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1

Cash, Scottye J. "Family Preservation Services: The Casey Family–A Chronology." Journal of Family Social Work 6, no. 2 (July 18, 2002): 43–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j039v06n02_04.

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2

Sumser, Robert. "The History of the Family. James Casey , R. I. Moore." Journal of Modern History 64, no. 4 (December 1992): 752–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/244553.

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GIMMEL, MATTHEW L. "Genus-level revision of the family Phalacridae (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea)." Zootaxa 3605, no. 1 (January 15, 2013): 1–147. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3605.1.1.

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A pre-phylogenetic revision of the family Phalacridae at the genus level is presented. Twenty-eight new generic synonymies are established as follows: Acylomus Sharp 1888 (=Liophalacrus Sharp 1888, syn. nov.; Ganyrus Guillebeau 1894, syn. nov.; Podocesus Guillebeau 1894, syn. nov.; Tinodemus Guillebeau 1894, syn. nov.; Ledorus Guillebeau 1895, syn. nov.; Astenulus Guillebeau 1896, syn. nov.; Afronyrus Švec 2006, syn. nov.), Apallodes Reitter 1873 (=Litolibrus Sharp 1889, syn. nov.; Sphaeropsis Guillebeau 1893, syn. nov.; Gyromorphus Guillebeau 1894, syn. nov.), Augasmus Motschulsky 1858 (=Megischius Guillebeau 1896, syn. nov.; Nematolibrus Sahlberg 1913, syn. nov.), Entomocnemus Guillebeau 1894 (=Stilbomimus Champion 1924, syn. nov.), Grouvelleus Guillebeau 1892 (=Ochrolitoides Champion 1924, syn. nov.; Litotarsus Champion 1925, syn. nov.), Litochrus Erichson 1845 (=Merobrachys Guillebeau 1895, syn. nov.), Litostilbus Guillebeau 1894 (=Pseudolitochrus Liubarsky 1993, syn. nov.), Ochrolitus Sharp 1889 (=Gorginus Guillebeau 1894, syn. nov.), Olibroporus Casey 1890 (=Parasemus Guillebeau 1894, syn. nov.), Olibrosoma Tournier 1889 (=Lichrotus Lyubarsky 1993, syn. nov.), Phaenocephalus Wollaston 1873 (=Phalacratomus Scott 1922, syn. nov.; Heterostilbus Champion 1924, syn. nov.), Phalacrinus Blackburn 1891 (=Sphaerostilbus Champion 1924, syn. nov.), Pseudolibrus Flach 1889 (=Biophytus Guillebeau 1894, syn. nov.; Polyaloxus Guillebeau 1894, syn. nov.), Pycinus Guillebeau 1893 (=Ochrodemus Guillebeau 1893, syn. nov.; Radinus Guillebeau 1893, syn. nov.; Euphalacrus Champion 1925, syn. nov.). Ten new genera and seven new species are described: Antennogasmus, gen. nov. (type species: A. cordatus, sp. nov.), Austroporus, gen. nov. (type species: A. victoriensis (Blackburn)), Malagasmus Gimmel, gen. nov. (type species: M. thalesi, sp. nov.), Malagophytus, gen. nov. (type species: M. steineri, sp. nov.), Neolitochrus, gen. nov. (type species: N. pulchellus (LeConte)), Paracylomus, gen. nov. (type species: P. asiaticus (Champion)), Platyphalacrus, gen. nov. (type species: P. lawrencei, sp. nov.), Ranomafanacrinus, gen. nov. (type species: R. nigrinus, sp. nov.), Steinerlitrus, gen. nov. (type species: S. warreni, sp. nov.), Sveculus, gen. nov. (type species: S. lewisi, sp. nov.). Generic reassignments resulted in 194 new combinations. Nine new names have been established for junior primary and secondary homonyms: Acylomus bicoloratus nom. nov. for Tinodemus bicolor Švec 2002; Acylomus lyubarskyi nom. nov. for Olibrus capriviensis Lyubarsky 1998; Acylomus sveci nom. nov. for Tinodemus reticulatus Švec 2002; Acylomus orientalis nom. nov. for Stilbus similis Švec 1992; Acylomus zdeneki nom. nov. for Afronyrus snizeki Švec 2006; Apallodes championi nom. nov. for Litolibrus ocellatus Champion 1925; Olibrus peringueyi nom. nov. for Olibrus consanguineus Péringuey 1892; Augasmus exquisitus nom. nov. for Litochrus pulchellus Blackburn 1895; Litochrus pronotalis nom. nov. for Augasmus bimaculatus Lyubarsky 1996. A type species is designated for Phalacrinus Blackburn 1891 (P. australis Blackburn 1891). Six new species-group synonymies are established: Acylomus ergoti Casey 1890 (=Tinodemus grouvellei Guillebeau 1894, syn. nov.), Acylomus curvolineatus (Champion 1924) (=Tinodemus meridianus (Švec 1992), syn. nov.; Olibrus stuporatus Lyubarsky 1994, syn. nov.), Xanthocomus attenuatus (Casey, 1890) (=Xanthocomus concinnus (Casey, 1916), syn. nov.; Stilbus thoracicus Casey, 1916, syn. nov.; Stilbus quadrisetosus Casey, 1916, syn. nov.). One name, Olibrus sternalis Casey 1916, is resurrected from synonymy. Lectotypes are designated for 23 nominal species. One genus and two species are excluded from Phalacridae: Sternosternus Guillebeau 1894 (with its type and only species, S. grouvelleiGuillebeau 1894) and Parasemus parvopallidus Lea 1932, both of which belong in Hydrophilidae. All 34 resulting genera in the family Phalacridae are keyed, described, and illustrated. A phylogenetic hypothesis based on analysis of a matrix of 98 morphological characters was created using parsimony. Results of these analyses were not robust enough at deep levels to create a new subfamilial or tribal classification, but nine genus-groups have been hypothesized.
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4

Kivnick, Helen Q. "An Uncertain Inheritance: Writers on Caring for Family, edited by Nell Casey." Activities, Adaptation & Aging 32, no. 2 (August 18, 2008): 163–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01924780802256576.

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5

Shepard, William D. "Beetles (Coleoptera) of Peru: A Survey of Families. Mycetophagidae Leach 1815." Revista Peruana de Biología 27, no. 2 (May 23, 2020): 121–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.15381/rpb.v27i2.17872.

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The diversity of the family Mycetophagidae (Coleoptera) is summarized for Peru. Two genera are recorded (Litargus Erichson and Thrimolus Casey). Comments are given on classification and distribution of the family, as well as known biology and natural history.
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Lambert, Michael, and Stephen Crossley. "‘Getting with the (troubled families) programme’: a review." Social Policy and Society 16, no. 1 (September 21, 2016): 87–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1474746416000385.

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The commitment of the appointed Director General of the Troubled Families Unit, Louise Casey, that the Troubled Families Programme (TFP) was ‘an opportunity not to repeat the failed attempts of the past’ masks several enduring continuities (Casey, 2012: 3). This review article argues that the TFP should be seen as part of a wider spectrum of policies which locates ‘troubles’ or ‘problems’ in the family itself and emphasises behaviour as the target of action without regard to wider social or economic considerations. This policy process must be understood within a wider context of not only historical efforts ‘to constrain the redistributive potential of state welfare’ (Macnicol, 1987: 316) but also of contemporary forms of neoliberal governance of ‘the family’ (Butler, 2014; Crossley, 2016a; Gillies, 2014).
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7

WILLIAMS, PATRICK. "Family and Community in Early Modern Spain: The Citizens of Granada, 1570-1739By James Casey." History 94, no. 314 (April 2009): 238–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-229x.2009.453_10.x.

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8

ZERBE, RICHARD O., ROBERT D. PLOTNICK, RONALD C. KESSLER, PETER J. PECORA, EVA HIRIPI, KIRK O’BRIEN, JASON WILLIAMS, DIANA ENGLISH, and JAMES WHITE. "BENEFITS AND COSTS OF INTENSIVE FOSTER CARE SERVICES: THE CASEY FAMILY PROGRAMS COMPARED TO STATE SERVICES." Contemporary Economic Policy 27, no. 3 (July 2009): 308–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1465-7287.2008.00136.x.

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9

Kennedy, W. J., and M. Delamette. "Lyelliceratidae and Flickiidae (Ammonoidea) from the Upper Albian of the Helvetic Shelf (western Alps, France and Switzerland)." Journal of Paleontology 68, no. 6 (November 1994): 1263–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000034272.

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The condensed Upper Albian to Lower Cenomanian deposits of the Helvetic Shelf of France and Switzerland yield diverse ammonite faunas including representatives of the family Lyelliceratidae, subfamily Stoliczkaiinae that is the origin of the Upper Cretaceous Acanthoceratidae and its descendants, as well as representatives of the dwarf stoliczkaiine offshoot, the family Flickiidae, subfamily Salaziceratinae. The following are described and referred to the Upper Albian Mortoniceras inflatum Zone: Neophlycticeras (N.) brottianum (d'Orbigny, 1841), N. (N.) rhodanense Delamette, 1983, N. (Protissotia) itierianum (d'Orbigny, 1841), and Zuluscaphites helveticus n. sp. From the Upper Albian Stoliczkaia dispar Zone come Neophlycticeras (N.) blancheti (Pictet and Campiche, 1859), N. (Paradolphia) priscum Casey, 1965, Stoliczkaia (5.) notha (Seeley, 1865), S. (S.) tenuis Renz, 1968, S. (Lamnayella) tetragona Neumayr, 1875, Cenisella bonnetiana Pictet, 1847, Zuluscaphites orycteropusi Van Hoepen, 1955, Salaziceras (S.) salazacense (Hébert and Munier-Chalmas, 1875), and S. (S.) breistrofferi Scholz, 1979. The Lower Cenomanian Mantelliceras mantelli Zone, Neostlingoceras carcitanense Subzone yields Stoliczkaia (Stoliczkaia) villoutreysi Casey, 1965, S. (Lamnayella) tetragona Neumayr, 1875, and S. (Shumarinaia) hashimotoi Matsumoto and Inoma, 1975.
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MAGRO, ALEXANDRA, LÚCIA M. ALMEIDA, JULISSA CHURATA-SALCEDO, and JEAN-LOUIS HEMPTINNE. "New synonym of Nephus (Nephus) voeltzkowi Weise (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae), with comments on the origin of a Neartic population and its possible asexual status." Zootaxa 4949, no. 1 (March 24, 2021): 198–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4949.1.13.

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Coccinellidae (Coleoptera), commonly known as ladybirds or ladybugs, are a highly diversified family comprising nearly 6000 described species (Vandenberg 2002) distributed in 2 subfamilies and 24 tribes (Seago et al. 2011). The genus Nephus Mulsant, 1846, present worldwide, is currently placed in the vast Coccidulini tribe (Seago et al. 2011). There are different classifications for Nephus: Gordon (1976, 1985) considered five Nephus subgenera (Depressoscymnus Gordon, Nephus Mulsant, Scymnobius Casey, Sidis Mulsant, and Turboscymnus Gordon), while Fürsch (1987) considered nine Nephus subgenera, and later (Fürsch 1996) excluded Diomus Mulsant, 1850 as subgenus, leaving Bipunctatus Fürsch, 1987, Depressoscymnus Gordon, 1976, Geminosipho Fürsch, 1987, Nephus Mulsant, 1846, Parascymnus Chapin, 1965, Scymnobius Casey, 1899, Sidis Mulsant, 1850 and Turboscymnus Gordon, 1976. Gordon and González (2002) elevated Scymnobius to genus.
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Bousquet, Y., and A. Larochelle. "CATALOGUE OF THE GEADEPHAGA (COLEOPTERA: TRACHYPACHIDAE, RHYSODIDAE, CARABIDAE INCLUDING CICINDELINI) OF AMERICA NORTH OF MEXICO." Memoirs of the Entomological Society of Canada 125, S167 (1993): 3–397. http://dx.doi.org/10.4039/entm125167fv.

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AbstractAll species-group names of Trachypachidae, Rhysodidae, and Carabidae (including cicindelincs) correctly recorded from America north of Mexico are catalogued with state and province records. Valid names are listed with the author(s), date of publication, and page citation in their current and original combinations while all synonyms are provided in their original combinations. Genus-group names are recorded with the author(s), date of publication, page citation, type species, and kind of type species fixation. Species groups were preferred to subgenera but subscneric names are also listed.The following nomenclatural changes are proposed and discussed: Bembidion neocoerulescens Bousquet, new replacement name for B. coerulescens Van Dyke, 1925; Chlaenius circumcinctus Say, 1830 for C. perplexus Dejean, 1831; Cyclotrachelus dejeanellus (Csiki, 1930) for C. morio (Dejean, 1828); Cyclotrachelus freitagi Bousquet, new replacement name for C. obsoletus (Say, 1830); Dyschirius aeneolus LeConte, 1850 for D. frigidus Mannerheim, 1853; Harpalus laevipes Zetterstedt, 1828 for H. quadripunctatus Dejean, 1829; Harpalus providens Casey, 1914 for H. viduus LeConte, 1865; Harpalus reversus Casey, 1924 for H. funerarius Csiki, 1932; Notiophilus sierranus Casey, 1920 for N. obscurus Fall, 1901; Pseudamara Lindroth, 1968 for Disamara Lindroth, 1976; Pterostichus trinarius (Casey, 1918) for P. ohionis Csiki, 1930; Stenolophus carbo Bousquet, new replacement name for S. carbonarius (Dejean, 1829).Thirty-six new synonyms are established and seven, considered as questionable, are confirmed. They are (with the valid names in parentheses): Agonothorax planipennis Motschulsky, 1850 (= ? Agonum affine Kirby, 1837); Platynus variolatus LeConte, 1851 (= Agonum limbatum Motschulsky, 1845); Agonum nitidum Harris, 1869 (= ? Agonum melanarium Dejean, 1828); Amerinus fuscicornis Casey, 1914 and A. longipennis Casey, 1914 (= Amerinus linearis (LeConte, 1863)); Apristus fuscipennis Motschulsky, 1864 (= Apristus latens LeConte, 1848); Batenus aeneolus Motschulsky, 1865 (= Agonum exaratum (Mannerheim, 1853)); Brachystylus curtipennis Motschulsky, 1859 (= Pterostichus congestus (Ménétriés, 1843)); Brachystylus parallelus Motschulsky, 1859 (= ? Pterostichus californicus (Dejean, 1828)); Cratacanthus cephalotes Casey, 1914, C. subovalis Casey, 1914, and C. texanus Casey, 1884 (= Cratacanthus dubius (Palisot de Beauvois, 1811)); Cymindis comma T.W. Harris, 1869 (= ? Cymindis limbatus Dejean, 1831); Feronia praetermissa Chaudoir, 1868 (= Pterostichus commutabilis (Motschulsky, 1866)); Galerita angusticeps Casey, 1920 (= Galerita janus (Fabricius, 1792)); Gonoderus cordicollis Motschulsky 1859 (= Pterostichus tristis (Dejean, 1828)); Anisodactylus alternans LeConte, 1851 (= Anisodactylus alternans (Motschulsky, 1845)); Hypherpes spissitarsis Casey, 1918 (= Pterostichus tarsalis LeConte, 1873); Lebia brunnicollis Motschulsky, 1864 (= Lebia lobulata LeConte, 1863); Lebia subfigurata Motschulsky, 1864 and L. sublimbata Motschulsky, 1864 (= Lebia analis Dejean, 1825); Lophoglossus bispiculatus Casey, 1913 and L. illini Casey, 1913 (= Lophoglossus scrutator (LeConte, 1848)); Platysma leconteianum Lutshnik, 1922 (= Pterostichus commutabilis (Motschulsky, 1866)); Loxandrus iris Motschulsky, 1866(= Loxandrus rectus (Say, 1823)); Masoreus americanus Motschulsky, 1864 (= Stenolophus rotundicollis (Haldeman, 1843)); Notaphus laterimaculatus Motschulsky, 1859 (= Bembidion approximatum (LeConte, 1852)); Notiophilus cribrilaterus Motschulsky, 1864 (= Notiophilus novemstriatus LeConte, 1848); Omaseus brevibasis Casey, 1924 (= Pterostichus luctuosus (Dejean, 1828)); Notaphus incertus Motschulsky, 1845 (= Bembidion breve (Motschulsky, 1845)); Peryphus concolor Motschulsky, 1850 (= Bembidion platynoides Hayward, 1897); Peryphus erosus Motschulsky, 1850 (= Bembidion transversale Dejean, 1831); Peryphus subinflatus Motschulsky, 1859 (= Bembidion petrosum petrosum Gebler, 1833); Planesus fuscicollis Motschulsky, 1865 and P. laevigatas Motschulsky, 1865 (= Cymindis platicollis (Say, 1823)); Poecilus pimalis Casey, 1913 (= Poecilus diplophryus Chaudoir, 1876); Pterostichus arizonicus Schaeffer, 1910 (= Ophryogaster flohri Bates, 1882); Pterostichus sequoiarum Casey, 1913 (= Pterostichus tarsalis LeConte, 1873); Scaphinotus grandis Gistel, 1857 (= ? Scaphinotus unicolor unicolor (Fabricius, 1787)); Stenocrepis chalcas Bates, 1882 and S. chalcochrous Chaudoir, 1883 (= Stenocrepis texana (LeConte, 1863)); Stenolophus humeralis Motschulsky, 1864 (= Stenolophus plebejus Dejean, 1829); and Stenolophus laticollis Motschulsky, 1864 (= Stenolophus ochropezus (Say, 1823)).Olisthopus iterans Casey, 1913 and Pterostichus illustris LeConte, 1851, listed as junior synonyms of O. parmatus (Say, 1823) and P. congestus (Ménétriés, 1843), respectively, are considered in the present work as valid species.The type species (listed in parentheses) of the following 14 genus-group taxa are designated for the first time: Circinalidia Casey, 1920 (Agonum aeruginosum Dejean, 1828); Evolenes LeConte, 1853 (Oodes exaratus Dejean, 1831); Leucagonum Casey, 1920 (Agonum maculicolle Dejean, 1828); Megaliridia Casey, 1920 (Cychrus viduus Dejean, 1826); Megalostylus Chaudoir, 1843 (Feronia lucidula Dejean, 1828 = Feronia recta Say, 1823); Micragra Chaudoir, 1872 (Micragra lissonota Chaudoir, 1872); Onota Chaudoir, 1872 (Onota bicolor Chaudoir, 1872); Oodiellus Chaudoir, 1882 (Oodiellus mexicanus Chaudoir, 1882 = Anatrichis alutacea Bates, 1882); Oxydrepanus Putzeys, 1866 (Dyschirius rufus Putzeys, 1846); Paranchomenus Casey, 1920 (Platynus stygicus LeConte, 1854 = Anchomenus mannerheimii Dejean, 1828); Pemphus Motschulsky, 1866 (Cychrus velutinus Ménétriés, 1843); Peronoscelis Chaudoir, 1872 (Tetragonoderus figuratus Dejean, 1831); Rhombodera Reiche, 1842 (Rhombodera virgata Reiche, 1842 = Lebia trivittata Dejean, 1831); and Stenous Chaudoir, 1857 (Oodes cupreus Chaudoir, 1843).Two new family-group names are proposed, Cnemalobini (= Cnemacanthini of authors) based on Cnemalobus Guérin-Méneville, 1839 and Loxandrini based on Loxandrus LeConte, 1852.The work also includes a synopsis of all extant world carabid tribes, a bibliography of all original descriptions, a full taxonomic index, and, as appendices, lists of nomina nuda and unjustified emendations, and annotated lists of species incorrectly or doubtfully recorded from America north of Mexico and of new North American records.
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MAJKA, CHRISTOPHER G. "The Ciidae (Coleoptera: Tenebrionoidea) of the Maritime Provinces of Canada: new records, distribution, zoogeography, and observations on beetle-fungi relationships in saproxylic environments." Zootaxa 1654, no. 1 (December 5, 2007): 1–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1654.1.1.

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The Ciidae of the Maritime Provinces of Canada are surveyed. Fifteen species are now known to occur in the region, thirteen in Nova Scotia, six in New Brunswick, and two on Prince Edward Island. Ten new provincial records are reported. Seven species including Ceracis sallei Mellié, Ceracis thoracicornis (Ziegler), Cis creberrimus Mellié, Cis pistoria Casey, Cis subtilis Mellié, Malacocis brevicollis (Casey), and Orthocis punctatus (Mellié) are newly recorded in the Maritime Provinces as a whole. Cis americanus Mannerheim and Cis levettei (Casey) are newly recorded on Prince Edward Island, the first records of this family from the province.Collecting effort on Cape Breton Island, Prince Edward Island, and in New Brunswick has apparently been insufficient to fully document the ciid fauna of these areas. Some local and regional distribution patterns of ciids in the mainland of Nova Scotia and in the Maritime Provinces are suggested from the present data, but further collecting is required to confirm these. Zoogeographically, most of the region's ciids are members of either a boreal fauna (9 species) with Holarctic affinities, or a southeastern North American Nearctic fauna (5 species). The Maritime Provinces ciid fauna has representatives of five of the six known ciid host-use groups. Records of host fungi indicate that there are suitable hosts for all species of ciids found in the region in all three Maritime Provinces, indicating that ciids in the region appear not to be limited by availability of suitable host-fungi. However, Cis horridulus Casey, Cis striolatus Casey, and Cis subtilis Mellié, the three species in the Trametes host-use group, are very infrequently collected and apparently rare.Forests in Maritime Provinces have been greatly affected by forestry and disease, and such activities are known to impact fungal communities. Consequently such practices could have important repercussions for groups like the Ciidae that are reliant on fungi as both a food source and a habitat
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Lawson, Lynna J., Robert C. Wilkerson, Tammy Gillespie, Elizabeth G. Dunn, J. Gordon Arbuckle, and L. Jo Turner. "Addressing the Needs of Children of Offenders: The 4-H LIFE Model." Journal of Youth Development 2, no. 2 (September 1, 2007): 163–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/jyd.2007.353.

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4-H LIFE represents a promising approach to addressing the needs of children of offenders and their caregivers. The 4-H Living Interactive Family Education (LIFE) Program was established in 1999 at the Potosi Correctional Center, a maximum security prison. 4-H LIFE is an enhanced or therapeutic visitation program with three key components: 1. parent engagement; 2. parent education; 3. 4-H activities for children of offenders, led by the incarcerated parents. Since inception, 141 youths between the ages of 5 and 18 have participated; 59 incarcerated fathers and 106 caregivers have also been engaged at PCC. Program evaluations suggest that parent-child outcomes improved. In 2005, 4-H LIFE received the Annie E. Casey Foundation Family Strengthening Award.
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SETLIFF, GREGORY P. "Annotated checklist of weevils from the Papuan region (Coleoptera, Curculionoidea)." Zootaxa 1536, no. 1 (July 30, 2007): 1–296. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1536.1.1.

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The following checklist includes 2,955 species-group names and 553 genus-group names of weevils occurring in the Papuan region. Major islands treated are: Aru, Biak, Bougainville, Manus, Mysol, New Guinea, Salawatti, Trobriand, Waigeo, Woodlark, and Yapen Islands and the islands of the Admiralty, Bismarck, d’Entrecasteaux, and Louisaide Archipelagoes. Maps of the region with historically important collection localities are provided. Entomological expeditions to the region and collections containing significant weevil material are summarized. All available family-group, genusgroup and species-group names are arranged alphabetically for all families of Curculionoidea known from the region. All currently accepted species epithet are annotated with taxonomic references, notes on published distributions, past taxonomic changes, infrasubspecific names, and species-group synonymies. The following nomenclatural changes are proposed: the monotypic genus Neplaxa Casey is a new synonym of Pantoxystus Pascoe; its type species Neplaxa illustratus Casey is a new synonym of Pantoxystus rubricollis (Boisduval). Two subgenera of Neosynaptops, Neosynaptopsis Legalov and Pseudosynaptos Legalov are new synonymies of Euops (Neosynaptops) Voss revised status. Typespecies are designated for 25 genera, changes of rank or status are proposed for 19 taxa, and 88 new combinations are listed in “Nomenclatural changes.”
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15

Hugon, Alain. "James Casey. Family and community in early modern Spain: The citizens of Granada, 1570-1739. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2007, 314 p." Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 64, no. 2 (April 2009): 516–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0395264900028328.

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Hermawan, Francisca, Sri Hapsari Wijayanti, and Fransiskus X. Lara Aba. "The Canvas Model as a Strategy for Improving Financial Profits: A Casey Study of Online Businesses in Indonesia." GATR Journal of Business and Economics Review 2, no. 4 (December 17, 2017): 40–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.35609/jber.2017.2.4(6).

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Objective - The aim of this study is to identify how the strategy of online businesses can be improved to increase financial profits. The focus of this study is on online businesses selling flowers, taking into consideration the fact that the freshness of flowers does not last long, and that the price and quality of flowers fluctuates depending on climatic conditions. Methodology/Technique - The data used in this research is primary data, obtained by distributing questionnaires for market research, tested against 57 respondents. The respondents were selected using non-probability sampling with a purposive sampling technique. The results of the validation test r count > r table, with 5% significance, shows that businesses providing flower arrangements are in high demand. Findings - The results of the model business identification canvas and the profit and loss projections indicate that the choice of the business strategy series for cut flowers on each element is accurate. The results of the analysis of the strengths and threats also identifies that selling price varies depending on the types of flowers used in an arrangement, and accessories used. Novelty - This research studies how the types of flowers used, the design of an arrangement, accessories used, packaging, and family ownership of a business can effect the interest of potential customers in the Fiore shop in Afrodite. Type of Paper: Empirical. Keywords: SWOT; Canvas Models; Communication; Online Business; Indonesia. JEL Classification: C50, C53, C59.
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Diaz, Robert. "The Ruse of Respectability: Familial Attachments and Queer Filipino Canadian Critique." Asian Diasporic Visual Cultures and the Americas 4, no. 1-2 (March 4, 2018): 114–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/23523085-00401006.

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This article focuses on queer Filipino artists who deploy familial memories to produce important knowledge around what it means to be queer, racialized, and diasporic in Canada. Through Patrick Salvani’s drag showSarap(2017) and Casey Mecija’s short filmMy Father, Francis(2013), the author tracks how familial memories expose the contradictions inherent in being sexually and racially marginalized within this multicultural, settler colonial space.SarapandMy Father, Francisactivate various scenes of domesticity to disturb the teleological tropes with which the private and the public have been institutionally compartmentalized. Both also offer examples of Filipino Canadian critique that resist the assimilationary ruse of respectability through economic value and ideological worth. These works reorganize the meaning of “finding happiness,” not by drawing from overwrought narratives of familial “inclusion,” but by mining the complex affects that often emanate from the histories, burdens, and pains of family members.
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Esthappan, Sino, Johanna Lacoe, Janine M. Zweig, and Douglas W. Young. "Transforming Practice Through Culture Change: Probation Staff Perspectives on Juvenile Justice Reform." Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice 18, no. 3 (February 3, 2020): 274–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1541204020901761.

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Probation plays a central role in the juvenile justice system, and probation officers are often involved in numerous decisions made in juvenile courts. This study examines the views of probation staff from 23 jurisdictions, some of which participated in an Annie E. Casey Foundation–funded juvenile justice reform effort intended to safely and significantly reduce the use of out-of-home placements, especially for youth of color. We survey juvenile probation staff members at two waves and describe changes in reported practices and principles relating to individualized case planning, youth engagement, family and community engagement, and racial and ethnic equity and inclusion as well as beliefs about the purposes of out-of-home placement. Reform sites reported slightly more frequent use of practices and principles addressing community engagement and racial and ethnic equity and inclusion in the second wave than in the first wave.
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Harris, A. Katie. "Family and Community in Early Modern Spain: The Citizens of Granada, 1570–1739. By James Casey (New York, Cambridge University Press, 2007) 314 pp. $90 cloth." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 39, no. 1 (July 2008): 119–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jinh.2008.39.1.119.

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Wu, Shengqing. "Nostalgic Fragments in the Thick of Things: Yuan Kewen (1890–1931) and the Act of Remembering." Journal of Chinese Literature and Culture 6, no. 1 (April 1, 2019): 239–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/23290048-7497297.

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Abstract This article delves into the nexus of nostalgia, memory, and visuality by examining the images, objects, and events surrounding Yuan Kewen's remembrances of his father, Yuan Shikai, and their family estate in Huanshang. It also considers Zhang Boju's remembrance of his interactions with Yuan Kewen as another layer of historical memory. Phenomenological analysis of the act of remembering, especially in the work of Edward Casey, will be shown to yield rich insights when applied to China's early twentieth-century Republican culture. Surviving fragments—poems, anecdotes, photographs, and paintings—replete with sensuous and affective images of the past become the loci of memory in which these historical figures lived. Lamentation and reminiscence are also conducted through performance of historical dramas whose gestures of mourning and remembrance allowed Yuan to cultivate feelings of perpetual nostalgia through personal artistic expressions. The act of remembering became symptomatic for Yuan, Zhang, and to a large extent the entire generation of literati who experienced drastic social-political changes in the twentieth century.
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SHOCKLEY, FLOYD W., and NATALIA J. VANDENBERG. "Notes on the taxonomic identity of Bystus hirtulus (Kirsch) and transfer from Endomychidae to Coccinellidae (Coleoptera: Cucujoidea), with designation of a lectotype for Alexia hirtula Kirsch." Zootaxa 2868, no. 1 (May 5, 2011): 62. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2868.1.3.

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During an examination of type material of the New World endomychid genus Bystus Guérin-Méneville (Anamorphinae), the type series of Alexia hirtula Kirsch from Peru was found to contain a mixture of different taxa, none of which belong to the genus Bystus, the subfamily Anamorphinae, or even the family Endomychidae. Alexia hirtula is transferred to Delphastus Casey (Coccinellidae: Microweiseinae: Serangiini), establishing the new combination, Delphastus hirtulus (Kirsch), and a lectotype is designated. Of the three paralectotypes, one appears to be conspecific with the lectotype, one is identified as an undescribed species of Microscymnus Champion (Coccinellidae: Cryptognathini), and one, a partial specimen lacking the head, pronotum, and one elytron, is identified as a species of Leiodidae in the tribe Scotocryptini, probably Aglyptinus Cockerell. A diagnosis and redescription of D. hirtulus is provided, and Gordon’s (1994) key to Delphastus is modified to accommodate the newly transferred species. The historical classification of D. hirtulus is discussed along with characters justifying its revised placement.
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van Kleeck, Anne. "Guiding Parents From Diverse Cultural Backgrounds to Promote Language Skills in Preschoolers With Language Disorders: Two Challenges and Proposed Solutions for Them." Perspectives on Language Learning and Education 20, no. 3 (August 2013): 78–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/lle20.3.78.

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In providing culturally sensitive services for the families of young children with language disorders, the SLP is often confronted with a set of challenges. The first relates to avoiding making assumptions about the communication practices of any particular family, and is called the “avoid stereotyping” challenge. The solution offered is to repurpose the routines-based interview that is becoming more widely used in early intervention services (e.g., Bernheimer & Weisner, 2007; McWilliam, 2012; McWilliam, Casey, & Sims, 2009) in order to help the SLP determine (in a nonjudgmental fashion) the frequency and specific nature of interactions that occur in the home. When families do not display interaction patterns that evidence suggests foster language development and school success, how does the SLP both value the family's preferred practices and offer suggestions for interaction that may contradict them? The solution offered for this challenge, referred to as the “avoiding mixed messages” challenge, is to talk with parents about how such interactions will better prepare their child for the language demands of school. This is referred to as the “blaming the schools” solution.
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23

Behrend-Martínez, Edward. "Book Review: James Casey, Family and Community in Early Modern Spain: The Citizens of Granada 1570—1739, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007; 328 pp., 2 maps; 9780521855891, £55.00 (hbk)." European History Quarterly 41, no. 2 (April 2011): 299–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02656914110410020506.

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24

Bang, Sang-keun. "Hong Yu-han's Family line and Life." Research Journal of Catholic Church History 17 (December 31, 2020): 109–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.35135/casky.2020.17.109.

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Bang, Sang-keun. "Hong Yu-han's Family line and Life." Research Journal of Catholic Church History 17 (December 31, 2020): 109–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.35135/casky.2020.17.109.

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26

Faulconer, James E. "Latter-Day Saint Liturgy: The Administration of the Body and Blood of Jesus." Religions 12, no. 6 (June 10, 2021): 431. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel12060431.

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Latter-day Saint (“Mormon”) liturgy opens its participants to a world undefined by a stark border between the transcendent and immanent, with an emphasis on embodiment and relationality. The formal rites of the temple, and in particular that part of the rite called “the endowment”, act as a frame that erases the immanent–transcendent border. Within that frame, the more informal liturgy of the weekly administration of the blood and body of Christ, known as “the sacrament”, transforms otherwise mundane acts of living into acts of worship that sanctify life as a whole. I take a phenomenological approach, hoping that doing so will deepen interpretations that a more textually based approach might miss. Drawing on the works of Robert Orsi, Edward S. Casey, Paul Moyaert, and Nicola King, I argue that the Latter-day Saint sacrament is not merely a ritualized sign of Christ’s sacrifice. Instead, through the sacrament, Christ perdures with its participants in an act of communal memorialization by which church members incarnate the coming of the divine community of love and fellow suffering. Participants inhabit a hermeneutically transformed world as covenant children born again into the family of God.
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박혜경 and JaeKyungLee. "A Paradox of Marriage Migration as a Strategy against Poverty - Cases of Filipino Marriage Migrants in Korea." Family and Culture 22, no. 4 (December 2010): 33–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.21478/family.22.4.201012.002.

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28

Flay, Casey. "New Zealand Plant Protection Society / Zespri Kiwifruit Scholarship." New Zealand Plant Protection 71 (July 26, 2018): 364. http://dx.doi.org/10.30843/nzpp.2018.71.229.

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Production of Actinidia chinensis (kiwifruit) is a billion- dollar industry in New Zealand that is threatened by various pests and diseases. Armoured scale insects, leafroller insects and a disease caused by the bacterium Pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae (Psa) all cause economic loss to the kiwifruit industry because of the damage they inflict and the market access restrictions imposed if their presence is detected. Examining the available kiwifruit germplasm pool for resistance to the armoured scale insect (Hemiberlesia lataniae) was identified as a promising first step towards introgression of resistance into future kiwifruit cultivars. To integrate resistance alleles into current and future breeding programmes efficiently, robust markers linked to resistance genes need to be identified. Casey Flay, recipient of the NZPPS/Zespri Kiwifruit Scholarship, is a PhD student at Massey University. In the first year of his PhD, Casey studied H. lataniae scale resistance markers in a small family of A. chinensis var. chinensis from breeding populations at the New Zealand Institute of Plant & Food Research. Markers were identified for this population that were associated with phenotype and were validated in a related population. To test these markers in a diverse background, four families made from a cross of wild-sourced material was phenotyped. All the seedlings resulting from crossing resistant parents with a tolerant parents were resistant to H. lataniae. However, further work is required to backcross resistant progeny with susceptible parents before marker information can be associated with phenotype. Ongoing work includes studying H. lataniae resistance as well as resistance to the brownheaded leafroller (Ctenopseustis obliquana) in a large kiwifruit population which is segregating for resistance to both H. lataniae and C. obliquana. Loci responsible for each type of resistance will be identified and a detailed quantitative trait locus (QTL) map generated. This process will allow markers to be developed to target these QTLs, enabling them to be robust tools for resistance breeding. Casey will also study the effects of Psa on the kiwifruit germplasm collection at Plant & Food Research. Selection mapping will be used to assess alleles that are removed from the germplasm population as a consequence of Psa infection. Results of this work will provide information on the sections of the kiwifruit genome that confer tolerance or susceptibility to Psa, enabling breeders to enhance breeding for resistance to Psa. Breeding for resistance to biotic threats that are currently targeted by chemical sprays is a reasonable move toward a healthier, cheaper and more environmentally friendly form of food production. This will benefit organic producers and conventional producers alike by reducing market access issues, decreasing the need for pest control, and decreasing the real and perceived risks associated with spray residues, resulting in increased market appeal and economic returns. This one-off NZPPS/Zespri Kiwifruit Scholarship was possible thanks to Zespri. It was funded by the proceeds of a symposium on Psa held in Palmerston North in 2016 run jointly by Zespri and the New Zealand Plant Protection Society.
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29

Weber, Alison. "Golden Age or Early Modern: What's in a Name?" PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 126, no. 1 (January 2011): 225–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/pmla.2011.126.1.225.

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As few hispanists have failed to notice, early modern Spain is more often appearing as an alternative term for what we used to call the Spanish Golden Age. University catalogs still advertise courses on Golden Age poetry, but lectures are more apt to bear titles such as “The Crisis of the Gift in Early Modern Spain.” Although some recent books—Inventing the Sacred: Imposture, Inquisition, and the Boundaries of the Supernatural in Golden Age Spain (Keitt), Honor and Violence in Golden Age Spain (Taylor), and An Erotic Philology of Golden Age Spain (Martín)—display Golden Age in their titles, they share shelf space with offerings such as The Drama of the Portrait: Theater and Visual Culture in Early Modern Spain (Bass), Imperial Lyric: New Poetry and New Subjects in Early Modern Spain (Middlebrook), and Family and Community in Early Modern Spain: The Citizens of Granada (Casey). The preference for early modern is showing up even in genres in which traditional usage might be expected. An anthology by Barbara Mujica, published in 1991, is subtitled Renacimiento y Siglo de Oro, but the cover of an anthology edited by her and published thirteen years later reads Sophia's Daughters: Women Writers of Early Modern Spain.
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30

전홍주, Keumjoo Kwak, and Soyeong Pae. "Practices and meanings of immigrant mothers' support for children's education: Cases of mothers from the Philippines and Japan." Family and Culture 20, no. 3 (September 2008): 161–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.21478/family.20.3.200809.006.

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31

Ayala Mendivil, Nubia Daniela, Sergio Ochoa Jiménez, and Carlos Armando Jacobo Hernández. "La dimensión familia en la organización: estudio de caso en una MiPyMES familiar." Investigación Administrativa 46-2 (July 1, 2017): 1–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.35426/iav46n120.04.

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La presente investigación se plantea mediante el método de estudio de casos, siendo el sujeto de estudio una empresa familiar de giro comercial. El objetivo del estudio es realizar una investigación exploratoria para identificar las dimensiones de la variable familia que influyen en el desarrollo de la MIPYME familiar en estudio. Para ello se desarrollaron guías de entrevistas semiestructuradas, prosiguiendo con la integración de datos, agrupándolos por las cuatro dimensiones de la variable familia. Con el desarrollo de la investigación se pretende ayudar a futuras investigaciones a profundizar más en el tema y aportar al conocimiento sobre las MIPYMES familiares, así como contribuir a la generación de nuevas teorías que permitan la permanencia y sustentabilidad de las mismas.
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32

Nam Boram, 최새은, and 이재림. "Compensating for Spouse’s and Child’s Contribution to Assets and Caregiving in Inheritance Cases: An Analysis of Precedents on “Contribution-Based Portion”." Family and Culture 27, no. 2 (June 2015): 212–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.21478/family.27.2.201506.008.

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33

Shinina, T. V., and O. V. Mitina. "Design and Validation of the «Adolescents’ Readiness for Independent Living» Questionnaire: Assessment and Development of Life Skills." Психологическая наука и образование 24, no. 1 (2019): 50–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.17759/pse.2019240104.

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Designing a model of autonomy development for adolescents is an important aspect of the research. The article describes the process of Designing and validating the «Adolescents’ Readiness for Independent Living» questionnaire. The «Adolescents’ Readiness for Independent Living» questionnaire is an adaptation of the Ansell-Casey Life Skills Assessment (ACLSA) Youth 4 — Version 4.0 [32].A distinctive feature of the modified questionnaire is the use of a series of focus groups with adolescents attending residential institutions and the formulation of questions that allow us to measure the independence of adolescents in Russia. The questionnaire is based on the concept of hardiness, according to which life skills promote the socialization of adolescents into the world of «adulthood» and uncertainty. An empirical study assessed adolescents’ readiness for independent living; it was conducted in Moscow and the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, with a total sample size of (N = 179) respondents, 76 of them boys, 103 girls, and with an average age of 17 years. Two-factor analysis of variance was used for further analysis. Gender and place of residence (with the family or at boarding school) were taken as independent dichotomous variables. The scores for each scale were the dependent variables. The reliability of the questionnaire was demonstrated, as well as its construct validity and convergent validity. Recommendations are made for researchers working or planning to work with adolescent samples.
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34

Boiteau, Gilles, Yves Bousquet, and W. P. L. Osborn. "VERTICAL AND TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION OF COCCINELLIDAE (COLEOPTERA) IN FLIGHT OVER AN AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE." Canadian Entomologist 131, no. 2 (April 1999): 269–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.4039/ent131269-2.

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AbstractTwenty-one species of Coccinellidae were trapped in flight between 0.8 and 14.3 m from 1992 to 1995 in New Brunswick, Canada. Catches were larger at 0.8 m, with a rapidly decreasing capture rate leading, on average, to more than 50% of the catches at or below 3.8 m every year. The capture rate at 14.3 m was lower than at any of the nine other levels. Hippodamia convergeas Guérin-Méneville flights were distributed close to the ground, with more than 50% of catches at 0.8 m, whereas Mulsantina hudsonica Casey flights were similar at all levels. The strong decreasing gradient of flight as a function of height for Coccinellidae (−0.825) was strongly influenced by that of H. convergens (−1.809) and of Coccinella septempunctata L. (−0.921) and Coccinella trifasciata perplexa Mulsant (−0.715). All other species had a slope of less than −0.5. The temporal distribution of flights was species specific, with maximum activity before the end of June for most, but this was not reflected in the frequency of catches for the entire family, which did not differ throughout the season, although they tended to be lower after mid-August. The weekly vertical flight distribution differed from the average distribution pattern only occasionally, probably during periods of long-distance dispersal. These profiles and known catches from a single trap location can be used to estimate dispersal activity at different heights.
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35

송다영. "A Study on the Predictors of Double Burden of Caregiving among Women Carrying both Childcare and Care for the Elderly - Focusing on East-Asia Country Cases." Family and Culture 29, no. 2 (June 2017): 95–125. http://dx.doi.org/10.21478/family.29.2.201706.004.

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36

Fayzullayev, Sarvar. "Unique approach to Family Business: Uzbekistan case." INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT SCIENCE AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION 2, no. 10 (2015): 37–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.18775/ijmsba.1849-5664-5419.2014.210.1004.

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The new law of “Family Entrepreneurship” was introduced in the Republic of Uzbekistan on the 26th April, 2012. Enforcement of this law has brought many changes in the domain of entrepreneurship. The main aim of this article is to state opportunities created by this new law and to point out differences of this law in relation to the norms practiced in foreign countries. In order to achieve this goal, we used comparison method of in our study. The results of the study show that this newly-introduced law on “Family Entrepreneurship”puts the meaning of family business uniquely different from the one practiced in the world and it has had a huge positive impact on entrepreneurship in Uzbekistan. Article can be a good guidance for the policy makers of developing countries to come up with better policy instruments to trigger the development of entrepreneurship environment in their relevant countries.
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37

Kagan, Richard L. "James Casey. Family and Community in Early Modern Spain: The Citizens of Granada, 1570–1739. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2007. xii + 314 pp. index. tbls. map. bibl. $90. ISBN: 978-0-521-85589-1." Renaissance Quarterly 60, no. 4 (2007): 1334–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ren.2007.0380.

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38

Narváez Liceras, Alejandro. "Deuda financiera y quiebra de familias: el caso peruano." Revista de Investigaciones de la Universidad Le Cordon Bleu 7, no. 1 (June 29, 2020): 109–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.36955/riulcb.2020v7n1.009.

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39

Ledwoń, Aleksandra, Beata Dolka, Tomasz Piasecki, Izabella Dolka, and Piotr Szeleszczuk. "Invasion of Flukes of the Echinostomatidae Family in Racing Pigeon (Columba liviavar.domestica) Lofts." Avian Diseases 60, no. 2 (June 2016): 523–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1637/11343-120715-caser.

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40

Webster, Reginald P., Pierre de Tonnancour, Jon D. Sweeney, Vincent L. Webster, Chantelle A. Kostanowicz, Cory Hughes, Robert S. Anderson, John Klymko, Claude Chantal, and Robert Vigneault. "New Coleoptera records from eastern Canada, with additions to the fauna of Manitoba, British Columbia, and Yukon Territory." ZooKeys 946 (July 6, 2020): 53–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.946.52489.

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One-hundred-eleven new provincial and territorial Coleoptera records are reported from New Brunswick (64), Nova Scotia (20), Prince Edward Island (5), Quebec (14), Manitoba (3), British Columbia (3), and Yukon Territory (2) for the 26 following families: Carabidae, Dytiscidae, Histeridae, Staphylinidae, Scarabaeidae, Buprestidae, Eucnemidae, Elateridae, Cantharidae, Erotylidae, Monotomidae, Cryptophagidae, Passandridae (first record of this family from New Brunswick), Laemophloeidae, Nitidulidae, Anamorphidae, Coccinellidae, Latridiidae, Mordellidae, Tenebrionidae, Cerambycidae, Chrysomelidae, Anthribidae, Brentidae, Dryophthoridae, and Curculionidae. Among these are ten new Canadian records: Heterosternuta oppositus (Say, 1823) (Dytiscidae) (New Brunswick), Gyrophaena blatchleyi Seevers, 1951 (Staphylinidae) (Quebec), Acropteroxys lecontei Crotch, 1873 (Erotylidae) (Manitoba), Placonotus falinorum Thomas, 2011 (Laemophloeidae) (Quebec), Adelina pallida (Say, 1824) (Tenebrionidae) (Quebec), Poecilocera harrisii (J.L. LeConte, 1851) (Chrysomelidae) (New Brunswick), Plesiobaris albilata (LeConte, 1876) (Curculionidae) (Quebec, New Brunswick), Pseudopityophthorus asperulus (LeConte, 1868) (Curculionidae) (Nova Scotia), Hylurgops palliatus (Gyllenhal, 1813) (Curculionidae) (New Brunswick), and Heteroborips seriatus (Blandford, 1894) (Curculionidae) (Nova Scotia). Plesiobaris disjuncta Casey reported as new for Canada in New Brunswick and Quebec by Webster et al. (2012a) is actually P. albilata (LeConte) and thus P. disjuncta is removed from the faunal list of Canada. Eleven species from New Brunswick not previously reported in literature were found on the online platforms BugGuide.Net and iNaturalist and are reported in this publication. This highlights the importance of online platforms dedicated to recording wildlife observations and citizen science in detecting new species records. Data is also presented for seven species from Quebec and two species from New Brunswick reported by Bousquet et al. (2013) without any supporting information for their occurrence in these provinces. Among the species reported here, 32 are adventive.
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41

Glotov, Sergiy. "Morphological variation of the spermatheca of Mocyta fungi (Insecta: Coleoptera: Staphylinidae)." Novitates Theriologicae, no. 12 (June 16, 2021): 252–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.53452/nt1241.

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The variation of spermatheca of Mocyta fungi (Gravenhorst, 1806) has been studied. Mocyta fungi is a widespread Holarctic species, which by a combination of morphological and biological features belongs nowadays to the genus Mocyta (Mulsant & Rey, 1874), tribe Athetini (Casey, 1910), subfamily Aleocharinae (Fleming, 1821), family Staphylinidae (Latreille, 1802). Based on a survey of museum collections, the author’s own gatherings, and collections of Ukrainian entomologists, a total of 349 specimens from Ukraine, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Germany, Poland, and Russia have been studied. Additionally, based on the analysis of all known literature data, a wide range of variation of the spermatheca of Mocyta fungi has been compiled. The wide morphological variability of the form of the spermatheca in Mocyta fungi in different parts of the species range indicates the need for careful use of the form of the spermatheca taxonomic works, especially when describing new species based on the study of one or a few specimens. In addition, the most effective group of diagnostic features has been compiled for Mocyta fungi, which can be used to identify species quickly and reliably both in the field and during cameral identification. The information on the species’ distribution in the territory of Ukraine has been clarified and significantly supplemented by new findings. The results can be used to address a number of theoretical issues of faunistics, zoogeography, and ecology, as well as in compiling the inventory of the fauna of the Ukrainian Carpathians, for comparative faunal research, in the analysis of species distribution, in biogeographic constructions, studies of faunogenesis, ecological monitoring and prediction of consequences of the influence of human activities on natural ecosystems of the region.
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42

Ellitan, Lena, Robertus Sigit HL, and Dominicus Wahyu Perdana. "Financial Check Up of Family Finance to Strengthen Family Welfare: The Case of Swadaya Credit Union Members-Surabaya." International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development Volume-2, Issue-1 (December 31, 2017): 1493–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.31142/ijtsrd8229.

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43

Kim, Gyu-Seong. "The Study on quotation data of Vie de Monseigneur Daveluy by Salmon - Focusing on the citation of letters sent to family members after entering Korea -." Research Journal of Catholic Church History 16 (December 31, 2019): 303–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.35135/casky.2019.16.303.

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44

Ravan, Mr Sanket V. "Family Business Governance System of Dabur Group a Case Study." International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development Special Issue, Special Issue-FIIIIPM2019 (March 20, 2019): 164–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.31142/ijtsrd23091.

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45

Ruiz Martín, Arancha. "Family Bilingualism: an English-Spanish case study in Madrid (Spain)." Elia, no. 19 (2019): 235–324. http://dx.doi.org/10.12795/elia.mon.2019.i1.12.

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46

Ruiz Martín, Arancha. "Family Bilingualism: an English-Spanish case study in Madrid (Spain)." Elia, no. 19 (2019): 235–324. http://dx.doi.org/10.12795/elia.mon.2019.i19.12.

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47

Schmidt, Annika I., Sylvia Glüer, Konrad Mühlhaus, and Benno Manfred Ure. "Family cases of gastroschisis." Journal of Pediatric Surgery 40, no. 4 (April 2005): 740–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2005.01.017.

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48

Alcázar Sánchez, Jesús Geovani, and Emanuel Gómez Martínez. "Contrastes de la agricultura familiar: el caso Benito Juárez, La Concordia, Chiapas." Revista de Geografía Agrícola, no. 56 (June 2016): 7–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.5154/r.rga.2016.56.002.

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49

Kashiwagi, Takao, Tadahiro Inagaki, Minoru Kishi, Satoshi Kusaka, Takuma Suzuki, Tamaki Hirata, Masahide Iwai, Naoki Yoshioka, Takao Mitsuhashi, and Hirohei Yamamura. "Family Cases of Datura Poisoning." Nihon Naika Gakkai Zasshi 101, no. 7 (2012): 2045–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.2169/naika.101.2045.

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50

Efremova, N. A., L. G. Goryacheva, S. P. Kaplina, V. A. Greshnyakova, A. A. Osipova, and T. A. Bykova. "Family hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis: (2 clinical cases in one family)." Journal Infectology 11, no. 3 (October 9, 2019): 136–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.22625/2072-6732-2019-11-3-136-141.

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Family hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (hemophagocytic syndrome) is a rare hereditary disease, which is based on a disturbance of the regulation of the immune response, leading to proliferation and activation of histiocytes, phagocytosis of peripheral blood cells. The most common mutations include – PRF1, UNC13D, STX11. Two cases of familial hemophagocytic lymphogystyocytosis in children of an early age from a single family, features of the course are described.
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