, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Birmingham Society of Artizans"

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Jackson, David. "The Birmingham Midshires Building Society." In Dynamic Organisations, 185–96. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-14169-2_10.

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"BIRMINGHAM: BLADES OF FRUSTRATION." In Black British Culture and Society, 210–23. Routledge, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203360644-24.

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Hilton, Matthew. "The Polyester-Flannelled Philanthropists: The Birmingham Consumers’ Group and Affluent Britain." In An Affluent Society?, 149–65. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315262819-9.

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Pare, William. "“Laws of the Birmingham Co-Operative Society, and Trading Fund Association”, In An Address Delivered at the Opening of the Birmingham Cooperative Society (Birmingham: Printed for W. Plastans, and Published by the Society, 1828), 27–32." In Contemporary Thought on Nineteenth Century Socialism, 203–9. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429452376-30.

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Faill, Rodger T. "The Birmingham Window; Alleghanian décollement tectonics in the Cambrian-Ordovician succession of the Appalachian Vallay and Ridge Province, Birmingham, Pennsylvania." In Centennial Field Guide Volume 5: Northeastern Section of the Geological Society of America, 37–42. Geological Society of America, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/0-8137-5405-4.37.

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Pineda, Erin R. "Forcing the Better Argument." In Seeing Like an Activist, 127–58. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197526422.003.0005.

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This chapter details the outward-facing dynamics of civil disobedience by examining the tactics employed in the 1963 Birmingham Campaign. Though Birmingham is often memorialized as the pinnacle of nonviolent and properly civil disobedience in the United States, the tactics that the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) deployed there trouble the easy distinction between persuasion and coercion, nonviolence and force. Activists in Birmingham described and defended their actions as crisis-generating—what this chapter calls the tactics of disruption and the tactics of disclosure. In a society shaped by white supremacy, black activists knew that they would have to arrest the attention of white citizens—disrupt everyday routines, violate norms of comportment, and involve spectators in a dramatic conflict—in order to create the space for persuasion to do its work. They had to force the better argument.
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Davis, Michael T., James Epstein, Jack Fruchtman, and Mary Thale. "Citizens, John Binns and John Gale Jones, the citizens we deputed to visit the popular society at Birmingham, are speedily to take their trial on a charge of seditious conduct (1796)." In London Corresponding Society, 1792–1799, 231–34. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003192657-10.

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Howes, Anton. "Building a Social Movement?" In Arts and Minds, 303–18. Princeton University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691182643.003.0013.

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This chapter draws attention to the Special Activities Committee of the Royal Society of Arts. It mentions the institution of the Benjamin Franklin Medal, which was originally intended to be specifically awarded to younger people in order to draw them into the Society. It also talks about Freddie Williams, who had already been elected to a fellowship at the Royal Society and awarded the first Benjamin Franklin Medal. The chapter discusses the Society's expansion by forming regional committees, which started with Birmingham in 1960 that eventually became a West Midlands committee. It elaborates on the idea of the expansion of committees that would promote discussions across the country and lead to new ideas and initiatives for the Society to adopt on a national basis.
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Mitchell, Elaine. "Marigolds Not Manufacturing." In Pen, print and communication in the eighteenth century, 153–68. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789622300.003.0011.

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This chapter considers the printed plant catalogues of eighteenth-century Birmingham nurseryman, John Brunton. More than lists of plants for the horticulturally acquisitive, their pages reflect the exploration, colonisation and commercialisation that brought a flood of new plants into Britain from around the world. Approached as cultural and material objects, the catalogues draw attention to the fruitful connection to be made between garden history and printing history and culture. This exploration illuminates new aspects of Birmingham’s society and culture in the eighteenth century that challenge our perception of a town more readily noted for its manufacturing than its marigolds.
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Sondhi, Ranjit. "sampad: working with arts and culture." In Community Organising Against Racism. Policy Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447333746.003.0006.

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sampad is a South Asian arts and heritage organisation based at the Midlands Arts Centre in Birmingham, UK, that develops high-quality dance, music, drama, literature, poetry, crafts performances, and events based on traditions drawn from the countries of the Indian subcontinent to engage in a creative intercultural dialogue with all sections of Britain's increasingly diverse society. Through the language of art, it explores the relationship between traditional and emerging identities, between established and popular art forms, within and between different religious, cultural, and social groupings, and between settled communities and new migrants to create the basis for a wider and more informed debate in wider civil society about the construction of community and identity in the modern era. This chapter explores the extent to which sampad has met its aims and objectives. sampad's formal mission statement now is to connect people and communities with British Asian arts and heritage and to play a proactive role in the creative economy.
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Conference papers on the topic "Birmingham Society of Artizans"

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Enderby, Beth J., Maya Desai, and Richard Heaver. "A Cross-sectional Analysis Of Children Treated For Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia At Birmingham Children's Hospital." In American Thoracic Society 2010 International Conference, May 14-19, 2010 • New Orleans. American Thoracic Society, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm-conference.2010.181.1_meetingabstracts.a3320.

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Wille, K. M., R. P. Holt, V. Rusanov, N. S. Sharma, E. Diaz Zavala, S. C. Bellot, T. D. Lewis, J. K. Kirklin, C. W. Hoopes, and V. G. Valentine. "Analysis of Survival and Mortality After Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation: the University of Alabama at Birmingham Experience." In American Thoracic Society 2019 International Conference, May 17-22, 2019 - Dallas, TX. American Thoracic Society, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm-conference.2019.199.1_meetingabstracts.a1619.

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Pillai, A., J. Marsh, D. Wilson, S. O’Hickey, A. Sahal, A. Szuszmann, D. Subramanian, et al. "P132 Application of a hub-spoke model to severe asthma service delivery: outcomes from the birmingham regional centre." In British Thoracic Society Winter Meeting 2018, QEII Centre, Broad Sanctuary, Westminster, London SW1P 3EE, 5 to 7 December 2018, Programme and Abstracts. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Thoracic Society, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/thorax-2018-212555.290.

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Khan, Ahsan, Farhan Shahid, Gregory Lip, and Eduard Shantsila. "97 Total monocyte count as predictor of exercise capacity in patients with permanent atrial fibrillation and preserved left ventricular function – the west birmingham AF project." In British Cardiovascular Society Annual Conference ‘High Performing Teams’, 4–6 June 2018, Manchester, UK. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Cardiovascular Society, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/heartjnl-2018-bcs.96.

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Jones, GAL, G. Colville, Y. Heward, A. Savage, R. Morrison, J. Fraser, M. Griksaitis, and DP Inwald. "G359 Picus under pressure? a national paediatric intensive care society survey of psychological morbidity in picu staff." In Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, Abstracts of the RCPCH Conference and exhibition, 13–15 May 2019, ICC, Birmingham, Paediatrics: pathways to a brighter future. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2019-rcpch.346.

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Soltan, M., L. Crowley, CR Melville, J. Varney, S. Cassidy, R. Mahida, F. Grudzinska, D. Parekh, D. Dosanjh, and D. Thickett. "L12 To what extent are social determinants of health, including household overcrowding, air pollution and housing quality deprivation, modulators of presentation, ITU admission and outcomes among patients with SARS-COV-2 infection in an urban catchment area in Birmingham, United Kingdom?" In British Thoracic Society Winter Meeting, Wednesday 17 to Friday 19 February 2021, Programme and Abstracts. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Thoracic Society, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/thorax-2020-btsabstracts.414.

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