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1

The weapons state: Proliferation and the framing of security. Boulder, Colo: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2000.

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2

Koenigshof, Gerald A. Performance and quality-control standards for composite floor, wall, and truss framing. Asheville, N.C: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, 1985.

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3

Koenigshof, Gerald A. Performance and quality-control standards for composite floor, wall, and truss framing. Asheville, N.C: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, 1985.

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4

Koenigshof, Gerald A. Performance and quality-control standards for composite floor, wall, and truss framing. [Asheville, N.C.]: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, 1985.

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5

Koenigshof, Gerald A. Performance and quality-control standards for composite floor, wall, and truss framing. [Asheville, N.C.]: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, 1985.

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6

Fallgirls: Gender and the framing of torture at Abu Ghraib. Farnham: Ashgate, 2011.

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7

Kennedy, Ludovic Henry Coverley. The airman and the carpenter: The Lindbergh kidnapping and the framing of Richard Hauptmann. New York, N.Y., U.S.A: Viking, 1985.

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8

The airman and the carpenter: The Lindbergh kidnapping and the framing of Richard Hauptmann. New York, NY: Penguin Books, 1986.

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9

The airman and the carpenter: The Lindbergh case and the framing of Richard Hauptmann. London: Collins, 1985.

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10

Kennedy, Ludovic Henry Coverley. The airman and the carpenter: The Lindbergh kidnapping and the framing of Richard Hauptmann. New York, N.Y., U.S.A: Viking, 1985.

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11

Kennedy, Ludovic Henry Coverley. The airman and the carpenter: The Lindbergh kidnapping and the framing of Richard Hauptmann. [London]: Fontana/Collins, 1986.

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12

Legal Framing of the Democratic Control of Armed Forces and the Security Sector: Norms and Reality/ies (2001 Geneva, Switzerland). Legal framing of the democratic control of armed forces and the security sector: norms and reality/ies. Beograd: Centre for Civil-Military Relations, 2001.

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13

Spevack, Edmund. Allied control and German freedom: American political and ideological influences on the framing of the West German Basic Law (Grundgesetz). Münster: Lit, 2001.

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14

Babor, Thomas F., Jonathan Caulkins, Benedikt Fischer, David Foxcroft, Keith Humphreys, María Elena Medina-Mora, Isidore Obot, et al. Framing the issues. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198818014.003.0001.

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The use of psychoactive substances is commonplace in many parts of the world, despite the efforts of policymakers, government officials, public health advocates, and concerned citizens to prevent, eliminate, or control it. If previous experience can serve as a guide, in the future many countries will face periodic drug-use epidemics, followed by aggressive policy responses to suppress them. Continued endemic drug use generates a patchwork of policy responses that never quite keep up with the problem. The scientific evidence on the impact of policy constitutes the core interest of this book and consists of three broad approaches: programmes to prevent drug use, treatment and harm-minimization services that help heavy drug users change their behaviour, and supply control programmes to restrict access to illicit substances. This book suggests that public health concepts provide an important vehicle to coordinate supply control and demand reduction.
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15

News Framing of School Shootings: Journalism and American Social Problems. Lexington Books/Fortress Academic, 2016.

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16

Mutimer, David. The Weapons State: Proliferation and the Framing of Security (Critical Security Studies). Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1999.

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17

1951-, Benson Janie, and IPAS (Organization), eds. Meeting women's needs for post-abortion family planning: Framing the questions. Carrboro, NC: IPAS, 1992.

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18

United States. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development. Office of Policy Development and Research, ed. Alternative framing materials in residential construction: Three case studies. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1994.

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19

Merry, Melissa Kate. Warped Narratives: Distortion in the Framing of Gun Policy. University of Michigan Press, 2020.

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20

VanSickle-Ward, Rachel, and Kevin Wallsten. Politics of the Pill: Gender, Framing, and Policymaking in the Battle over Birth Control. Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2019.

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21

Politics of the Pill: Gender, Framing, and Policymaking in the Battle over Birth Control. Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2019.

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22

Caldwell, Ryan Ashley. Fallgirls: Gender and the Framing of Torture at Abu Ghraib. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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23

Mele, Alfred R., ed. Surrounding Self-Control. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197500941.001.0001.

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This book is one of the fruits of the Philosophy and Science of Self-Control project, a three-year project designed to explore the topic of self-control from a variety of angles: neuroscience; social, cognitive, and developmental psychology; decision theory; and philosophy. The book is divided into four main parts: “What is self-control and how does it work?”; “Temptation and goal pursuit”; “Self-control, morality, and law”; and “Extending self-control.” Part I explores conceptual and empirical questions about the nature of self-control and how self-control functions. Questions featured here include the following: How is self-control related to willpower and ego depletion? What are the cultural and developmental origins of beliefs about self-control? Does self-control entail competition between or coordination of elements of the mind? Is self-control a set of skills? What is inhibitory control and how does it work? How are attempts at self-control hindered or helped by emotions? How are self-control and decision-making related? A sampling of questions tackled in Parts II, III, and IV includes the following: How do one’s beliefs about one’s own ability to deal with temptation influence one’s behavior? What does the ability to avoid temptation depend on? How is self-control related to moral concerns and beliefs? How should juvenile responsibility be understood, and how should the juvenile justice system be reformed? How does the framing of possible outcomes bear on success at self-control? How are self-control and empathy related? Can an account of self-control help us understand moral responsibility and free will?
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24

J, Brooks Jeffrey, and Rocky Mountain Research Station (Fort Collins, Colo.), eds. Collaborative capacity, problem framing, and mutual trust in addressing the wildland fire social problem: An annotated reading list. Fort Collins, CO: United States Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, 2006.

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25

J, Courchene Thomas, Neave Edwin H, and John Deutsch Institute for the Study of Economic Policy., eds. Framing financial structure in an information environment. Kingston, Ont: John Deutsch Institute for the Study of Economic Policy, 2003.

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26

Ricciardi, Victor. The Financial Psychology of Players, Services, and Products. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190269999.003.0002.

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This chapter provides an overview of the emerging cognitive and emotional themes of behavioral finance that influence individual behavior. The behavioral finance perspective of risk incorporates both qualitative (subjective) and quantitative (objective) aspects of the decision-making process. An emerging subject of research interest and investigation in behavioral finance is the inverse (negative) relation between perceived risk and expected return (perceived return). The chapter highlights important topics such as representativeness, framing, anchoring, mental accounting, control issues, familiarity bias, trust, worry, and regret theory. It also examines the role of negative affective reactions on financial decisions. A host of biases that depend on specific aspects of the financial product or investment service influence the judgment and decision-making process of most financial players.
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27

Shabazz, Rashad. Policing Interracial Sex. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039645.003.0002.

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This chapter examines how carceral power became a permanent fixture in Black Chicago during the Progressive Era. It documents the rise of policing in the Black Belt and shows how carceral power entered Black Chicago via attempts to control interracial sex and socializing in the Black/white sex districts on the South Side. The chapter first provides an overview of policing on Chicago's Black Belt as well as the geography of lynching and that of interracial social spaces in the city. It then considers the ways that policing of the Black Belt served as a mechanism to access and consolidate whiteness, organize the racial geography of the city, and for the Black middle class to push for the sexual regulation of Blacks. It also explores how interracial sex districts shaped Chicago's response to Black migration and the subsequent measures it took to control Black masculinity. Finally, it considers the role race scholars and Reconstruction discourses from the South played in framing and mobilizing the hysteria around interracial socializing and sex in Chicago.
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28

Sanders, James W. Irish vs. Yankees. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190681579.001.0001.

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As a social historian, James W. Sanders takes a new look at a critical period in the development of Boston schools. Focusing on the burgeoning Irish Catholic population and framing the discussion around Catholic hierarchy, Sanders considers the interplay of social forces in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries that led to Irish Catholics’ emerging with political control of the city and its public schools. The latter reduced the need for parochial schools; by at least the 1920s, the public and parochial schools had taken giant steps toward one another in theory and practice under the leadership of the Catholics who presided over both systems. The public schools taught the same morality as the Catholic ones, and, in the generous use of Catholic saints and heroes as moral exemplars, they came dangerously close to breaching the wall of separation between religion and the public school. As a result, despite the large Irish Catholic population, Boston’s parochial school system looked very different from parochial schools in other American cities, and did not match them in size or influence. The book begins in 1822 when Boston officially became a city and ends with the Irish Catholic takeover of the Boston public school system before the Second World War.
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29

Kelly, Catriona. Soviet Art House. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197548363.001.0001.

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This book examines cinema in the Brezhnev era from the perspective of one of the USSR’s largest studios, Lenfilm. Producing around thirty feature films per year, the studio had over three thousand employees working in every area of film production. The discussion covers the period from 1961 to the collapse of centralized state facilities in 1986. The book focuses particularly on the younger directors at Lenfilm, those who joined the studio in the recruiting drive that followed Khrushchev’s decision to expand film production. Drawing on documents from archives, the analysis portrays film production “in the round” and shows that the term “censorship” is less appropriate than the description preferred in the Soviet film industry itself, “control,” which referred to a no less exigent but far more complex and sophisticated process. The book opens with four framing chapters that examine the overall context in which films were produced: the various crises that beset film production between 1961 and 1969 (chapter 1) and 1970 and 1985 (chapter 2), the working life of the studio, and particularly the technical aspects of production (chapter 3), and the studio aesthetic (chapter 4). The second part of the book comprises close analyses of fifteen films that are typical of the studio’s production. The book concludes with a brief survey of Lenfilm’s history after the Fifth Congress of the Filmmakers’ Union in 1986, which swept away the old management structures and, in due course, the entire system of filmmaking in the USSR.
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30

Wears, Robert, and Kathleen Sutcliffe. Still Not Safe. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190271268.001.0001.

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Patient safety suddenly burst into public consciousness in the late 1990s and became a “celebrated” cause in the 2000s. It has since gradually faltered, and little improvement has been noted over almost 20 years. Both the rise and fall of patient safety demand explanation. Medical harm had been known long before the 1990s, so why did it suddenly become popular? And why were safety efforts ineffective? The authors propose that this rise was due to a discursive shift that reframed “medical harm” into “medical error” in the setting of anxiety about industrialization and great change in healthcare. The “error” framing, with its inherent notion of agency, was useful in advancing the agenda of a technocratic, managerial group of health professionals and diminishing the authority of the old guard based on clinical expertise. The fall was due to this “medicalization” of safety. Health professionals and managers with little knowledge of safety science came to dominate the patient safety field, crowding out expertise from the safety sciences (e.g., psychology, engineering) and thus keeping reform under the control of the healthcare establishment. Operating with a sort of delusional clarity, this scientific-bureaucratic cabal generated a great deal of activity but made little progress because they failed to engage with expertise in the safety sciences. Twenty years after sudden popularity, there is general agreement that little of value has been achieved. The future of patient safety is in doubt, and radical reform in approaches to safety will be required for progress to be made.
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31

Lentzos, Filippa. Genetic Engineering and Biological Risks. Edited by Roger Brownsword, Eloise Scotford, and Karen Yeung. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199680832.013.66.

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This chapter serves three objectives. First, it provides a narrative account of key developments in core bioengineering technologies. Second, it critically interrogates the emergence and evolution of regulatory regimes aimed at responding to perceived risks associated with these technological capabilities, highlighting how these have primarily relied on establishing ‘soft’ forms of control rather than hard edged legal frameworks backed by coercive sanctions, largely in the form of self-regulation by the scientific research community (with some notification provisions to keep the relevant government informed). Third, it provides an analysis of this regulatory evolution, focusing on the narrow construction of risk, and flagging up the possibility of alternative framings, which might have generated more inclusive and deliberative approaches to standard-setting and oversight.
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32

Vaughan-Williams, Nick. Vernacular Border Security. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198855538.001.0001.

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Since the peak of Europe’s so-called 2015 ‘migration crisis’, the dominant governmental response has been to turn to deterrent border security across the Mediterranean and construct border walls throughout the EU. During the same timeframe, EU citizens are widely represented—by politicians, by media sources, and by opinion polls—as fearing a loss of control over national and EU borders. Despite the intensification of EU border security with visibly violent effects, EU citizens are nevertheless said to be ‘threatened majorities’. These dynamics beg the question: Why is it that tougher deterrent border security and walling appear to have heightened rather than diminished border anxieties among EU citizens? While the populist mantra of ‘taking back control’ purports to speak on behalf of EU citizens, little is known about how diverse EU citizens conceptualize, understand, and talk about the so-called ‘crisis’. Yet, if social and cultural meanings of ‘migration’ and ‘border security’ are constructed intersubjectively and contested politically, then EU citizens—as well as governmental elites and people on the move—are significant in shaping dominant framings of and responses to the ‘crisis’. This book argues that, in order to address the overarching puzzle, a conceptual and methodological shift is required in the way that border security is understood: a new approach is urgently required that complements ‘top-down’ analyses of elite governmental practices with ‘bottom-up’ vernacular studies of how those practices are both reproduced and contested in everyday life.
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