Academic literature on the topic 'City-Dweller'

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Journal articles on the topic "City-Dweller"

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Perevedentsev, Viktor I. "Who Is the New City Dweller?" Soviet Studies in Literature 22, no. 4 (1986): 92–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.2753/rsl1061-1975220492.

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Korolev, C. M. "CASUS PYALMIAE: A CITY DWELLER AND HIS VILLAGE." Russian Peasant Studies 8, no. 4 (2023): 152–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.22394/2500-1809-2023-8-4-152-173.

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Zadorozhnaya, Evgenia V. "A Digital Urban Dweller: Legal Capacity Issues." Town-Planning Law 1 (February 8, 2024): 22–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.18572/2500-0292-2024-1-22-26.

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The article analyzes the problem of regulatory regulation of digital counterparts of citizens in the infosphere of the city, taking into account the potential development of artificial intelligence. The author explores the possibility of recognizing the technical and legal image of a modern city dweller endowed with artificial intelligence, legal fiction and quasi-subject of law.
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Sitnikova, S. V. "Axiological Aspects of the Health of a Modern City Dweller." Izvestia of Saratov University. New Series. Series: Sociology. Politology 14, no. 4 (2014): 23–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.18500/1818-9601-2014-14-4-23-28.

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Chatterjee, Ipsita. "Quintessence of Urban India: Musings about Social Change from the Perspectives of the Slum Dweller and the Displaced." Social Change 53, no. 2 (2023): 256–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00490857231169477.

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Urbanisation is a ‘constant’ process and cities will account for all future world population growth. What does it mean for people who find these spatio-temporal existences entrapping and limiting? This article reflects upon the urban condition of India from the imaginative geographic perspectives (to use Edward Said’s concept) of working people, labour, informal proletariat, the slum-dweller. In order to do so, this article explores the ‘urban’ or the ‘city’ as a concept and therefore, its connection with its ‘other’. Since the quintessence of life is the flowing hermaphroditic existence of th
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Imamov, Marsel M. "Integrating smart city and smart citizen into the digital economy." Revista Amazonia Investiga 13, no. 76 (2024): 83–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.34069/ai/2024.76.04.7.

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The study aims to enhance interactions within smart city infrastructures by systematically analyzing associated challenges and proposing strategic solutions. Employing methodologies such as system analysis, synthesis, optimization, modeling, and decision-making—while considering process uncertainties—we dissect the "smart city" and "smart city dweller" concepts, charting their evolutionary cycles. The results outline a structural framework for interactions between citizens, the state, businesses, and society, integrating key subsystems into a unified infrastructure. We also evaluate feedback m
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Jo, Kae Hwa, Gyeong Ju An, Gyun Moo Kim, and Yeon Ja Kim. "Predictive Factor s for City Dweller s’ Attitudes toward Death with Dignity." Korean Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care 15, no. 4 (2012): 193–204. http://dx.doi.org/10.14475/kjhpc.2012.15.4.193.

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Blanton, Lucas S., David H. Walker, and Donald H. Bouyer. "Rickettsiae and Ehrlichiae Within a City Park: Is the Urban Dweller at Risk?" Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases 14, no. 2 (2014): 168–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/vbz.2013.1473.

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Souza, Franco L., María S. Fenoglio, and Fabio Angeoletto. "To Be a Brazilian City Dweller, Sometimes We Must Learn to Say Enough!" Sustainability 15, no. 4 (2023): 3699. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su15043699.

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In several Brazilian localities, a local-scale problem can be detected regarding an absence of citizens compromising that is negatively associated with a greater engagement in public policies that could reflect, in the end, a better understanding of the importance of ecosystem services for their lives. Whatever the governance initiatives, by considering the neighborhoods’ boundaries and their particularities, they should be accompanied by a strong informative commitment to encourage the local population to break away from their harmful attitudes that result in bizarre idiosyncrasies associated
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KOSTKO, Natalia A. "THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS OF THE CITY SOCIAL SPACE STUDY." Tyumen State University Herald. Social, Economic, and Law Research 7, no. 2 (2021): 65–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.21684/2411-7897-2021-7-2-65-88.

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Cities are always in the focus of research attention due to their special importance for the present and future development of society. A city is a unity and a clash of mutually exclusive projections, trends, forms, which makes it a unique, specific, multifaceted phenomenon not just of the social life of its citizens, communities, but a basic element of civilization, a bond of a scattered and atomic world. Modern transformational changes are manifested most vividly and on a large scale in cities, hence the search for adequate measures, resources, management models for embedding in the context
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "City-Dweller"

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Fouche, Monique. "The new commune: a design proposal that aims to create an alternative living environment for city dweller." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24366.

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The New Commune is a design proposal that aims to create an alternative living environment for the city dweller that revolves around simplicity and community, where nature plays the main role and elements of self-sufficiency become a reality. The design proposal merges the principles of an urban commune with that of agricultural density. This document traces the evolution of the design process, from the initial interest of the commune ideology explored in phase 1 to the analyses of the urban implications of this design proposal in phase 6, providing an understanding of the commune concept not
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Books on the topic "City-Dweller"

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Kleaver, Patrick J. City Dweller: A Lifetime Living And Working In St. Louis. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2013.

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Mizuno, Katsuhiko. Kyōto : kurashi no niwa =: The gardens of Kyoto : the garden of the city dweller. Kyōto Shoin, 1987.

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Kreuser, Stephen. Cravings of a City Dweller. Blue Lichen Press, Washburn WI, 2004.

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Dolce, LeAnne, and Enhanced Interactions. I Found My Voice!: Short stories of a city Dweller. Wake Up Happy, Sis!, 2010.

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City Dweller: A Lifetime Living And Working In St. Louis: Updated and Expanded. Independently Published, 2021.

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Schaffer, Greg. From the Loft: Tales of a Former City Dweller Living on a Horse Farm. Second Chance Publishing, 2017.

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Hessler, Alissa, and Alissa Morris. Ditch the City and Go Country: How to Master the Art of Rural Life from a Former City Dweller. Page Street Publishing Company, 2017.

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Ditch the City and Go Country: How to Master the Art of Rural Life From a Former City Dweller. Page Street Publishing, 2017.

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Song, Weijie. A Displaced City and Postmemory. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190200671.003.0006.

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This chapter examines how Sinophone writers from PRC, Taiwan, and Hong Kong compose their Beijing narratives to articulate their anxiety and desire, frustrated and fluid subjectivities. Liang Shiqiu a Beijing native, Taipei dweller, literary guru, and sophisticated connoisseur of fine cuisine, writes about Beijing cuisine to evoke emotional affiliation, gastronomic nostalgia, and imagined reunion. Both originally from Taiwan, Lin Haiyin romanticizes her memory of the south side of Beijing from an innocent girl’s perspective, while Zhong Lihe sharply criticizes the inferior and filthy life of B
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Jamil, Ghazala. Closing Gesture. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199470655.003.0008.

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The Ideal City is made up of the stuff of dreams. All its residents can dream of a city which they can create in their own image of happiness, and live in everyday. In the Ideal City, the worth of human life is not measured by how much an individual being can consume. In the Ideal City, the residents are aware that they do not merely consume, but they also can and do create. The Ideal City comprises of persons and collectivities who share an inalienable humanity, and not just of people marked as ‘islands’ by their ‘individuality’. In the Ideal City, differences do not need insularity and each
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Book chapters on the topic "City-Dweller"

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Steffny, Annette. "From Ideal City-Dweller to Ideal Citizen." In Türkeiforschung im deutschsprachigen Raum. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-28782-5_7.

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Rose, Deborah Bird. "Flying Foxes in Sydney." In Manifesto for Living in the Anthropocene. punctum books, 2015. https://doi.org/10.21983/p3.0100.1.16.

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Do city dwellers dream of wide open spaces like rangelands, or do they dream of tall buildings? Do their dreams entice them to look up into the great, blue depths above them, and do flying foxes flit across the night sky of their sleep? Do they ever think: “now, this is a biodiver-city!”?At least one city dweller, journalist James Woodford, looked up with delight. He wrote: “watching bats silhouetted against the stars is one of the greatest, but little known, pleasures of life” (Woodford 2003). Actually, many city dwellers find pleasure in the fact that their city and their lives are shared with flying foxes. Every night around sunset the flying foxes start their nightly flyout. With their dark fur, their wingspans of up to one meter, and their distinctive bat silhouette, they stand out against the clear colors of an Aus-tralian sunset. They are beautiful wherever they are, but in Sydney, Australia’s largest and most iconic city, they are fan-tastic! They span out across the Opera House, and over the Harbour Bridge. One can sit at Circular Quay, sipping a drink and watching the ferries, the bridge, and the lights of Luna Park flashing across the harbor. Then the motion above begins. The gaze that has been fixed horizontally shifts up-ward to the blizzard of flying foxes, and one feels quite close
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Orlemanski, Julie. "Tourism, Experience, Knowledge, Action." In Oceanic New York. punctum books, 2015. https://doi.org/10.21983/p3.0112.1.17.

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For the better part of a decade, I’ve been acoast-dweller. I spent quite a few years in Boston, historied port city, and at the time of writing I live in Los Angeles, where my weekends are in darting back and forth across the Pacific Coast Highway, between mountains and surf. But this September [2014] I’ll be moving to Chicago—a city, rumor has it, at some distance from the sea. Which is to say: I’m anticipating my imminent return to a primarily touristic mode of encountering the ocean. Soon enough, a week or two in the summertime will be my standard span for luxuriating in that oceanic feeling. But this is after all how I first encountered the Atlantic as a little girl: as vacationer and holidaymaker during annual family trips to one of the barrier islands along the North Carolina coast. Holden Beach was where, for me, the vast tidal swathe kept time on grey sands and the marshes flipped and shook their vivid grass. I was a passing visitor there, but the ocean covered a huge and permanent region of my girl-soul. All year, I would anticipate walking alone down the beach with my feet in the wavelets, telling myself new myths. And again: I was a passing and transient visitor there, but it was within a permanent infrastructure that I made my wide-eyed way: a mesh of supply-chains and util-ities, bridge-buildings and dredgings, insurance schemes and invasive species, condominiums and ice-cream parlors. How does one measure the tourist’s wonder against the things that support it? What does the tourist come to know, and what does she not?
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Butler, Christopher. "The City." In Early Modernism. Oxford University PressOxford, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198117469.003.0004.

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Abstract The great city demands competition and invention. It disseminates images of the modernization process through newspapers, magazines, and books, and so challenges the citizen’s creativity and desire to dominate. But it also threatens its inhabitants, who feel anonymous within the mass and cut off from the face-to-face relationships which were supposed to be typical of the smaller, ‘organic’ societies, from which so many of them had emigrated in the early decades of the nineteenth century. The peculiar psychology of the city dweller had long been of particular interest to the artist and, for literary intellectuals at least, Baudelaire provided a classic description of it in his ‘De l’heroisme de la vie modeme’.
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Hansen, Mogens Herman. "Polis as City." In Polis. Oxford University PressOxford, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199208494.003.0012.

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Abstract All our written sources show that socially and economically a polis was a city plus its hinterland, and that politically it was a kind of state. Each of these aspects must be treated now in greater detail. We begin with polis as city. An important difference between polis as city and polis as state can be clearly seen if we attempt to answer the questions: Who lived in a polis? And who were members of a polis? Although the Greeks had a tendency to settle in cities, it is a fact that in ancient Greek there is no word that means the people living in a city as against the people living in the countryside. The word polites meant a ‘citizen’ in the political sense of the word, and signified the adult male citizen irrespective of where he lived.1 The word asty (city) was used as a synonym of polis in the sense of a place,2 but its derivation astos (man from the asty) is never used to mean ‘city-dweller’. Like polites, astos is used of a citizen only in the political meaning. The adjective agroikos often means someone who lives in the country, and then can have the derivative meaning of ‘simple, uneducated person’.
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Olczak, Katarzyna. "Dziecko SPATiF-u”, czyli warszawskie życie Janusza Głowackiego." In Miasto jako przestrzeń twórców. Ksiegarnia Akademicka Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/9788376386430.04.

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„SPATiF’s Child”, the Warsaw life of Janusz Głowacki The main objective of this article is to define the perspective of the reversal influence, which is understood as a relation between writer-city dweller (Warsaw in the case of Głowacki) and the space of that city. Another goal is to present Janusz Głowacki’s way of life in the capital, the local artistic community and to analyze connections between the city where he lives and his literature. To examine the issue of identity of city space and other various modes of the subject’s identity modelling in the “dialogue” with that space. Focusing on the defining function of city and the way of subject’s constructing his “city within a city”. Głowacki’s main literary strategy is irony and anecdote. His life and work were investigated from the perspective of various disciplines such as sociology of city, urban studies (which in itself includes an interdisciplinary social psychology) and geopoetics.
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Postel, Charles. "Confederation." In The Populist Vision. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195176506.003.0008.

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Abstract On his arrival in Chicago in the fall of 1895, the Texas Populist John Flaherty found the reform movement in the big city mired in an ideological muddle. “To you Texas populists who have a fixed and sound idea of the political and monetary conditions,” he wrote the Southern Mercury back in Dallas, “it is incomprehensible how people can be so blind to their own best interests.” Chicago reformers “go and hear the single tax man and shout themselves hoarse over his panacea for the public ills. They shout the same acclaim to the international bi-metalic lunatic, and roar with delight at the 16 to 1 silver tongued orator.” In a “wilderness of doubt and uncertainty,” the clutter of innovations, schemes, and proposals competing for the attention of the city dweller contrasted sharply with the “keen kernels of truth, without husk or chaff,” that the rural reform press provided its readers.
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Lewis, Bernard. "Country and Freedom." In Islam And The West. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195076196.003.0010.

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Abstract In the twelfth book of the Iliad, the Trojan hero Hector, dismissing the fears of Polydamas that inauspicious omens may presage a bad result in the impending battle, robustly assures him: “One omen is best, to fight for one’s country.”1 Hector was mistaken about the omen, since he himself was killed and Troy was doomed, but the duty to fight was not affected. Centuries later, the Roman poet Horace, in his Odes, goes a step further and asserts that “it is sweet and becoming to die for one’s country.”2 The Greek patris and the Latin patria, translated as country in the foregoing citations, are obviously related, and both derive from words meaning father. Both convey the meaning of paternal and ancestral home. In ancient Greek and Roman civilization, this usually meant a city-the normal unit of political identity, loyalty, and authority. A Greek or Roman was not merely a city-dweller; he was a citizen, in Greek polites, in Latin civis, with the right to share in the formation and conduct of the government of his city and a corresponding duty to fight and, if necessary, to die in its cause. In the Roman Empire, the unit of identity became larger and could extend from a city to a whole province or even to what we would nowadays call a country.
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Nelson, Rebecca. "Cities and the Environment on the Constitutional Stage." In Cities in Federal Constitutional Theory. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192843272.003.0009.

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Abstract Human influence on the environment is now widely considered to be so significant as to constitute a new geological epoch, the Anthropocene. The rapidly accelerating pace, scale, and impact of urbanization makes it a critical driver of that influence, so much so that some prefer the term ‘Astycene’—an era altered and characterized by the ‘astos’, or urban dweller. The widespread adoption of modern constitutional environmental rights provisions speaks to the scale and severity of contemporary environmental threats in general. However, the centrality of cities in causing and experiencing environmental threats, and the corresponding constitutional implications, remain substantively unaddressed by constitutions and their scholars. This chapter applies an environmental lens to the key questions of whether constitutions should recognize cities, and what any such recognition should seek to accomplish. It uses the metaphor of the constitutional stage, first describing the environmental backdrop to that stage in physical and institutional terms. It then argues that although cities can act in the role of both environmental victim and villain, recognizing them in constitutions would help address important environmental problems in both situations. Both situations also support constitutionalizing intergovernmental coordination mechanisms that can adapt to changing circumstances—in other words, action on stage that unfolds using dialogues and improvisation, rather than the ‘constitutional soliloquys’ of exclusive powers and rigid constitutional formulations. Finally, the chapter explores factors relevant to the casting call—determining what counts as a city for the purposes of an environmentally informed constitutional narrative.
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Andrés Benitez, Joaquín, María Cristina Cravino, Maximiliano Duarte, and Carla Fainstein. "Neoliberal urban governance and slum dweller movements: the mutual fragmentation of policies and community-based organizations in the city of Buenos Aires." In Handbook on Urban Social Movements. Edward Elgar Publishing, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4337/9781839109652.00032.

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Conference papers on the topic "City-Dweller"

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Sun, Ruiqi, and Yi Shi. "Towards more convenient liveale city: research on the suburban dweller space using behaviour through spatiotemporal big data." In Post-Oil City Planning for Urban Green Deals Virtual Congress. ISOCARP, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/yznx6176.

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Under the background of the rapid urbanization, suburbs have become the forefront of urban living space. Compared with the dwellers in the city center, the daily behavior characteristics of suburban dwellers are more varied due to the commuting distance and employment opportunities. Thus, if the city governor only based on the socio-economic or population density index to allocate the public resources, it might result waste. In here, we attempt to discuss the approach to reduce this kind of waste through dynamic behavior perspectives. Based on the above, Shenyang (the provincial capital city w
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Slobodchikov, S. Yu, and N. G. Kharitonova. "The subject world of a Siberian city dweller in the 30–50s 20th century (on the example of Yeniseisk)." In Balandinskie Chteniya. Новосибирский государственный университет архитектуры, дизайна и искусств им. А.Д. Крячкова, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.37909/978-5-89170-287-5-2021-1017.

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Capen, Judith, and Kirby Capen. "Row House to Ranch House." In ASME 2014 8th International Conference on Energy Sustainability collocated with the ASME 2014 12th International Conference on Fuel Cell Science, Engineering and Technology. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/es2014-6391.

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According to Lawrence Livermore Labs 36% of the country’s energy use is attributable to buildings and two thirds of that is in the residential sector. This research combines building energy modeling with energy consumption data in transportation and infrastructure sectors to examine energy use implications of habitation patterns. We compared CO2 footprints of three different patterns of typical American habitation: post-Second World War non-urban, 19th century urban, and highly urban. From drawings, utility bills, and occupant data, we used TREAT (Targeted Retrofit Energy Analysis Tool) to mod
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