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1

Jacobs, Els M., M. A. P. Meilink-Roelofsz, M. E. van Opstall, and G. J. Schutte. "Dutch Authors on Asian History." Pacific Affairs 63, no. 3 (1990): 424. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2759559.

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van Ginneken, Ewout, Katherine Swartz, and Philip Van der Wees. "Dutch Insurance Exchanges: The Authors Reply." Health Affairs 32, no. 9 (September 2013): 1688. http://dx.doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2013.0682.

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Toonen, Jaron. "Geschlechtsübergreifende Personenbezeichnungen in wissenschaftlichen Zeitschriftenartikeln." Linguistik Online 113, no. 1 (February 9, 2022): 153–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.13092/lo.113.8351.

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This study, based on a corpus of 20 Dutch and 20 German scientific journal articles, looks at how authors of German and Dutch research papers use nouns referring to persons. This investi-gation shows that although the two West Germanic languages are typologically similar due to their geographic proximity the two languages can vary a lot in terms of the abstraction (e. g. Lehrkräfte, Personen; leerkrachten, personen) and specification (e. g. Lehrerinnen und Lehrer; leraressen en leraren) of both grammatical gender and biological sex in academic articles. As a result it can be observed that Dutch authors prefer generic masculine personal nous whereas German authors tend to use more alternative forms, especially in recent times. The result contributes not only to a deeper understanding of personal nouns in academic articles but also to a clearer understanding of where and why there are differences between German and Dutch.
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Johansen, Françoise, Derk Loorbach, and Annemiek Stoopendaal. "Exploring a transition in Dutch healthcare." Journal of Health Organization and Management 32, no. 7 (October 8, 2018): 875–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jhom-07-2018-0185.

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Purpose Healthcare systems are facing persistent challenges, such as dealing with an ageing population, related increases in chronic diseases and healthcare costs facilitated by technological progress. The authors argue that the boundaries of optimisation are being reached and a more fundamental change or transition is necessary. The purpose of this paper is to explore the contours of this transition in the Netherlands. The authors do this from the perspective of healthcare organisations that have participated in the “Expedition to Sustainable Healthcare”: a learning programme organised by the Dutch Network for Sustainable Healthcare aimed at creating frontrunners in this transition. Design/methodology/approach The paper combines conceptual with experimental empirical work. The authors use the transition research frameworks to conceptualise persistent problems and transitional dynamics in the healthcare system. In a longitudinal study, the authors analysed how the participating organisations developed after the expedition. Findings The process validated the initial understanding of persistent sustainability challenges. An integral approach to sustainable healthcare is translated as a transformation of culture, structures and practices and the development of capacity for crossing borders and domains, inside and outside of the organisation. To facilitate and stimulate such a process the authors found that problem structuring and collective identification of persistent problems and the unsustainability in the healthcare system is a crucial step towards a shared view and discourse that supports change. Originality/value A transition in the Dutch healthcare system is just starting to emerge and has barely been subject of research. This paper provides an empirical description of a transition management process in this context. The authors hope to lay a foundation for future work that seeks to explore transitions in healthcare in theory and practice.
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Baggerman, Arianne, and Rudolf Dekker. "Religious Autobiographies in the Netherlands: Authors, Publishers and Readers, 1750–1950." European Journal of Life Writing 7 (December 7, 2018): 88. http://dx.doi.org/10.21827/ejlw.7.294.

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In this article more than 200 religious autobiographies written by Dutch orthodox pietist men and women are analyzed. Although hardly studied so far, these texts were a substantial part of all printed Dutch egodocuments, especially in the period 1850–1950. The authors are nearly all from the lowest ranks of Dutch society, and therefore their texts offer unique information about life in villages and small towns in the Netherlands. This form of autobiographical writing goes back to the seventeenth century, and transformed from an oral culture to a written and printed culture as, from around 1800, the number of local publishers and printers grew. The role of middlemen, such as Reformed ministers, is also studied, as many of the authors were semi-literate. Information about editions and print runs show how popular some of these books were, and still are. Traces left by readers give additional information about ownership and circulation.https://doi.org/10.21827/ejlw.7.294
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Urbaniak, Jan. "De roman als wapen tegen Frankrijk: Sara Burgerhart van Wolff en Deken en de strijd tegen de ‘gallofilie’ / The Novel as a Weapon against France: Wolff’s and Deken’s Sara Burgerhart and the Struggle Against the ‘Francophilia’." Werkwinkel 10, no. 2 (November 1, 2015): 89–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/werk-2015-0013.

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Abstract The so-called ‘moral reorientation’ (Dutch: ‘morele heroriëntatie’) was a large-scale Dutch project, aimed at an improvement of ethical standards of society in the 18th century. It was also a reaction to the decay of the Dutch Republic reflected in the literature at the end of the 18th century. Using magazines, drama’s and novels, authors provided example of a right behaviour and criticized all those phenomena, which led to a moral malaise in society. One of these phenomena was a boundless love for France, its culture, fashion, literature and philosophy. In literature it was presented as a grave danger for Dutch identity. The term ‘francophilia’ was invented. Also two Dutch female writers, Betje Wolff and Aagje Deken reacted on the dangerous symptoms of the ‘francophilia’ and warned against it in their novel Sara Burgerhart (1782). In my article I discuss some rhetorical devices, used by the authors to warn against the ‘francophilia.’ I analyse how they defined and further criticized this phenomenon.
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Pipkin, Amanda. "“They were not humans, but devils in human bodies”: Depictions of Sexual Violence and Spanish Tyranny as a Means of Fostering Identity in the Dutch Republic." Journal of Early Modern History 13, no. 4 (2009): 229–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/138537809x12528970165109.

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AbstractFrom 1609 to 1648, the inhabitants of the nascent Dutch Republic faced various challenges as they worked to justify and ensure its continued existence. Many authors and artists deployed depictions of sexual violence as a potent tool to patch over political and religious disagreements among the Dutch by encouraging them to focus on the larger threat—their Spanish enemy. They propagated stories that vilified the Spanish in two ways: focusing on the literal raping women of the Low Countries as Phillip II's troops attempted to reassert his control there and the metaphoric violence of a people ruled by a tyrant who violated the traditional rights of the Dutch nation imagined as a vulnerable woman. Through depictions of rape, these authors and artists not only created an enemy against whom the Dutch could unite; they also generated the idea that treating women with proper care and respect was part of a Dutch (male) national character.
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Geeraerts, Dirk. "Internationaler, collectiever, genderdiverser." Nederlandse Taalkunde 25, no. 2 (October 1, 2020): 411–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/nedtaa2020.2-3.023.geer.

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Abstract More international, collective, gender diverseThis contribution sheds light on three tendencies in the history of the journal Dutch Linguistics: the increase of Belgian authors, of female authors and of co-authors.
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Dibbets, Geert R. W. "Dutch philology in the 16th and 17th century." Historiographia Linguistica 15, no. 1-2 (January 1, 1988): 39–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/hl.15.1-2.04dib.

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Summary Within a hundred years the first Dutch vernacular orthographies and grammars were published in the Netherlands, as contributions to the cultivation of the language. In a number of these books the authors assumed the independence of the several Dutch dialects; in other publications we find the tendency towards a cultivated language, or we see that the authors started from the existence of a Refined Standard Dutch. However that may be the orthographists and grammarians aimed at the cultivation of written and spoken Dutch. Generally the grammarians did not pay much attention to two traditional areas of the grammar: orthographia and prosodia, but the etymologia was stressed: the theory of the parts of speech, and – to a lesser degree – the syntaxis. The influence of Latin grammar on Dutch was enormous, but could not prevent particularly van Heule (1633) and Leupenius (1653) from following their own course, for the most part within the traditional framework. In doing so the grammarians based themselves on the language usage, in which the nature of the language was given a concrete form.
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Dobbeleer, Michel De. "Transnational literary history? Dutch-speaking writers in Karel van het Reve’s ‘ventistic’ Geschiedenis van de Russische Literatuur [History of Russian Literature]." Werkwinkel 11, no. 2 (November 1, 2016): 27–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/werk-2016-0009.

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Abstract In his Geschiedenis van de Russische literatuur [History of Russian Literature, 1985] the famous Dutch Slavist and essayist Karel van het Reve, links Russian writers, such as Gavriil Derzhavin and Aleksei Pisemskii to Dutch and Flemish ones, such as Vondel and Willem Elsschot. Further on, in the chapter on Lev Tolstoi, Multatuli’s Max Havelaar is cited, although it is clear from the start that none of these Dutch-speaking authors could have had any influence on the Russian writers to whom Van het Reve devotes his colourful chapters. In this article I explore the ‘transnational’ potential of Van het Reve’s self-willed literary-historiographical approach. It turns out that Van het Reve mentions most of these Dutch-speaking authors rather to indicate - directly or indirectly - that he (dis)likes them, than to contribute to the achievements of comparative literature. Both in his choice of authors and his way of practicing literary historiography Van het Reve manifests himself as a proponent of the vent (cf. the well-known vorm of vent or manner or man discussion). Nevertheless, some of his observations could be considered as transnational constellations (in the world-literature sense of the term).
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Heijne, Maria A. M., and Wilma J. S. M. van Wezenbeek. "The Dutch Approach to Achieving Open Access." Bibliothek Forschung und Praxis 42, no. 1 (April 4, 2018): 36–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/bfp-2018-0010.

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AbstractIn this paper, the authors – both of whom are library directors and involved in the contract negotiations with the bigger scientific publishers – present the conditions that formed the Dutch approach in these negotiations. A combination of clear political support, a powerful delegation, a unique bargaining model and fidelity to their principles geared the Dutch to their success in achieving open access. The authors put these joint license and open access negotiations in the perspective of open science and show that they are part of the transition towards open access.
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Bremer, Kai. "Niederländische Dichterinnen als Vorbild und Anregung?" Daphnis 52, no. 1 (February 22, 2024): 74–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18796583-12340102.

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Abstract Research has so far argued that Anna Maria van Schurman is the Dutch poet to whom Sibylla Schwarz alludes in her poem “Ein Gesang wieder den Neidt”. This article not only argues that Schwarz was rather alluding to the Dutch poet Anna Roemers Visscher; it also discusses what significance the openness of Dutch poetry towards female authors could have had for a young female poet in Germany.
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Yeung, Shie Yee Au, and Arthur W. Hofman. "Recent Developments in the Dutch Loss Carry Over Restrictions for Holding and Intercompany Financing Entities." Intertax 44, Issue 6/7 (June 1, 2016): 559–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/taxi2016045.

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Based on Dutch tax law, losses resulting from holding and financing activities are ring-fenced in such a way that these losses can only be offset against profits derived from similar activities. Recently, two developments took place with regard to those rules. First, the Dutch tax law was changed in reaction on a verdict of the Dutch Supreme Court. Second, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruled a verdict that could have an impact on the rules. In this article, the authors describe those developments and they discuss the current scope of the relevant Dutch legislation.
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Shi, Lin, Laurens Swinkels, and Fieke Van der Lecq. "Board diversity and self-regulation in Dutch pension funds." Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal 28, no. 5 (March 13, 2017): 939–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/edi-05-2016-0043.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the change in pension fund board diversity after self-regulation was introduced, and investigate which pension fund characteristics influence compliance with self-regulation. In addition, the authors analyze whether compliance might be achieved by tokenism. Design/methodology/approach The authors hand-collect pension fund and pension fund board data of the largest (by assets) 200 pension funds in the Netherlands. The authors compare descriptive statistics on board diversity, perform statistical tests on these, and perform non-linear regression techniques to investigate which pension fund characteristics influence compliance. Findings The findings are fourfold. First, over the past three years, pension fund boards have only marginally improved on gender and age diversity. In April 2014, still more than 35 percent of the funds had no women on the board, and an overwhelming 60 percent had no members below 40 years of age. This indicates that self-regulation in the pension fund industry so far has not been effective for the industry as a whole. Second, the authors find that pension funds that have larger boards are more likely to have at least one woman on the board or at least one member below 40 years of age. Third, boards of pension funds with more assets are less likely to have young board members. Fourth, boards with at least one female have a higher probability of also having at least one member below 40 years, which is suggestive of tokenism. Research limitations/implications Based on Hirschman’s (1970) theory of voice and exit, the authors expect that pension fund boards would be more diverse than corporate boards. However, the authors find that this is not the case. Second, given the importance of generational value transfers in pension fund policy decisions, the authors expect that age is a more important diversity characteristic than gender for pension fund boards in the Netherlands. Again, the data does not support this prediction. Practical implications Consistent with the literature on diversity in corporate boards, the authors find that diverse boards are on average larger. This suggests that, all other things equal, small boards might want to reconsider whether increasing their size would lead to more diversity and hence to more voice for participants that cannot exit the pension scheme. If larger funds hesitate to include young members because of their lack of relevant skills, then the authors would recommend setting up a platform to educate young candidates and prepare them for board membership. Forced independent auditor verification, as in the UK, might be a fruitful action the regulator could enforce on pension funds going forward. However, if that also does not lead to a significant improvement, compulsory diversity quota might be the only option left for policy makers. Originality/value This paper contributes to the literature in at least three ways. First, the authors analyze whether self-regulation on diversity in pension fund boards has been effective. Second, the authors determine which pension fund characteristics are associated with more board diversity. Third, the authors shed light on tokenism in pension fund board composition: Diversity might be obtained through installing diversity tokens, which are individuals who have multiple diversity characteristics.
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Sedláčková, Lucie. "Two Enfants Terribles in Dutch Exile: The Exilic Posture of Jaroslav Hutka and Ivan Landsmann." AUC PHILOLOGICA 2021, no. 1 (August 30, 2021): 83–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.14712/24646830.2021.14.

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This article addresses the topic of authorial posture (as defined by Jérôme Meizoz), in particular the exilic posture. Some exiled authors, listed as examples, or prototypes of that posture, were able to achieve a stable place in the Dutch literary or cultural field. This text shows, however, that some exiled authors or artists were not endowed with the crucial qualities and abilities, and it investigates what kind of qualities and abilities they missed. The Czechs Jaroslav Hutka and Ivan Landsmann spent a part of their lives in exile in the Netherlands, where they also created literary texts. The songwriter, poet and prosaist Hutka and the novelist Landsmann did acquire a firm position in the Czech cultural and literary field without really penetrating the Dutch one. This article examines the extent to which they represented the exilic posture, describes it in more detail, and provides more fitting designations. By doing so, it answers the question why these two authors did not or could not acquire an established position in the Dutch cultural field during their exile period
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Klomp, Mirella, Marten van der Meulen, Erin Wilson, and A. Zijdemans. "The Passion as Public Reflexivity: How the Dutch in a Ritual-musical Event Reflect on Religious and Moral Discussions in Society." Journal of Religion in Europe 11, no. 2-3 (October 17, 2018): 195–221. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18748929-01102007.

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This article analyses the public significance of The Passion—a televised retelling of the Passion of Jesus, featuring pop songs and celebrities in the Dutch public sphere. Using a multidisciplinary approach, the authors demonstrate how performances like The Passion offer spaces in which the Dutch can reflect publicly on important identity issues, such as the role of Christian heritage in a supposedly secular age. The article contributes to deeper knowledge of how Dutch late-modern society deals with its secular self-understanding.
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Blom, Elma, Nada Vasić, and Jan de Jong. "Production and Processing of Subject–Verb Agreement in Monolingual Dutch Children With Specific Language Impairment." Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research 57, no. 3 (June 2014): 952–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/2014_jslhr-l-13-0104.

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Purpose In this study, the authors investigated whether errors with subject–verb agreement in monolingual Dutch children with specific language impairment (SLI) are influenced by verb phonology. In addition, the productive and receptive abilities of Dutch acquiring children with SLI regarding agreement inflection were compared. Method An SLI group (6–8 years old), an age-matched group with typical development, and a language-matched, younger, typically developing (TD) group participated in the study. Using an elicitation task, the authors tested use of third person singular inflection after verbs that ended in obstruents (plosive, fricative) or nonobstruents (sonorant). The authors used a self-paced listening task to test sensitivity to subject–verb agreement violations. Results Omission was more frequent after obstruents than nonobstruents; the younger TD group used inflection less often after plosives than fricatives, unlike the SLI group. The SLI group did not detect subject–verb agreement violations if the ungrammatical structure contained a frequent error (omission), but if the ungrammatical structure contained an infrequent error (substitution), subject–verb agreement violations were noticed. Conclusions The use of agreement inflection by children with TD or SLI is affected by verb phonology. Differential effects in the 2 groups are consistent with a delayed development in Dutch SLI. Parallels between productive and receptive abilities point to weak lexical agreement inflection representations in Dutch SLI.
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de Heer, Lucas J., and Frank P. G. Pötgens. "The International Public Law Effectiveness Principle and Qualification Conflicts from a Dutch Perspective." Intertax 40, Issue 1 (January 1, 2012): 54–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/taxi2012005.

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In this article, the authors discuss the solution contained in the OECD Commentary for qualification conflicts. This solution would require the Residence State to follow the qualification of the Source State in certain situations. The Netherlands has made an observation to these provisions in the OECD Commentary. The authors discuss the distinction the OECD Commentary makes between qualification and interpretation conflicts. They argue that the Dutch observation is incompatible with the principle of effectiveness as derived from international public law and regret that the Dutch authorities maintained its observation in a recent renewal of its treaty policy.
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Aisya Hanum, Muhammad Ihsan, Nasikhin, and Fihris. "The Development Of Indonesian Islamic Civilization During The Dutch Occupation." JSI: Jurnal Sejarah Islam 2, no. 02 (November 27, 2023): 1–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.24090/jsij.v2i02.7955.

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This study aims to analyze the development of Indonesian Islamic civilization during the Dutch colonial period. To achieve this goal, the authors use the literary method with a qualitative approach, namely by collecting data and information by examining various sources in the form of books or scientific papers that are relevant to the object of research. With this research shows that 1). The socio-cultural conditions during the Dutch period underwent changes which can be seen by the existence of social discrimination and the presence of Dutch culture that entered Indonesia. 2). The system of government that prevailed in Indonesia during the Dutch colonial period. 3). Da'wah strategy carried out by the scholars during the Dutch colonial period. 4). Challenges faced by Indonesia during the Dutch colonial period. 5). An influential figure during the Dutch colonial period. This study is important to do in order to add to the study of the history of Islamic civilization in Indonesia, especially the scarcity of themes that discuss Islamic civilization during the Dutch colonial period.
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Bant, Willem. "“It Is Really a Big Achievement for a Small Community Like the One of Curaçao.” Jan Greshoff (1888–1971) and De Stoep (1940–1951): An Exploration." Werkwinkel 11, no. 2 (November 1, 2016): 49–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/werk-2016-0010.

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Abstract During the Second World War, both in the Dutch East Indies and in Curaçao, journals were published in which Dutch authors could publish their works unhampered by German censorship. In addition, literary works in Dutch were published in the Dutch East Indies, South Africa and New York. A man involved in all these initiatives was Jan Greshoff, an author who had played an important role in Dutch literature during the time between the two world wars. In this article, the role of Greshoff in relation to the literary journal De Stoep, which originated in Curaçao after the German occupation of Holland in 1940, will be explored. Although he never went to Curaçao and never met the journal’s founder, Luc. Tournier, in person, Greshoff played an important role in the history of De Stoep during the years of the war, and thus indirectly in the development of Dutch literature in Curaçao.
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Prędota, Stanisław. "Over Vlaams-Nederlandse woordenboeken." Werkwinkel 9, no. 1 (July 17, 2014): 91–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/werk-2014-0006.

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Abstract The contemporary Dutch language belongs to European multi-centered languages and has three variations: Dutch of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Dutch in Northern Belgium, and Dutch in Surinam. There are differences among the above variations which mainly regard the pronunciation and lexicon. The Flemish and Surinam variations pose a great challenge, especially for the translators of the Flemish and Surinam literature. Similarly, they pose also a significant theoretical and practical problem for the authors of one and two-language dictionaries of the Dutch language. The contemporary lexicography attempts to register the differences which one can find between the standard of the Dutch language and: its Northern Belgium variation, as well as its Surinam variation. It needs to be noted that lexicographers so far have been paying much attention to lexical differences between Dutch of the Kingdom of the Netherlands and Dutch of the Northern Belgium. In this very paper there are described four printed Flemish-Dutch dictionaries and one online dictionary, we also characterize the Prisma Handwoordenboek Nederlands met onderscheid tussen het Belgisch-Nederlands en Nederlands-Nederlands met medewerking van W. Martin en W. Smedts.
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Beelen, Hans. "Bezet door het ijs." De Moderne Tijd 4, no. 3 (January 1, 2020): 337–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/dmt2020.3-4.010.beel.

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Abstract Beset by Ice The Dutch Literary Resonance of Unfortunate Whaling Voyages in the Catastrophic Year 1777/1778 The Greenland whaling catastrophe of the year 1777 resulted in seventeen voyage descriptions, written in five languages over a period of 40 years. Travelogues in Dutch, German and Danish reflect the international character of the 18th century whaling trade. As for the Dutch literary setting, there appear to be great differences in style and processing between printed journals written by surviving seamen and descriptions written by or in collaboration with more or less professional authors.
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Valentin, Lukas. "Language, Power and Success: Bestselling Translations in the Dutch CPNB Top 100 archief." Publishing Research Quarterly 37, no. 3 (July 6, 2021): 439–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12109-021-09823-8.

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AbstractThis paper investigates origins, original languages and authors of bestselling translations on the annual Dutch Top 100 bestseller list. Considering the first fifty entries on the lists from the period between 1997 and 2019, the study aims to determine the Dutch position within the World Language System. The results show that about half of all the books surveyed are translations. These come from fifteen different source languages, although a clear majority are translations from English (73.2%). The analysis confirms the notion of a World Language System with central, semi-peripheral and peripheral languages and places Dutch among the peripheral languages. Furthermore, the study reveals strong globalisation and commercialisation tendencies in the Dutch book market.
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Kingma, M., and G. T. Jensma. "Literair Kwartier. De radio as spegel en megafoan fan ’e Fryske literatuer tusken 1945 en 1975." Us Wurk 71, no. 1-2 (July 20, 2022): 22–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.21827/uw.71.22-50.

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This contribution entails an extensive analysis of the Northern Dutch literary radio program Literair Kwartier (Literary Quarter). After Dutch national radio had already broadcasted literary programs from the early 1940s onward, the three Northern Dutch provinces (Fryslân, Groningen and Drenthe) were to follow as soon as they acquired a regional broadcasting station of their own in 1945, called RON or RONO. The emphasis on culture characterizing policy-making in postwar Dutch politics in general proved favorable to literature. In a great many book reviews and talks on literature Literair Kwartier acquainted literary critics and writers from the region to the broader listening audience. Since the program largely discussed Frisian literature, it makes for a remarkable insight into the issues, reception and evolution of this minority literature in the decades shortly after the Second World War. Yet, not in the least through the inclusion of book reviews of renowned national and international authors, Literair Kwartier also guided its listeners towards a proper high-brow literary taste. Literair Kwartier, the authors conclude, can best be seen not only as complementary to the written criticism of the period but also as an amplifier of the literary taste in the region in general.
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Boudewijn, Petra R. "An Enormous Interstitial Mestizo? The (Im)possibility of Eurasian Identity in Dutch Postcolonial Novels." Werkwinkel 11, no. 1 (June 1, 2016): 41–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/werk-2016-0003.

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Abstract This article examines the (im)possibility of Eurasian identity in Dutch postcolonial novels by second-generation authors such as Marion Bloem and Adriaan van Dis. As a result of Indonesia’s decolonisation 300.000 Dutch nationals came from the former Dutch East Indies to the Netherlands. Among them was a large group of Eurasians, people of mixed Dutch and Indonesian descent. Many of whom had never set foot on the so-called motherland. Although Eurasians had belonged to the European community in the tropics, they were perceived as immigrants by the Dutch government and were subjected to an aggressive, far-reaching assimilation policy - fearing they would otherwise become a major social problem. Their offspring, the so-called second generation, is often assumed to struggle with their identity while growing up in a postcolonial society that did not tolerate cultural differences at the time. What constitutes a Eurasian identity, and can such identities exist after the enforced assimilation of Eurasians in the Netherlands? How do second-generation authors look upon their Eurasian background and how do they portray these assumed identity struggles in postcolonial literature? The texts in question are discussed in relation to theories of hybridity. It is argued that the widespread notion that Eurasians either fall between two stools or grow into examples of hybrid identity are not foregone conclusions.
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Mosseveld, M., J. van der Lei, and M. van Wijk. "Design of a Decision Support System for Test Ordering in General Practice: Choices and Decisions to Make." Methods of Information in Medicine 38, no. 04/05 (1999): 355–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1634405.

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AbstractThe increased availability of tests in the past years has been accompanied by an increased number of blood tests ordered by general practitioners. Dutch investigators report a lack of general practitioners’ knowledge concerning the indications for blood tests leading to inappropriate and inadequate use of diagnostic tests. Taking advantage of the use of electronic patient records by Dutch general practitioners, the authors replaced the traditional paper forms for test ordering by a decision-support system. The objective of the decision-support system is to change test-ordering behavior. Designing a system to change test-ordering behavior, however, required the selection of a method to provide support. To study different methods for changing test-ordering behavior, the authors developed two versions of the decision-support system BloodLink. The first version, Blood-Link-Restricted, is based on the notion of restricting the number of choices presented to the general practitioners. The second version, BloodLink-Guideline, is based on the guidelines provided by the Dutch college of general practitioners.
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Ashikali, Tanachia, and Sandra Groeneveld. "Diversity management for all? An empirical analysis of diversity management outcomes across groups." Personnel Review 44, no. 5 (August 3, 2015): 757–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/pr-10-2014-0216.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine if and how diversity management outcomes differ across non-native and native Dutch groups within public sector organizations. The effects of diversity management on the extent employees feel their organizational environment is inclusive and on their attitudes and behaviour, are expected to be dependent on how diversity management is perceived by non-native and native Dutch employees in the organization. Drawing on social exchange theory, the authors expect that employees who positively value diversity management practices will reciprocate through showing attitudes and behaviours that are valued by the organization. Since social exchange refers to a social relationship between the employee and the organization that goes beyond the formal contract alone, the authors analyse affective commitment and organizational citizenship behaviour (OCB) as employee outcomes. Design/methodology/approach – The authors analyse data from a quantitative survey of a sample of Dutch central government employees and use structural equation modelling (SEM) to analyse the consequences of diversity management across non-native and native Dutch employee groups. Findings – Results show that diversity management is associated with higher levels of inclusion which in turn boosts affective commitment and OCB of both non-native and native Dutch employees. Practical implications – The findings show that higher levels of diversity management is associated with an increased inclusive environment, which in turn boosts employees’ affective commitment and OCB. This effect is equal for social-demographic diverse groups. Public managers should therefore implement diversity management that focus on creating an environment that is inclusive for all employees. The positive employee attitudes and behaviour resulting from this can contribute to achieving organizational goals. Originality/value – This paper combines theory on diversity management outcomes and social exchange to empirically explore and explain group differences by testing these linkages using SEM.
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Dijkstra, Wiebe E. J., and Frank P. G. Pötgens. "Cross-Border Fiscal Unities and Tax Treaties: Nothing New under the Sun?" Intertax 42, Issue 2 (February 1, 2014): 92–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/taxi2014009.

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The application of tax treaties to fiscal unities has caused quite some discussion in Dutch tax literature in the past, given the route the Dutch Supreme Court had chosen to follow could result in imbalances. This article analyses the relationship between the Dutch Supreme Court case of 3 February 2012, No. 10/05383, BNB 2012/126 - concerning a cross-border fiscal unity for Dutch corporate income tax purposes having a dual resident parent company with its place of effective management in Belgium - and earlier case law on cross-border fiscal unities. The authors examine the fundamental questions on tax treaty application and interpretation raised by these cases, particularly as regards the residence of consolidated group companies for tax treaty purposes .
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De Vaan, Ruud A. G., and Gerrit-Jan De Bock. "Rapidly Implemented Amidst COVID Crisis, New Dutch Restructuring Procedure Offers Relief to Businesses and Organizations Struggling with High Debts." European Company Law 18, Issue 3 (June 1, 2021): 106–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/eucl2021013.

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A recently enacted Dutch law enables businesses and organizations to avoid bankruptcy through a court-approved restructuring plan. As an implementation of the 2019 European Restructuring Directive, the so-called Dutch Scheme can be used to restructure debts and improve profitability, for example by applying forced debt reduction or debt-for-equity swaps. This new legislation entered into force on 1 January 2021 and is already proving to be an effective tool for business in financial distress. In this article, the authors describe its main characteristics. insolvency proceedings, restructuring plan, WHOA, Dutch Scheme, restructuring expert, debtor-in-possession
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Moon, Jihie. "Postcolonial Travel Writing - Focusing on South African Travelogues by Dutch Authors -." Comparative Study of World Literature 80 (September 30, 2022): 279–304. http://dx.doi.org/10.33078/cowol80.11.

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31

van der Horst, Mariska, Tanja van der Lippe, and Esther Kluwer. "Aspirations and occupational achievements of Dutch fathers and mothers." Career Development International 19, no. 4 (August 5, 2014): 447–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/cdi-12-2012-0128.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate how work and family aspirations relate to occupational achievements and gender differences herein. Design/methodology/approach – Using data from 2009 the authors examined the relationship between career and childrearing aspirations and occupational achievements of Dutch parents. Using path modeling in Mplus, the authors investigated both direct and indirect pathways where aspirations were related to occupational achievements via time allocations. Findings – The authors found that ranking being promoted instead of a non-career aspiration as the most important job aspiration was positively related to occupational achievements. Surprisingly, the authors also found that ranking childrearing as the most important life role aspiration was positively related to earnings among fathers. Research limitations/implications – Investigating aspirations in multiple domains simultaneously can provide new information on working parents’ occupational achievements. Practical implications – The results imply that parents who want to achieve an authority position or high earnings may need to prioritize their promotion aspiration among their job aspirations in order to increase the likelihood of achieving such a position. Moreover, this is likely to require sacrifices outside the work domain, since spending more time on paid work is an important way to achieve this aspiration. Originality/value – This paper adds to previous research by explicitly taking life role aspirations into account instead of focussing solely on job aspirations. Moreover, this study extends previous research by investigating indirect pathways from aspirations to occupational achievements via family work in addition to the previously found pathway via paid work.
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Kropman, Marc, Carla van Boxtel, and Jannet van Drie. "Narratives and Multiperspectivity in Dutch Secondary School History Textbooks." Journal of Educational Media, Memory, and Society 12, no. 1 (March 1, 2020): 1–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/jemms.2020.120101.

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School history textbooks provide an important source of information for learners of history. Textbook narratives of a nation’s past often present a limited frame of reference, which impedes the aim of teaching history from multiple perspectives. This article examines the representation of the Dutch Revolt in two Dutch and two Flemish history textbooks. By taking sentences as our unit of analysis, we analyzed narrative elements and metaphors, which informed us about the level of multiperspectivity in these narratives. We found that Dutch textbooks, in contrast to Flemish textbooks, create their emplotment of the narrative of the Dutch Revolt by focusing on the first ten years of the conflict and mostly lack multiperspectivity. We hope that the insights generated by this analysis may inform textbook authors who seek to do justice to multiple perspectives.
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Louwerse, Henriette. "‘A way of seeing and telling’: Resistance through language and form in the work of the Dutch authors Hafid Bouazza and Ramsey Nasr." Journal of European Studies 47, no. 2 (April 6, 2017): 158–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0047244117700073.

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This article discusses the debate within the Dutch academy on the differentiation between migration writing and post-colonial writing as an instance of an area of study in search of consensus. It offers a synthetic reading of the writing of two leading Dutch authors, Hafid Bouazza and Ramsey Nasr, based on the contention that both writers, through their widely different aesthetic and political negotiations, shape the discourse on multicultural literature and society in the Netherlands.
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Sleiderink, Remco, Helleke van den Braber, Nina Geerdink, and Laurens Ham. "Naar een diachrone blik op de verdiensten van Nederlandstalige auteurs." Nederlandse Letterkunde 25, no. 1 (April 1, 2020): 7–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/nedlet2020.1.002.slei.

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Abstract This article argues that it is both important and viable to develop a diachronic perspective on the profits of literary authors in the Low Countries. Up to now, conceptual and theoretical boundaries between different subdisciplines within Dutch literary studies have resulted in a compartmentalized, fragmentary narrative of the economic, social and symbolic profits of literary authors throughout the centuries. On the basis of a survey of the theoretical frameworks dominant in the subdisciplines of medieval, early modern and modern Dutch literature, we highlight the opportunities and difficulties for a diachronic perspective on financial advancement, focusing both on practice and discourse. In addition, we propose a schematic model that tries to overcome the difficulties and enables us to profit from the opportunities. This proposal allows for a sharper focus on both the practice of and discourse on literary authors’ economic gain from a diachronic perspective.
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35

Kalla, Irena Barbara. "Holocaust als non-fictie in de hedendaagse Nederlandse en Vlaamse jeugdliteratuur." Neerlandica Wratislaviensia 33 (November 17, 2022): 27–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.19195/0860-0716.33.3.

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The past two decades have seen a growing proliferation and generic (intermedial) diversification of Holocaust-related fiction and non-fiction in the Dutch language. At the hands of Dutch and Flemish authors of the third generation as well as writers who do not have a personal connection with the Holocaust, genres as diverse as the historical novel, picture books, the graphic novel, comic books and informational books have become the platform for creative engagement with the Shoah. In view of the growing temporal distance separating contemporary readers from the actual events of the Holocaust children’s literature, we saw its informative function being reinforced and revaluated. In this paper, I review Dutch and Flemish children’s literature about the Holocaust created in the 21st century. Special attention is paid to the literary methods and interventions used by authors in order to authenticate the narrative and frame it as non-fiction. These strategies demonstrate the further change in child images: the child is increasingly becoming a full-fledged participant in society and is as such entitled to historical truth, even if this truth is horrifying.
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Bakker, Minne, and Fijgje de Boer. "Kwaliteitscriteria in kwalitatief onderzoek: welke termen hanteer je als kwalitatief onderzoeker?" KWALON 26, no. 2 (January 1, 2021): 88–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/kwalon2021.2.002.bakk.

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Abstract Quality criteria for qualitative research: which terms do you use as a qualitative researcher? About 35 years ago, Lincoln and Guba developed four quality criteria for qualitative research – credibility, transferability, dependability and confirmability – as a counterpart for the criteria that were developed within the positivist research paradigm. Qualitative researchers differ in their use of quality criteria. The authors argue that qualitative researchers should preferably use quality criteria that have been developed within the interpretivist research paradigm. They also mention that it is difficult to find an adequate Dutch translation for the concepts of dependability and confirmability. These concepts are currently translated in different ways. The authors end the article with a proposal for the translation of these four quality criteria into Dutch.
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Zuma, Banoyi, and Margo Rooijackers. "Uncovering the potential of urban culture for creative placemaking." Journal of Tourism Futures 6, no. 3 (February 3, 2020): 233–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jtf-10-2019-0112.

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Purpose The authors provide a personal insight into how they see the potential of urban culture as a vehicle for creative placemaking. The purpose of this study is to highlight the opportunities for the tourism industry to embrace this global youth culture now that one of its pillars, breakdance, is on the brink of becoming an Olympic discipline in 2024, thus nudging this youth culture from underground to mainstream. Design/methodology/approach The authors interviewed two Dutch pioneers in the field of urban culture: Tyrone van der Meer, founder of The Notorious IBE (IBE), an international breaking event, and Angelo Martinus, founder of the urban scene in Eindhoven and initiator of EMOVES, an urban culture and sports event. Findings The authors illustrate the added value of urban culture to creative placemaking by addressing the initiatives of previously mentioned Dutch pioneers. Their urban culture events on Dutch soil, yearly attract thousands of participants and visitors from the urban scene, covering over 40 nationalities, to the South of The Netherlands. Originality/value This study provides a glimpse into a global youth culture that is primarily invisible to the tourism industry and a foresight in how the tourism industry and other stakeholders (e.g. policy makers, city marketeers, tourism managers and event organisers) can pick up on this evolving trend. The study is meant as a wake-up call.
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Udasmoro, Wening, Setiadi Setiadi, and Aprillia Firmonasari. "Between Memory and Trajectory: Gendered Literary Narratives of Javanese Diaspora in New Caledonia." International Journal of Interreligious and Intercultural Studies 5, no. 1 (June 2, 2022): 74–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.32795/ijiis.vol5.iss1.2022.2851.

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The purpose of this research is to explore the memory and the trajectory of the Javanese diaspora on the novels written by two female authors of Javanese descent in New Caledonia using a gender perspective. The Javanese diaspora in New Caledonia is a community that has left their homeland (Java) to start a new life in their destination land (New Caledonia) since 1896. They are descendants of the contract coolies (laborers) sent by the Dutch colonial government who controlled the Dutch Indies, including Java, at the request of French colonial government. The delivery of contract coolies was based on an agreement called the “Koeli Ordonatie” which had become a legal regulation and was implemented since the 1880s. It was a regulation signed by the Governor-General of the Netherlands Number 138 whose purpose was to fid unskilled laborers willing to work in the Dutch colonies, especially in the plantations and mining. The coolies, especially from Java, were mostly used as manual laborers in various parts of Dutch colonies, such as in Suriname. Seeing that this Dutch policy brought positive results for the exploitation of natural resources in the Dutch colonies, the French colonial government asked the help from the Dutch colonial government to recruit the laborers to be sent to French colonial region, New Caledonia.
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39

Grave, Jaap, and Ekaterina Vekshina. "Max Havelaar by Multatuli in Russia: The origins of translations." Scandinavian Philology 19, no. 1 (2021): 176–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu21.2021.111.

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This article is dedicated to the Russian translations of the Dutch novel Max Havelaar or the coffee auctions of the Nederlandsche Handelmaatschappy (1860) by Eduard Douwes Dekker (1820–1887), who published his work under the pseudonym Multatuli. Max Havelaar is one of the best known and most translated works of Dutch literature. There are six complete Russian translations published between 1916 and 1959, which have not yet been analyzed. The authors hypothesize that German is the intermediate language in the Dutch-Russian literary transfer as research has shown that German often served as an intermediate language for translations into Scandinavian and Slavic languages during this period. In the specific case of Max Havelaar, the German translation by Wilhelm Spohr, who moved in circles of anarchists, served as an intermediate text. The authors also investigated whether the Russian translators used the English translation of 1868, but this was not the case. In the first part of this article, the biographies of the Russian translators, authors of forewords and editors who worked on the Russian translations are examined. In the second part, excerpts from the novel are compared with the translations to analyze the relationship between the texts. The results of the research confirm that the first Russian translations were based on Karl Mischke’s German translation, which had appeared almost simultaneously with Spohr’s. Traces of this translation can also be found in later texts. To the authors’ knowledge, it has not been shown before that Mischke’s translation and not Spohr’s was used as an intermediate text.
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40

Hofman, Roelande H., and Adriaan Hofman. "SCHOOL CHOICE, RELIGIOUS TRADITIONS AND SCHOOL EFFECTIVENESS IN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SCHOOLS." International Journal of Education and Religion 2, no. 1 (July 24, 2001): 144–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1570-0623-90000035.

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The article analyses the Dutch paradox of an education system that includes a large proportion of private religious schools in one of the most highly secularized of Western societies. Using a three - factor model of school choice, the authors analyze the most important motives for parental school choice and try to answer the question of why so many Dutch children from secularized families still attend private religious schools. Reasons for unconventional school choice and reflections of religious traditions within the schools are addressed as possible explanations for the Dutch paradox. The importance of school effectiveness is examined as a motive for school choice, along with factors contributing to effectiveness of public and private schools.
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41

Brederode, Tim van, and Federica Casano. "EU Public Intervention in the Energy Market: A Stroke of Good Luck or Misfortune?" Intertax 51, Issue 11 (November 1, 2023): 754–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/taxi2023068.

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This contribution focuses on the legal analysis of Council Regulation (EU) 2022/1854 and on the implementation of the windfall profits tax in the Netherlands. The analysis takes into consideration constitutional and principle-based issues from levying this tax and potential litigation issues in the EU and in the Netherlands. The authors conclude by admitting the legality of the EU and Dutch measure. surplus profits, windfall profits tax, Dutch Mining Act, qualified majority voting, Article 122 TFEU, EU emergency law, EU tax policy
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42

van der Deijl, Lucas. "The Dutch Translation and Circulation of Spinoza’s Tractatus Theologico-Politicus in Manuscript and Print (1670-1694)." Quaerendo 50, no. 1-2 (June 4, 2020): 207–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700690-12341459.

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Abstract Benedictus de Spinoza became one of the few censored authors in the liberal publishing climate of the Dutch Republic. Twenty-three years passed before the first Dutch translation of his Tractatus Theologico-Politicus (1670) appeared in print, despite two interrupted attempts to bring out a vernacular version before 1693. This article compares the three oldest Dutch translations of Spinoza’s notorious treatise by combining digital sentence alignment with philological analysis. It describes the relationship between the variants, two printed versions and a manuscript, revealing a pattern of fragmentary similarity. This partial textual reuse can be explained using Harold Love’s notion of ‘scribal publication’: readers circulated handwritten copies as a strategy to avoid the censorship of Spinozism. As a result, medium and language not only conditioned the dissemination of Spinoza’s treatise in Dutch, but also affected its text in the versions published—either in manuscript or print—between 1670 and 1694.
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43

Abdikarimova, A. T., and G. B. Aimagambetova. "Some aspects of the "dutch disease" in the economy of the Republic of Kazakhstan." Central Asian Economic Review, no. 2 (June 25, 2021): 22–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.52821/2224-5561-2021-2-22-41.

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The fundamental structural transformations that have taken place in the country's economy have led to a deterioration in the quality of the economic system and increased dependence of the national economy on the conjuncture of world markets. Our previous research was concerned with determining what triggered the change in the structure of the economy, how effective the changes were, and what changes in sector proportions they led to. In this article, we tried to analyze whether we are facing the consequences of the "Dutch disease", which led to structural transformations in the economy.The purpose of the study is to confirm our assumption that the economy of the Republic of Kazakhstan is subject to the "Dutch disease".Methodology of the study. The authors relied on the cointegration analysis of time series using the Engle-Granger tests, the analysis of the stationarity of the Dickey-Fuller methods in order to determine cointegration, to assess the degree of interrelation between the values of mining and manufacturing production volumes on GDP indicators, as evidence of the presence of "Dutch disease".Originality / value of the research. The originality and value of the study lies on the fact that the authors tried to analyze the economy for the presence of "Dutch disease" in the economy of Kazakhstan using time series analysis methods.Findings. There is an assumption that the economy of Kazakhstan has certain symptoms and signs of the "Dutch disease", but it is not possible to say unequivocally that it was the main catalyst for structural changes, due to the fact that we could not prove the existence of a negative relationship between the growth rates of the mining industry and the manufacturing industry.
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Mol, Daniel, Jonas S. S. G. de Jong, and Joris R. de Groot. "On the Dutch Registry of catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation: Authors’ reply." EP Europace 23, no. 8 (March 29, 2021): 1331–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/europace/euab068.

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45

Willemsen, Marlous. "Dutch Authors from the Arab World: A Relief to the Multicultural Society." Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics, no. 20 (2000): 68. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/521942.

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46

Deurloo, M. C., F. M. Dieleman, and W. A. V. Clark. "Tenure Choice in the Dutch Housing Market." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 19, no. 6 (June 1987): 763–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a190763.

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In this paper, tenure choice in complex housing markets is examined, that is, in markets with more than a simple choice between own and rent. The paper has both substantive and technical foci. The substantive focus is to extend the authors' research on the links between housing and mobility and to provide detailed information on the way in which dwelling choices are made after the decision to relocate. The technical focus is to continue the authors' concern with building robust models of urban processes. The technical concerns are focused on special forms of automatic interaction detection and dummy variable multiple regression to estimate the influence of household characteristics and previous housing situation on dwelling choice. The data used in the analysis are part of a large sample taken in 1981 of all Dutch households. The automatic interaction detection method is used as a form of exploratory data analysis to identify the underlying ‘structure’ in the data. The results are used as input to the dummy regression process, which, in combination with the proportional reduction in uncertainty measures, establishes the importance of income and the role of regional variations, age, and type of house as major predictors of tenure choice. A main conclusion from the research is that, even though income is the most important predictor, age, size of family, type of house, and price also affect tenure choice. Even more important is the conclusion that it is essential to do separate analyses for separate tenures.
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47

Sternberg, Christian, and Herman van Kesteren. "Dutch/German Cross-Border VAT Grouping." EC Tax Review 22, Issue 4 (August 1, 2013): 187–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/ecta2013020.

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Both Germany and the Netherlands were acquainted with the concept of VAT grouping before the introduction of a common EU VAT system in 1968. In this article the authors discuss the requirements for VAT grouping in Germany and the Netherlands. Even though the requirements are similar VAT grouping between companies established in Germany and the Netherlands is not possible, because of the territorial restriction laid down in Article 11 VAT Directive. The objections to a cross-border VAT group including German and Dutch entities as well as the current position of both countries on the subject are examined in this article. The different positions of Germany and the Netherlands on cross-border VAT grouping result in potential situations of double or non-taxation that we will discuss.
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48

Molendijk, Arie L. "Publieke religie: een terreinverkenning." NTT Journal for Theology and the Study of Religion 61, no. 3 (August 18, 2007): 220–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/ntt2007.61.220.mole.

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The public role of contemporary religion is undeniably a topic of much strive and debate. Two recent Dutch volumes make an important contribution to this discussion by analyzing and evaluating issues that arise with the ‘re-emergence of religion in the public domain’. Especially the volume that was issued by the (Dutch) Scientific Council for Government Policy shows the transformations in the Dutch religious landscape and how important non-religious attitudes and orientations presently are in the Netherlands. Notwithstanding critical voices the authors of both books show an appreciative and non-judgemental approach to the phenomena they research. This essay addresses some of the key issues in the often confusing and confused debates concerning the role that religion plays in modern society.
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Kotlyar, Ilya A. "Bankruptcy and the Praetorian Pledge: The Law of the Books and the Law in Action in the Early Modern Netherlands." Studia Iuridica 80 (September 17, 2019): 181–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0013.4799.

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The article points out at the discrepancy between the different Mss. of the Roman Justinianic text: Littera Pisana and Littera Bononiensis. The discrepancy entailed that the doctrine of medieval Ius Commune offered stronger protection of the collective rights of the creditors, in comparison with the Classical Roman law. The Roman Dutch “Elegant School”, despite its general reliance on the original Roman sources, already in the writings of Grotius demonstrated allegiance to the medieval doctrine on the issue of bankruptcy. The authors of the “Elegant School” continued to prefer the medieval interpretation of the creditors’ rights and bankruptcy, although Dutch practice was, in many respects, drastically different from the Ius Commune doctrine. This ensured a strong protection of creditors in bankruptcy in Dutch law.
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de Leeuw, Arianne, Erik ten Vergert, and Arco C. P. Bobeldijk. "Is the Collection of a Dutch Protective Assessment after Emigration EU-proof?" Intertax 40, Issue 11 (November 1, 2012): 616–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/taxi2012063.

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When an individual owning shares constituting a substantial interest emigrates from the Netherlands, a protective tax assessment is imposed. Under certain circumstances this protective assessment is (partially) collected. The authors explore the way in which the regulations regarding this collection must be interpreted, as this is unclear. This interpretation is also assessed by the authors within the context of EU law. The authors conclude that a specific interpretation is necessary for the regulations to be (as much as possible) in accordance with EU law and even then the regulations retain a measure of overkill. Amendment of the regulations will therefore be necessary to make them fully compliant with EU law.
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