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1

Backert, Steffen, ed. Molecular Mechanisms of Inflammation: Induction, Resolution and Escape by Helicobacter pylori. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-15138-6.

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2

Lanteigne, Marc. Catch comparison of lobster traps equipped with two types of escape mechanisms. Gulf Fisheries Centre, 1995.

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Goldblatt, Roy. Payment is extracted: Mechanisms of escape into America in immigrant and post-immigrant Jewish American fiction. University of Joensuu, 2002.

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C, Ochoa Augusto, ed. Mechanisms of tumor escape from the immune response. Taylor & Francis, 2003.

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5

Backert, Steffen. Molecular Mechanisms of Inflammation: Induction, Resolution and Escape by Helicobacter pylori. Springer, 2019.

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6

Ochoa, A. Mechanisms of Tumor Escape from the Immune Response (Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapyseries, 1). CRC, 2002.

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7

Luis, Roniger. Escape, Deportation, and Exile. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190693961.003.0002.

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This chapter traces how exile became an institutionalized mechanism of exclusion and underscores the paradoxical connection between citizenship and exclusionary modernity in the region. It stresses how these countries experienced policies of massive deterritorialization of citizens to counteract a widened involvement in public arenas and politics, and that the very drive of modernization generated new social forces, which these political systems were unable to include through democratic institutionalization. It discusses the cases of Paraguay, with its cycles of authoritarian rule and politica
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LaRoche, Cheryl Janifer. Introduction. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038044.003.0001.

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This book explores the free Black communities in Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio and their associations with the Underground Railroad. Focusing on the Black settlements in Rocky Fork and Miller Grove in Illinois, Lick Creek in Indiana, and Poke Patch in Ohio, it considers how the Underground Railroad movement secretly operated in conjunction with free Blacks and their historic Black churches. The book uses vital elements of what it calls the “geography of resistance” to examine the mechanisms of escape from slavery from an alternative perspective. By drawing on geography in combination with archae
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9

Piehler, Timothy F. Coercion and Contagion in Child and Adolescent Peer Relationships. Edited by Thomas J. Dishion and James Snyder. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199324552.013.11.

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Peer relationships during adolescence play a powerful role in youth adjustment. This chapter summarizes research regarding two distinct yet related social processes that have been observed within adolescent peer interactions to be predictive of problem behaviors: coercion and contagion. The mechanisms underlying these two processes are outlined, including positive reinforcement involved in deviancy training (a form of contagion) as well as escape conditioning involved in coercion. The chapter details some of the commonalities between the two processes as seen in adolescence as well as key diff
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10

Barsoum, Rashad S. Schistosomiasis. Edited by Neil Sheerin. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199592548.003.0181_update_001.

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AbstractSchistosomes are blood flukes that parasitize humans, apes, cattle, and other animals. In these definitive hosts they are bisexual, and lay eggs which are shed to fresh water where they complete an asexual cycle in different snails, ending in the release of cercariae which infect the definitive hosts to complete the life cycle.Seven of over 100 species of schistosomes are human pathogens, causing disease in different organs depending on the parasite species. Racial and genetic factors are involved in susceptibility, severity, and sequelae of infection.Morbidity is induced by the host’s
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Ohnuma, Reiko. Catching Sight of the Buddha. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190637545.003.0002.

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This chapter looks at one mechanism through which animals can dramatically improve their karmic situations, in spite of their low status and abilities. In some stories, an animal physically sees the Buddha, spontaneously gives rise to prasāda (faith), dies shortly thereafter, and is reborn in one of the lower heavens that populate the Buddhist cosmos. On the one hand, the mechanism of prasāda provides a loophole that bypasses the animal’s lack of moral agency and allows it to escape from its animal rebirth. On the other hand, the narratives that illustrate this mechanism show a strong concern
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12

Deakin, Simon, Angus Johnston, and Basil Markesinis. 16. The Rule in Rylands v. Fletcher. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780199591985.003.0016.

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This chapter examines the rule in Rylands v. Fletcher, that anyone who in the course of ‘non-natural’ use of his land ‘accumulates’ thereon for his own purposes anything likely to do mischief if it escapes is answerable for all direct damage thereby caused. The discussions cover the requirements of liability; controlling mechanisms in Rylands v. Fletcher; what and whose interests are protected by the rule; Rylands v. Fletcher and nuisance; and Rylands v. Fletcher and the future of strict liability in general.
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13

Kenney, Padraic. “You Have the Consolation of Being Very Much in the Fight”. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199375745.003.0005.

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Political prisoners leave behind a cause and a movement, and endeavor to represent them and to stay in contact while behind bars. They live in a world beyond the imagining of most of their fellow citizens. Whatever a movement loses when its leaders and enthusiasts go to jail, it faces the difficult challenge of keeping them relevant to the cause. This chapter explores the mechanics, limitations, and opportunities of letter writing, and examines the history of escapes from prison. Prisoner assistance movements in many cases—in particular Polish leftists fighting for independence, Irish Republic
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14

Milbank, Alison. Black Books and Brownies. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198824466.003.0009.

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Scottish fiction about the Reformation is concerned with the mechanics of historical change, which are rendered through a series of enchanted books and people discussed in Chapter 8. In the novel, The Monastery, describing the Dissolution and Reformation, Scott gothicizes the Bible as a magic book and the White Lady as its guardian to dramatize the mysterious nature of religious change, the dependence of the future on a Gothic past, and the need for interpretation. In Old Mortality, Scott’s protagonist escapes the frozen dualities of Covenanter and Claverhouse, revealing historical change itse
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15

Nolan, T. J., T. B. Nutman, and G. A. Schad. Strongyloidosis. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198570028.003.0064.

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Strongyloidosis is an intestinal parasitism caused by the threadworm, Strongyloides stercoralis. The parasite, occurring in dogs, primates and man, is found throughout the moist tropics, as well as in temperate areas where poor sanitation or other factors facilitate the occurrence of faecally transmitted organisms. In some parts of the world, notably Africa and New Guinea, human infections caused by S. fülleborni have been reported. In Africa, the latter is primarily a parasite of primates, but in New Guinea, no animal host is known. S. stercoralis is unique among zoonotic nematodes, in that l
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