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1

Bullock, Darcy M. Evaluation of emergency vehicle signal preemption on the Route 7 Virginia corridor. McLean, VA: Federal Highway Administration, 1999.

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2

Bullock, Darcy M. Evaluation of emergency vehicle signal preemption on the Route 7 Virginia corridor. McLean, VA: U.S. Dept. of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration, Research, Development, & Technology, Turner-Fairbank Highway Research Center, 1999.

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3

En route: A paramedic's stories of life, death, and everything in between. New York: Kaplan Pub., 2009.

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4

Council, National Safety. Exit routes, emergency action plans & fire prevention plans: Compliance training : participant guide. [United States?]: National Safety Council, 2003.

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5

Zimmerman, Carol. Using highways for no-notice evacuations: Routes to effective evacuation planning primer series. Washington, D.C: Federal Highway Administration, Office of Operations, 2007.

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6

Bacher, Renée. LSU in the eye of the storm: A university model for disaster response. Baton Rouge, La: Louisiana State University, Office of Public Affairs, 2005.

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7

Stein, Emma Natalya. Constructing Kanchi. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463729123.

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This book traces the emergence of the South Indian city of Kanchi as a major royal capital and multireligious pilgrimage destination during the era of the Pallava and Chola dynasties (circa seventh through thirteenth centuries). It presents the first-ever comprehensive picture of historical Kanchi, locating the city and its more than 100 spectacular Hindu temples at the heart of commercial and artistic exchange that spanned India, Southeast Asia, and China. The author demonstrates that Kanchi was structured with a hidden urban plan, which determined the placement and orientation of temples around a central thoroughfare that was also a burgeoning pilgrimage route. Moving outwards from the city, she shows how the transportation networks, river systems, residential enclaves, and agrarian estates all contributed to the vibrancy of Kanchi’s temple life. The construction and ongoing renovation of temples in and around the city, she concludes, has enabled Kanchi to thrive continuously from at least the eighth century, through the colonial period, and up until the present.
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8

Host communities: Analyzing the role and needs of communities that take in disaster refugees in the wake of major disasters and catastrophes : hearing before the Ad Hoc Subcommittee on Disaster Recovery of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, One Hundred Tenth Congress, first session, December 3, 2007, field hearing in Baton Rouge, Louisianna [i.e. Louisiana]. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 2008.

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9

United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. Ad Hoc Subcommittee on Disaster Recovery. Host communities: Analyzing the role and needs of communities that take in disaster refugees in the wake of major disasters and catastrophes : hearing before the Ad Hoc Subcommittee on Disaster Recovery of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, One Hundred Tenth Congress, first session, December 3, 2007, field hearing in Baton Rouge, Louisianna [i.e. Louisiana]. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 2008.

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10

Lei, Xiaohui, ed. Emergency Operation Technologies for Sudden Water Pollution Accidents in the Middle Route of South-to-North Water Diversion Project. IntechOpen, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.81771.

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11

Salla, Michael E. Emergence du Dragon rouge - Programmes spatiaux secrets et Alliances extraterrestres Tome 4. ARIANE, 2020.

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12

Beed, Martin, Richard Sherman, and Ravi Mahajan. Poisoning and overdose. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199696277.003.0014.

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Emergency managementAnalgesicsAntidepressantsSedativesInhaled poisonsIndustrial chemicalsAlcohols and hydrocarbonsRecreational drugsMiscellaneous poisonsPoisoning or overdose (OD) may be intentional or unintentional. It can occur via ingestion, injection, or inhalation, and rarely by transdermal or other routes. It may be obvious from the history and presentation, but a high index of suspicion may also be required....
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13

Gozlan, Rodolphe E., and Marine Combe. Environmental change and pathogen transmission. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198789833.003.0005.

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The majority of emerging pathogens has an environmental origin. These pathogens are increasing in incidence and geographic distribution. Because of the continuous worldwide population growth, and global changes, the emergence of pathogens will continue to intensify, particularly in tropical areas where demographic growth is uncontrolled and socioeconomic and environmental changes rapid. Using a set of case studies, we look at the role of biodiversity alteration on zoonoses emergence and transmission routes, as well as the existing links between climate variability and pathogen emergence. Pathogen emergence and transmission are closely associated with habitat alterations and vector or host-species changes. Because of environmental changes, pathogens that were previously in a dynamic equilibrium, with local host communities in a pristine habitat, without human contact, are now redistributed locally, and over long distances, owing to increasing global pathways. Thus, we aim to characterize the environmental determinants of pathogen transmission in the tropics.
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14

Schomberg, Lucy, and Nick Maskell. Water on the lung: a rare cause of a transudative effusion and new options for palliation. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199657742.003.0016.

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Pleural effusions are very common in clinical practice and can be notoriously difficult to diagnose and a real challenge to manage. There is a large amount of literature on malignant effusions, but no clear guidelines on managing refractory non-malignant pleural effusions. This case examines a rarer cause of a transudative effusion, focussing on the route to diagnosis. The emergence of thoracic ultrasound, in light of the National Patient Safety Agency report in 2008, and the increased safety are reviewed, and, in addition, the options for management are considered, including the tunnelled pleural catheter as a potential long-term solution in this challenging situation.
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15

Adaptive Rules In Emergent Logistics (ARIEL) An Agent-Based Analysis Environment to Study Adaptive Route-Finding Constantly Changing Road-Networks. Storming Media, 2003.

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16

Sherman, Stuart. Finding Their Accounts. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199580033.003.0022.

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This chapter focuses on the peculiarities of the Spectator, a publication which began in 1711. The Spectator is neither autobiography nor novel; it offers, starting with its first number, a useful map through the maze of their intertwining. That the two genres were intimately enmeshed during the decades of their first emergence is a proposition at once self-evident and much canvassed. But the chapter shows how the Spectator may provide a route worth further canvassing. In the peculiar characteristics of its wildly popular authorial persona, it plays out as paradigm (and as parody too) core patterns of transaction between author and reader which had already begun to establish the narrative of ‘my own History’ (whether factual or fictive) as a newly hypnotic cultural artefact — and as a mode of writing whose powerful appeal resides in ‘separations’.
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17

Blacklock, Mark. Conclusion. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198755487.003.0008.

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The conclusion argues that higher space has always been described as analogous to the imagination itself, referencing arguments made by William Spottiswoode. It summarizes the cultural history of higher space charted over the course of the book and what is described within it: the emergence of a new form of spatial imaginary that has conditioned a new kind of subject. It suggests routes for further research into the ideas of expanded spatiality in the early twentieth century. It argues, following Gillian Beer, that the forms of mistranslation encountered when scientific concepts are treated in literature are generative: in the context of higher-dimensional space, ideas developed in geometry crossed diverse cultural terrains producing hybrid concepts that continue to generate and inform cultural work.
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18

Fielding, Nigel G. The Contemporary Training System. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198817475.003.0005.

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This chapter reviews the history of British police training, accenting the recent past and contemporary period. Following consideration of early precursors there is coverage of recruit training 1983–2003, the emergence of the Initial Police Learning and Development Programme (IPLDP), the landmark Neyroud Review of 2010, and the contemporary training programme that followed in the wake of Neyroud. There is a focus on the curriculum, including the balance between rote learning of law and procedures versus adult learning pedagogies. The chapter profiles the recruitment and training of police auxiliaries, including PCSOs, the recruitment and training of detectives, and the recruitment and training of supervisors and police managers, closing with discussion of the recent innovation of ‘direct entry’.
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19

Rittberger, Berthold. 14. The European Union. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hepl/9780199570829.003.0015.

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This chapter examines how the European Union acquired distinctive constitution-like features. It begins with a discussion of three routes to constitutionalization: the first is through changes in the EU's primary law; the second focuses on ‘in between’ constitutionalization; and the third leads directly to the European Court of Justice and its jurisprudence. The chapter proceeds by discussing two developments that have shaped the EU constitutional order almost since the beginning: the emergence of a body of EU law constituting a set of higher-order legal rules, and the consolidation of the constitutional principle of representative democracy. It explains how the supremacy and direct effect of EU law, as well as the EU court's concern with the protection of fundamental rights, helped transform the EU into a constitutional polity. It also considers how the extension of the legislative, budgetary, and other powers of the European Parliament animated the constitutional principle.
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20

Herman, David. Coda: Toward a Bionarratology; or, Storytelling at Species Scale. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190850401.003.0009.

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The coda to the book puts forward the hypothesis that narrative, even though it is grounded in and optimally calibrated for meso-level, human-scale phenomena, furnishes routes of access to emergent structures and processes extending beyond the size limits of the lifeworld, including species transformations at the macro level of phylogenetic history. In this way, the coda suggests how the study of what can be called storytelling at species scale constitutes an important aspect of narratology beyond the human. Focusing on the heuristic potentials of “multiscale narration” across a range of fictional and nonfictional examples, the chapter explores how narrative provides structural affordances that can be used to trace out pathways between, on the one hand, localized environments in which temporally and spatially bounded events involving particular animals or groups of animals take place, and, on the other hand, more or less massively distributed transformations at species scale.
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21

Foster, Travis M. Genre and White Supremacy in the Postemancipation United States. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198838098.001.0001.

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Even as Black Lives Matter thinkers underscore white supremacy’s manifestation in the unremarkable and all-too-often unnoticed unfolding of ordinary life, literary critical methods remain impeded by longstanding biases toward unconventional texts, visionary writers, and nonconforming ideas. The result is that we’re left without adequate methods, vocabularies, and archives for apprehending white supremacy’s urgent ordinariness. In Genre and White Supremacy in the Postemancipation United States, Travis M. Foster suggests that genre provides the best route out of this impasse. Through rigorous new interpretations of four popular literary and cultural genres—campus novels, the Ladies’ Home Journal, Civil War elegies, and gospel sermons—Foster unpacks how conventionality played a crucial role in both reconstituting and resisting taken-for-granted operations of white supremacy and antiblackness in the wake of emancipation. Arguing that genre provides a scale and a method for rendering ordinariness newly available to close analysis, Foster reveals the specific conventions and strategies through which antiblackness constitutes white social worlds far removed from the color line, while also surveying whiteness’s remarkable capacity to adapt itself to new conditions and incorporate internal differences. Simultaneously, using genre analysis to trace forms of black resistance that manifest within the radical collectivity of black social worlds, rather than through more familiar liberal politics of dissent, he highlights practices of freedom and community that refuse the very political conditions proffered by white supremacist logic. The result is an original and important new account of popular literature’s role in refashioning and resisting white supremacy in an emergent postemancipation climate.
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22

Blaustein, George. Nightmare Envy and Other Stories. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190209209.001.0001.

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Nightmare Envy and Other Stories is a study of Americanist writing and institutions in the twentieth century. Four chapters trace four routes through an “Americanist century.” The first is the hidden history of American Studies in the United States, Europe, and Japan. The second is the strange career of “national character” in anthropology. The third is a contest between military occupation and cultural diplomacy in Europe. The fourth is the emergence and fate of the “American Renaissance,” as the scholar and literary critic F. O. Matthiessen carried a canon of radical literature across the Iron Curtain. Drawing on American and European archives, the book weaves cultural, intellectual, and diplomatic history with portraits of Matthiessen, Margaret Mead, Ruth Benedict, David Riesman, Alfred Kazin, and Ralph Ellison. It excavates the history of the Salzburg Seminar in American Civilization, where displaced persons, former Nazis, budding Communists, and glad-handing Americans met on the common ground of American culture. Many of our modern myths of the United States and Europe were formed in this moment. Some saw the United States assume the mantle of cultural redeemer. Others saw a stereotypical America, rich in civilization but poor in culture, overtake a stereotypical Europe, rich in culture and equally rich in disaster. Others found keys to their own contexts in American books, reading Moby-Dick in the ruins. Nightmare Envy and Other Stories chronicles American encounters with European disaster, European encounters with American fiction, and the chasms over which culture had to reach.
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23

Goodman, Nan. The Puritan Cosmopolis. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190642822.001.0001.

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This book traces the emergence of a sense of kinship with and belonging to a larger, more inclusive world within the law and literature of late seventeenth-century Puritanism. Connected to this cosmopolitanism in part through travel, trade, and politics, late seventeenth-century Puritans, it is argued, were also thinking in terms that went beyond these parameters about what it meant to feel affiliated with people in remote places—of which the Ottoman Empire is the best, but not the only example—and to experience what Bruce Robbins calls “attachment at a distance.” In this way Puritan writers and readers were not simply learning about others but also cultivating an awareness of themselves as “stand[ing] in an ethically significant relation” to people all around the world. The underlying source of these cosmopolitan predilections was the law, specifically the law of nations, often considered the precursor to international law. Through the terms for sovereignty, obligation, and society made available by a turn toward the cosmopolitan within the law, the Puritans experimented with concepts of extended obligation and ideas about a society consisting of all humans, not just those living on certain trade routes or within certain foreign communities. In mapping out these thought experiments, The Puritan Cosmopolis uncovers Puritans who were reconceptualizing war, contemplating new ways of cultivating peace, and rewriting the rules for being Puritan by internalizing legal theories about living in a larger, more inclusive world.
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24

Lally, Jagjeet. India and the Silk Roads. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197581070.001.0001.

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India and the Silk Roads is a global history of a continental interior, the first to comprehensively examine the textual and material traces of India’s caravan trade with central Asia. But what was the fate of these overland connections in the ages of sail and steam? This book brings the world of caravan trade to life—a world of merchants, mercenaries, pastoralists and pilgrims, but also of kings, bureaucrats and their subjects in the countryside and towns. Their livelihoods did not become obsolete with the advent of ‘modern’ technologies and the consequent emergence of new global networks. Terrestrial routes remained critically important, not only handling flows of goods and money, but also fostering networks of trade in credit, secret intelligence and fighting power. With the waning of the Mughal Empire during the eighteenth century, new Indian kingdoms and their rulers came to the fore, drawing their power and prosperity from resources brought by caravan trade. The encroachment of British and Russian imperialism into this commercial arena in the nineteenth century gave new significance to some people and flows, while steadily undermining others. By showing how no single ruler could control the nebulous yet durable networks of this trading world, which had its own internal dynamics even as it evolved in step with global transformations, this book forces us to rethink the history of globalisation and re-evaluate our fixation with empires and states as the building blocks of historical analysis.
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25

Duplouy, Alain, and Roger W. Brock, eds. Defining Citizenship in Archaic Greece. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198817192.001.0001.

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Citizenship is a major feature of contemporary national and international politics. It is also a legacy of ancient Greece. The concept of membership of a community appeared in Greece some three millennia ago as a participation in the social and political life of small-scale communities, but only towards the end of the fourth century BC did Aristotle offer the first explicit statement about it. Though long accepted, the Aristotelian definition remains deeply rooted in the philosophical and political thought of the classical period, but it probably fails to account accurately for the previous centuries or the dynamics of the emergent cities. Focusing on archaic Greece, this collective enquiry, bringing together renowned international scholars, aims at exploring new routes to archaic citizenship, exemplifying the living diversity of approaches to archaic Greece and to the Greek city. If the Aristotelian model has long been applied to all Greek cities regardless of chronological issues, historians are now challenging Aristotle’s theoretical definition and are looking for other ways of conceiving citizenship and community, setting the stage for a new image of archaic cities, which are no longer to be considered as primitive or incomplete classical poleis. Driven by this same objective, the essays collected here have not, however, been tailored to endorse any specific view. Each contributor brings his or her own national background and approaches to archaic citizenship through specific fields of enquiry (law, descent, cults, military obligations, associations, civic subdivisions, athletics, commensality, behaviours, etc.), often venturing off the beaten track.
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26

Hegland, Frode, ed. The Future of Text. Future Text Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.48197/fot2020a.

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This book is the first anthology of perspectives on the future of text, one of our most important mediums for thinking and communicating, with a Foreword by the co-inventor of the Internet, Vint. Cerf and a Postscript by the founder of the modern Library of Alexandria, Ismail Serageldin. In a time with astounding developments in computer special effects in movies and the emergence of powerful AI, text has developed little beyond spellcheck and blue links. In this work we look at myriads of perspectives to inspire a rich future of text through contributions from academia, the arts, business and technology. We hope you will be as inspired as we are as to the potential power of text truly unleashed. Contributions by Adam Cheyer • Adam Kampff • Alan Kay • Alessio Antonini • Alex Holcombe • Amaranth Borsuk • Amira Hanafi • Amos Paul Kennedy Jr. • Anastasia Salter • Andy Matuschak & Michael Nielsen • Ann Bessemans & María Pérez Mena • Andries Van Dam • Anne-Laure Le Cunff • Anthon Botha • Azlen Ezla • Barbara Beeton • Belinda Barnet • Ben Shneiderman • Bernard Vatant • Bob Frankston • Bob Horn • Bob Stein • Catherine C. Marshall • Charles Bernstein • Chris Gebhardt • Chris Messina • Christian Bök • Christopher Gutteridge • Claus Atzenbeck • Daniel Russel • Danila Medvedev • Danny Snelson • Daveed Benjamin • Dave King • Dave Winer • David De Roure • David Jablonowski • David Johnson • David Lebow • David M. Durant • David Millard • David Owen Norris • David Price • David Weinberger • Dene Grigar • Denise Schmandt-Besserat • Derek Beaulieu • Doc Searls • Don Norman • Douglas Crockford • Duke Crawford • Ed Leahy • Elaine Treharne • Élika Ortega • Esther Dyson • Esther Wojcicki • Ewan Clayton • Fiona Ross • Fred Benenson & Tyler Shoemaker • Galfromdownunder, aka Lynette Chiang • Garrett Stewart • Gyuri Lajos • Harold Thimbleby • Howard Oakley • Howard Rheingold • Ian Cooke • Iian Neil • Jack Park • Jakob Voß • James Baker • James O’Sullivan • Jamie Blustein • Jane Yellowlees Douglas • Jay David Bolter • Jeremy Helm • Jesse Grosjean • Jessica Rubart • Joe Corneli • Joel Swanson • Johanna Drucker • Johannah Rodgers • John Armstrong • John Cayle • John-Paul Davidson • Joris J. van Zundert • Judy Malloy • Kari Kraus & Matthew Kirschenbaum • Katie Baynes • Keith Houston • Keith Martin • Kenny Hemphill • Ken Perlin • Leigh Nash • Leslie Carr • Lesia Tkacz • Leslie Lamport • Livia Polanyi • Lori Emerson • Luc Beaudoin & Daniel Jomphe • Lynette Chiang • Manuela González • Marc-Antoine Parent • Marc Canter • Mark Anderson • Mark Baker • Mark Bernstein • Martin Kemp • Martin Tiefenthaler • Maryanne Wolf • Matt Mullenweg • Michael Joyce • Mike Zender • Naomi S. Baron • Nasser Hussain • Neil Jefferies • Niels Ole Finnemann • Nick Montfort • Panda Mery • Patrick Lichty • Paul Smart • Peter Cho • Peter Flynn • Peter Jenson & Melissa Morocco • Peter J. Wasilko • Phil Gooch • Pip Willcox • Rafael Nepô • Raine Revere • Richard A. Carter • Richard Price • Richard Saul Wurman • Rollo Carpenter • Sage Jenson & Kit Kuksenok • Shane Gibson • Simon J. Buckingham Shum • Sam Brooker • Sarah Walton • Scott Rettberg • Sofie Beier • Sonja Knecht • Stephan Kreutzer • Stephanie Strickland • Stephen Lekson • Stevan Harnad • Steve Newcomb • Stuart Moulthrop • Ted Nelson • Teodora Petkova • Tiago Forte • Timothy Donaldson • Tim Ingold • Timur Schukin & Irina Antonova • Todd A. Carpenter • Tom Butler-Bowdon • Tom Standage • Tor Nørretranders • Valentina Moressa • Ward Cunningham • Dame Wendy Hall • Zuzana Husárová. Student Competition Winner Niko A. Grupen, and competition runner ups Catherine Brislane, Corrie Kim, Mesut Yilmaz, Elizabeth Train-Brown, Thomas John Moore, Zakaria Aden, Yahye Aden, Ibrahim Yahie, Arushi Jain, Shuby Deshpande, Aishwarya Mudaliar, Finbarr Condon-English, Charlotte Gray, Aditeya Das, Wesley Finck, Jordan Morrison, Duncan Reid, Emma Brodey, Gage Nott, Aditeya Das and Kamil Przespolewski. Edited by Frode Hegland.
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