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1

Curran, M. "James Noel Curran." BMJ 341, dec06 2 (December 6, 2010): c7031. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.c7031.

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2

Gandy, Oscar H. "Book Review: Media and Democracy by James Curran." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 89, no. 2 (May 15, 2012): 333–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699011431049.

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3

FACHIN, DIEGO AGUILAR, MARCELA MARIA PARADA ZICHINELLI, and BOLÍVAR RAFAEL GARCETE BARRETT. "An illustrated checklist of Stratiomyidae (Diptera: Brachycera) from Paraguay, with three new synonyms and 22 new records of species for the country." Zootaxa 5190, no. 1 (September 27, 2022): 1–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5190.1.1.

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The Stratiomyidae (Diptera) of Paraguay is cataloged and illustrated, and information is given on distributions, name-bearing types, synonyms, and pertinent literature. Previously to this study, the fauna of soldier flies in the country comprised 18 genera and 29 species, which has been raised up to 35 genera and 63 species, of which only nine are assigned to morphospecies level. The list of species is based on the examination of the original descriptions of all nominal species, all other references known to us containing taxonomic and distributional information, and new material examined from various collections. Images of 45 species are herein provided, which include type specimen images of seven valid species, of which three are exclusively found in the country. One subfamily is newly reported from Paraguay: Chrysochlorininae. Fourteen genera are newly reported from Paraguay: Acanthinomyia Hunter, 1900; Archistratiomys Enderlein, 1913; Auloceromyia Lindner, 1969; Chrysochlorina James, 1939; Gowdeyana Curran, 1928; Hoplitimyia James, 1934; Leucoptilum James, 1943; Neoberis Lindner, 1949; Myxosargus Brauer, 1882; Nothomyia Loew, 1869; Panacris Gerstaecker, 1857; Promeranisa Walker, 1854; Psellidotus Rondani, 1863; and Raphiocera Macquart, 1834. Twenty-two species are newly reported from Paraguay: Acanthinomyia elongata (Wiedemann, 1824); Archistratiomys rufipalpis (Wiedemann, 1830); Auloceromyia pedunculata Pimentel & Pujol-Luz, 2000; Chordonota inermis (Wiedemann, 1830); Chrysochlorina albipes James, 1939; Chrysochlorina incompleta (Curran, 1929); Gowdeyana vitrisetosus (Lindner, 1935); Hermetia flavipes Wiedemann, 1830; Hermetia pulchra Wiedemann, 1830; Hermetia teevani Curran, 1934; Leucoptilum plaumanni James, 1943; Merosargus cingulatus Schiner, 1868; Merosargus coxalis Lindner, 1949; Merosargus golbachi James in James & McFadden, 1971; Merosargus nebulifer James in James & McFadden, 1971; Merosargus obscurus (Wiedemann, 1830); Merosargus stigmaticus (Lindner, 1949); Neoberis brasiliana Lindner, 1949; Panacris nigribasis Lindner, 1949; Promeranisa nasuta (Macquart, 1850); Raphiocera armata (Wiedemann, 1830); and Sargus thoracicus Macquart, 1834. Four species are removed from the Paraguayan fauna: Cyphomyia albitarsis (Fabricius, 1805), Euryneura pygmaea (Bellardi, 1862), and Nemotelus niger Bigot, 1879 have no specimens known from Paraguay, so the inclusion of Paraguay in their distribution is a typing error; and Nemotelus eburneopictus James (1974) has its type locality corrected to Argentina. The examination of the material allows the proposition of three specific synonyms: Cyphomyia imitans Curran, 1925 syn. nov. of C. gracilicornis Gerstaecker, 1857, Panacris breviseta Lindner, 1964 syn. nov. of P. nigribasis Lindner, 1949, and Dicranophora brevifurca James, 1943 syn. nov. of Dicamptocrana jorgenseni Frey, 1934 (this species is newly recorded to Brazil, state of São Paulo), after removing D. brevifurca out of synonymy with Dicranophora bispinosa (Wiedemann, 1830). Additionally, a female lectotype is designated for Rhingiopsis enderleini Lindner, 1928.
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4

Dicenzo, Maria. "Feminist media and history: a response to James Curran." Media History 10, no. 1 (April 2004): 43–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13688800410001673734.

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5

Healton, Cheryl, and James W. Curran. "The Tobacco Technical Assistance Consortium." Health Promotion Practice 12, no. 6_suppl_2 (November 2011): 112S—113S. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1524839911419499.

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Cheryl Healton, DrPH, President and CEO of Legacy, and James W. Curran, MD, MPH, Dean, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, look back at their collaboration in the Tobacco Technical Assistance Consortium and the significant contributions being made to change social norms through training and technical assistance.
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6

Adams, Iain, and Sébastien Laffage-Cosnier. "James Curran : l’athlète écossais aérien et la légende américaine du coaching." Staps 115, no. 1 (2017): 73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/sta.115.0073.

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7

Sutherland, Kerry. "Posthumous Publications: James Brand Pinker and the Literary Estate of Henry James." Henry James Review 39, no. 3 (2018): 207–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hjr.2018.0020.

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8

Henderson, Mae G. "James Baldwin: Expatriation, Homosexual Panic, and Man's Estate." Callaloo 23, no. 1 (2000): 313–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cal.2000.0032.

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9

Nunez, Enio, and Márcia S. Couri. "Revision of neotropical genea rondani (Diptera, Tachinidae, Tachininae, Leskiini)." Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia 51, no. 31 (2011): 481–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0031-10492011003100001.

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The Neotropical species of Genea Rondani, 1850 (Diptera, Tachinidae, Tachininae, Leskiini) are revised by the examination of type-material of almost all species and a large material deposited in many scientific collections. G. australis (Townsend), G. brasiliensis (Townsend), G. gracilis James, G. jaynesi (Aldrich), G. major (Townsend), G. pellucens (Curran), G. tenuirostris (James), G. trifaria (Wiedemann) were keyed and redescribed with the first descriptions of male terminalia. G. longipalpis (Wulp) was not included in this study as no material was examined and the available data are restricted to the original description. G. glossata (Townsend) is proposed as a junior synonym of G. trifaria. G. paulistana sp. nov. from São Paulo is proposed as a new species.
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10

Drescher, Seymour. "On James Farr's ` “So Vile and Miserable an Estate' ”." Political Theory 16, no. 3 (August 1988): 502–3. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0090591788016003008.

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11

Neumayer, Christina. "James Curran, Natalie Fenton, & Des Freedman: Misunderstanding the Internet. London, New York: Routledge. 2012." MedieKultur: Journal of media and communication research 29, no. 55 (December 21, 2013): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/mediekultur.v29i55.9751.

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12

Cornejo Portugal, Inés. "LA COMUNICACIÓN DESDE EL ACTO INTENCIONAL UNA MIRADA PARA ESTUDIAR LA CIUDAD." Andamios, Revista de Investigación Social, no. 1 (September 9, 2006): 109. http://dx.doi.org/10.29092/uacm.v0i1.49.

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El presente trabajo examina algunas de las principales con- tribuciones del debate académico representado por los profesores de comunicación, James Curran y David Morley, sobre la recepción de la audiencia y la producción de sentido, en los estudios de comunicación y cultura. El objetivo, con base en esta revisión, es marcar algunos pasos teóricos que permitan abordar determinados fragmentos citadinos desde la experien- cia del sujeto. En este sentido, la autora aboga por el continuo intercambio y colaboración entre las ciencias sociales, en cuanto al uso de conceptos, categorías, teorías, etcétera y por un enfoque hermenéutico-interpretativo que ilumine el fragmento de realidad que se intenta investigar.
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13

Spoo, Robert. "Archival Foreclosure: A Scholar's Lawsuit Against the Estate of James Joyce." American Archivist 71, no. 2 (September 2008): 544–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.17723/aarc.71.2.gq50902754j2388w.

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14

FRANKLIN, WAYNE, and James Cooper. "Six Early James Fenimore Cooper Letters." Resources for American Literary Study 37 (January 1, 2014): 29–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/26367686.

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Abstract Very few letters written by James Fenimore Cooper survive from the period prior to the start of his literary career in 1820. The present article provides the annotated texts of six newly discovered letters dating from between 1817 and 1820, all of which concern the financial crisis that then was confronting the estate of Cooper's father. Five of the letters were addressed by James Cooper to a young lawyer, Thomas Bridgen, who created that crisis by his efforts to recover debts the Coopers owed his own family. Because Bridgen and young Cooper apparently had been acquainted as schoolboys early in the 1800s, their later dealings over financial matters were strongly colored by personal feelings. Bridgen's eventual betrayal of Cooper gave the story a peculiarly poignant tone that is audible, I argue, in several loosely autobiographical novels that Cooper published in the 1840s.
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15

FRANKLIN, WAYNE, and James Cooper. "Six Early James Fenimore Cooper Letters." Resources for American Literary Study 37 (January 1, 2014): 29–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/resoamerlitestud.37.2014.0029.

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Abstract Very few letters written by James Fenimore Cooper survive from the period prior to the start of his literary career in 1820. The present article provides the annotated texts of six newly discovered letters dating from between 1817 and 1820, all of which concern the financial crisis that then was confronting the estate of Cooper's father. Five of the letters were addressed by James Cooper to a young lawyer, Thomas Bridgen, who created that crisis by his efforts to recover debts the Coopers owed his own family. Because Bridgen and young Cooper apparently had been acquainted as schoolboys early in the 1800s, their later dealings over financial matters were strongly colored by personal feelings. Bridgen's eventual betrayal of Cooper gave the story a peculiarly poignant tone that is audible, I argue, in several loosely autobiographical novels that Cooper published in the 1840s.
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16

Mizushima, Akane, and Hiroyuki Tamada. "Study on postwar expansion planning of James-yama estate at Shioya, Kobe." Proceedings of The City Planning Institute of Japan, Kansai Branch 16 (2018): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.11361/cpijkansai.16.0_1.

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17

Farnsworth, Stephen J. "Startt, James D. Woodrow Wilson, the Great War, and the Fourth Estate." Congress & the Presidency 45, no. 3 (September 2, 2018): 343–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07343469.2018.1507547.

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18

FINN, MARGOT C. "Colonial Gifts: Family Politics and the Exchange of Goods in British India, c. 1780–1820." Modern Asian Studies 40, no. 1 (February 2006): 203–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x06001739.

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In August 1851, James Russell travelled to London from his estate on the banks of the Tweed. As a young man decades earlier, Russell had served as a cavalry officer in India, and he was anxious to exploit this visit to the metropolis to renew his acquaintance with the men who had formed his social circle years ago in Hyderabad. Having arrived in London, James Russell called on Charles Russell (no relation) at the latter's residence in Argyle Street. Chairman of the Great Western Railway, Charles Russell too had passed his youth in India, serving as a lieutenant in the Company's army and as an assistant to the diplomatic Resident at Hyderabad—his older brother, Henry. In a letter to his brother—now Sir Henry and (thanks to his Indian fortune) the proprietor of an extensive landed estate in Berkshire—Charles described James Russell as ‘still a great oddity, almost mad I think’, but conceded that ‘all his feelings are those of [a] gentleman and his pursuits have always been intellectual’. To substantiate this assessment of his old friend's sensibilities, he instanced James Russell's retention and use of a dictionary given to him by Charles in Hyderabad. ‘He gratified me by telling me that he still retained “a handsome Greek Lexicon” which I gave him, when he resumed the study of Greek’, Charles informed his brother Henry. ‘On his way home [from India] he followed the retreat of the ten thousand with Xenophon in his hand; and he has since worked hard, he tells me, at the Greek historians, poets & dramatists’. Having reminisced in London with Charles, James Russell journeyed to Berkshire to visit Sir Henry Russell, who read excerpts from Charles's letter aloud to his guest. ‘I always liked him’, Sir Henry wrote to his brother upon James Russell's departure, ‘and when I read to him your reference to early days, his eyes filled with tears’.
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19

Nelson, Edwin G. "Book Reviews : James Curran and Robert A. Blackburn (eds.), Paths of Enterprise: The Future of Small Business, London: Routledge, 1991." Journal of Entrepreneurship 2, no. 1 (March 1993): 117–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/097135579300200114.

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20

Abate, Corinne S. ""MEN LEARN AT LAST TO KNOW THEIR GOOD ESTATE" : DOROTHEA'S TRIUMPH IN JAMES IV." Explorations in Renaissance Culture 29, no. 2 (December 2, 2003): 253–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/23526963-90000268.

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21

CLEAL, CHRISTOPHER J. "THE PALEOBOTANICAL CONTRIBUTIONS OF CHARLES JAMES FOX BUNBURY (1809–1886)." Earth Sciences History 37, no. 1 (January 1, 2018): 88–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/1944-6178-37.1.88.

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ABSTRACT During the 1850s, Charles James Fox Bunbury, 8th Baronet Bunbury, was Britain's leading paleobotanist, who published a series of papers on fossil floras of Carboniferous, Jurassic and Neogene age. He also planned a major synoptic review of paleobotany, to rival Brongniart's Histoire de végétaux fossiles. He was financially comfortably-off, and well-connected with the scientific community in the London of his day. However, he failed to fulfil his ambitions in this field due to a combination of a lack of experience, and that on the death of his father he had to take over the running of the family estate. Today he is mainly remembered as the author of a number of names of still widely used fossil-taxa. Nevertheless, he fulfilled an important role in maintaining paleobotanical interest in Britain during the middle part of the nineteenth century.
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22

Beadle, Richard, and Anthony Smith. "A Carol by James Ryman in the Holkham Archives." Review of English Studies 71, no. 302 (April 17, 2020): 850–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/res/hgaa030.

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Abstract A late fifteenth-century manorial notebook in the archives of the Earl of Leicester at Holkham Hall, Norfolk, has been found to contain a hitherto unnoticed and apparently unique late medieval English carol, based on the Latin hymn Te deum. Comparison with other examples of the genre suggests that its author is more likely than not to have been James Ryman, a Franciscan friar of Canterbury, and a prolific writer of carols. His oeuvre includes a number of compositions deriving from the Te deum, to some of which the Holkham text bears significant similarities. The owner of the notebook is identified as William Wayte Jr of Tittleshall, Norfolk, who is known to have served as an estate administrator and agent for the well-known Norfolk lawyer Sir Roger Townshend of Raynham (c.1430–1493). Certain provisions in Wayte’s will suggest that his interest in the carol may have been connected to a devotion on his part to the Trinity, which in late medieval art was often expressed through imagery drawn from the Te deum.
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23

Pitimson, Natalie. "Book Review: James Curran, Ivor Gaber and Julian Petley, Culture Wars — The Media and the British Left. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005." Media, Culture & Society 29, no. 3 (May 2007): 518–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/01634437070290031002.

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24

Matlay, Harry. "Julian North, Robert Blackburn and James Curran, The Quality Business: Quality Issues and Smaller Firms, London: Routledge, 1998, £55.00, xii+234 pp." Work, Employment and Society 13, no. 1 (March 1999): 159–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0950017099240123.

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25

Gardner, John. "James Grande,William Cobbett, the Press and Rural England; Radicalism and the Fourth Estate, 1792–1835." Notes and Queries 63, no. 2 (April 11, 2016): 311–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/notesj/gjw072.

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26

Harding, Anthony John. "William Cobbett, the Press and Rural England: Radicalism and the Fourth Estate, 1792-1835. James Grande." Wordsworth Circle 46, no. 4 (September 2015): 215–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/twc24888072.

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27

Bugg, John. "James Grande, William Cobbett, the Press and Rural England: Radicalism and the Fourth Estate, 1792–1835." Romanticism 25, no. 1 (April 2019): 103–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/rom.2019.0405.

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28

Robertson, Terry Dwain, Merlin D. Burt, and Jim Ford. "The Center for Adventist Research at Andrews University." Theological Librarianship 8, no. 1 (January 16, 2015): 24–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.31046/tl.v8i1.368.

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The Center for Adventist Research (CAR), an Andrews University and General Conference of Seventh-day Adventist organization, seeks to promote an understanding and appreciation of the heritage and mission of the Seventh-day Adventist Church (SDA). It combines the resources of the James White Library’s Adventist Heritage Center and the Ellen G. White Estate Branch Office to provide the most extensive collection of Adventist related resources in the world, both physically and digitally. An introduction to the background, collections, and activities of CAR is presented. Of particular interest are the digitization projects.
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29

Corner, John. "Book reviews : Tamar Liebes and James Curran (eds), Media, Ritual and Identity. London: Routledge, 1998. 265 pp. ISBN 0-415-15992-X (pbk) £14.99." European Journal of Cultural Studies 2, no. 3 (September 1999): 416–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/136754949900200309.

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30

Worzala, Elaine, and David Wyman. "The human factor: the “unknown unknowns” in the real estate development process." Journal of Property Investment & Finance 40, no. 3 (December 20, 2021): 300–305. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jpif-11-2021-0099.

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PurposeVolatility, Uncertainty, Complexity and Ambiguity (VUCA) are terms the military have coined to describe the environment they often operate in. This paper examines how this decision-making framework can be used to better inform real estate investment and development. In celebration of this journal's 40th anniversary, we also explore how VUCA can be related to and expand on the teachings of Dr. James A. Graaskamp who published his seminal piece on the Fundamentals of Real Estate Development (1981) the same year. In that piece, he highlights the importance of paying attention to the human factor, the consumers of real estate.Design/methodology/approachThis is a thought piece on an alternative decision-making framework that can help capture the dynamic environment that commercial real estate investors and developers are currently working in. VUCA captures the difficulty of predicting the future in a world of accelerating, unpredictable change. This is particularly important in today's rapidly changing world caused not only by the current COVID-19 pandemic but also the exponential growth of the proptech industry as well as the increasing risks and opportunities associated with climate change that continues to impact the built environment.FindingsThis is not a traditional research project with empirical findings. We are presenting an alternative framework for thinking about making investment decisions in these current volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous times today and in the future. In addition, the importance of multidisciplinary training and the human factor are stressed.Research limitations/implicationsThere are no limitations to this research as it is the ideas of the authors. Implications are to help real estate investors, developers and educators better understand the environment that they are working in.Practical implicationsVUCA captures better the dynamic nature of real estate investments compared to traditional analysis. It helps one better analyze the risks and returns but also to acknowledge that there is a lot you cannot predict and there are many exogenous variables that can, at times, completely change the rules of the game. Flexibility and adaptability are essential tools for working in a VUCA environment. In addition, the human factor plays an increasingly important role and real estate investors and developers that clearly understand this and focus on the consumer will likely be more successful.Originality/valueWe believe that this is the first time that VUCA has been used in the real estate academic literature.
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31

Paroissien, David. "William Cobbett, the Press and Rural England: Radicalism and the Fourth Estate, 1792–1835 by James Grande." Dickens Quarterly 32, no. 2 (2015): 165–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dqt.2015.0012.

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32

Winch, Julie. "“A Person of Good Character and Considerable Property”: James Forten and the Issue of Race in Philadelphia's Antebellum Business Community." Business History Review 75, no. 2 (2001): 261–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3116646.

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James Forten (1766–1842) was in business in Philadelphia for almost half a century. A sailmaker by trade, he invested the profits from his sail-loft in real estate, bank stock, and shares in various ventures, including railroads. He was also a money-lender. Throughout his long career in business, Forten struggled to be accepted as an astute and successful member of the business community who happened to be a man of color. As this essay demonstrates, that was how some of his white peers saw him. To others, however, he was a man of color first and a man of business second.
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Long, John S., Richard J. Preston, Katrina Srigley, and Lorraine Sutherland. "Sharing the Land at Moose Factory in 1763." Ontario History 109, no. 2 (October 6, 2017): 238–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1041286ar.

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In the 18th century the Indigenous peoples of the James Bay region shared land near the coast, a few resources, and furs from a vast hinterland with European newcomers. The Royal Proclamation of 1763 excluded Rupert’s Land – an appropriate decision for it was quite distinct from lands in the south where settlers were acquiring Indigenous land on the fee simple real estate model. What were the James Bay indigenous people’s conditions for sharing their land? It was arguably their principles, and not King George’s edict, that characterized the year 1763 at Moose Fort (Moose Factory). This paper draws on Hudson’s Bay Co. records to examine what was being shared with the newcomers in this northern region. Unlike in the southern regions, the newcomers had no intention of displacing Indigenous peoples. A modest sharing of land and a generous sharing of food and fur resources, on terms congenial to its first inhabitants, characterizes 1763 in this northern region.
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Morrison, Renee. "Misunderstanding the internet, by James Curran, Natalie Fenton and Des Freedman, London, Routledge, 2016, ix + 223 pp., $39.95 (paperback), ISBN 978-1-138-90622-8." Pedagogies: An International Journal 11, no. 3 (July 2, 2016): 270–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1554480x.2016.1209759.

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HAUSER, MARTIN, NORMAN E. WOODLEY, and DIEGO A. FACHIN. "Taxonomic changes in African Stratiomyidae (Diptera)." Zootaxa 4263, no. 1 (May 8, 2017): 72. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4263.1.3.

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Thirteen new generic synonyms, nineteen species synonyms and forty-eight new combinations of African Stratiomyidae are proposed (senior synonym in parentheses):Arthronemina Lindner in James, 1980 syn. nov. (=Argyrobrithes Grünberg, 1915), Arthronema Lindner, 1966b syn. nov. (=Argyrobrithes Grünberg, 1915), Brachyphleps Lindner, 1965 syn. nov. (=Psapharomys Grünberg, 1915), Dinosargus Lindner, 1968 syn. nov. (=Gongrosargus Lindner, 1959), Dolichodema Kertész, 1916 syn. nov. (=Thorasena Macquart, 1838), Gobertina Bigot, 1879a syn. nov. (=Sternobrithes Loew, 1857), Himantochaeta Lindner, 1939 syn. nov. (=Nyplatys Séguy, 1938), Hypoxycera Lindner 1966a syn. nov. (=Hypoceromys Lindner, 1935), Leucacron Lindner, 1966b syn. nov. (=Ptilinoxus Lindner, 1966b), Lonchobrithes Lindner, 1968 syn. nov. (=Argyrobrithes Grünberg, 1915), Meristomeringella Lindner 1965 syn. nov. (=Hypoceromys Lindner, 1935), Physometopon Lindner, 1966b syn. nov. (=Cardopomyia Kertész, 1916), Psapharomydops Lindner, 1966a syn. nov. (=Steleoceromys Grünberg, 1915), Adoxomyia grisea (Séguy, 1931) syn. nov. (=Adoxomyia argenteofasciata (Bezzi, 1906)), Argyrobrithes argenteus Grünberg, 1915 syn. nov. (=Argyrobrithes fuscicornis (Bezzi, 1914)), Argyrobrithes crinitus Lindner, 1972 syn. nov. (=Argyrobrithes zernyi Lindner, 1943), Brachyphleps tristis Lindner, 1965 syn. nov. (=Psapharomys salebrosa Grünberg, 1915), Chrysochroma laetum Lindner, 1966b syn. nov. (=Ptectisargus abditus (Lindner, 1936), Dolichodema africana Kertész, 1916 syn. nov. (=Thorasena pectoralis (Wiedemann, 1838)), Gongrosargus distinguendus Lindner, 1966c syn. nov. (=Gongrosargus glaucus (Bigot, 1859)), Gongrosargus exclamationis Lindner, 1968 syn. nov. (=Gongrosargus pallidus (Macquart, 1838)), Gongrosargus univittatus Lindner, 1966b syn. nov. (=Gongrosargus pallidus (Macquart, 1838)), Hypoxycera simplex Lindner, 1966a syn. nov. (=Hypoceromys jamesi (Lindner, 1965)), Lonchobrithes modestus Lindner, 1968 syn. nov. (=Argyrobrithes curtilamellatum (Lindner, 1966)), Microptecticus clarus Lindner, 1968 syn. nov. (=Microptecticus ambiguus Lindner, 1966b), Neopachygaster umbrifera Lindner, 1966a syn. nov. (=Neopachygaster stigma Lindner, 1938), Odontomyia impressa Curran, 1928 syn. nov. (=Afrodontomyia gigas (Brunetti, 1926)), Odontomyia protrudens Curran, 1928 syn. nov. (=Afrodontomyia erecta (Brunetti, 1926)), Physometopon minor Lindner, 1968 syn. nov. (=Cardopomyia robusta Kertész, 1916), Platyna denudata Grünberg, 1915 syn. nov. (=Platyna hastata (Fabricius, 1805)), Ptectisargus lucidus Lindner, 1968 syn. nov. (=Ptectisargus abditus (Lindner, 1936)); Afrodontomyia erecta (Brunetti, 1926) comb. nov. (from Odontomyia), Afrodontomyia flammiventris (Brunetti, 1926) comb. nov. (from Odontomyia), Afrodontomyia rufiventris (Curran, 1928) comb. nov. (from Stratiomys), Argyrobrithes curtilamellatum (Lindner, 1966b) comb. nov. (from Arthronemina), Argyrobrithes fuscicornis (Bezzi, 1914) comb. nov. (from Sternobrithes), Cardopomyia parvicornis (Lindner, 1959) comb. nov. (from Pseudoxymyia Lindner, 1958), Cardopomyia vesicularis (Lindner, 1966b) comb. nov. (from Physometopon), Cephalochrysa bigoti (Lindner, 1968) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Cephalochrysa flavum (Lindner, 1968) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Cephalochrysa fortunatum (Lindner, 1966b) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Cephalochrysa lapidis (Lindner, 1966b) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Cephalochrysa latum (Lindner, 1966b) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Cephalochrysa lucens (Lindner, 1968) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Cephalochrysa matilei (Lindner, 1979) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Cephalochrysa triste (Lindner, 1966b) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Cephalochrysa turbidum (Lindner, 1965) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Cephalochrysa vadoni (Lindner, 1966b) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Gongrosargus flavipennis (Macquart, 1838) comb. nov. (from Sargus), Gongrosargus lateritius (Lindner, 1968) comb. nov. (from Dinosargus), Gongrosargus limbatus (Macquart, 1838) comb. nov. (from Sargus), Gongrosargus pallidus (Macquart, 1838) comb. nov. (from Sargus), Hypoceromys nigripes (Lindner, 1938) comb. nov. (from Pachygaster), Hypoceromys jamesi (Lindner, 1965) comb. nov. (from Meristomeringella), Microptecticus magnicornis (Lindner, 1936) comb. nov. (from Ptecticus), Microptecticus nigricoxa (Lindner, 1936) comb. nov. (from Microchrysa), Ptecticus lateritius (Rondani, 1863) comb. nov. (from Sargus), Ptectisargus abditus (Lindner, 1936) comb. nov. (from Ptecticus), Ptectisargus brunneus (Lindner, 1936) comb. nov. (from Ptecticus), Ptectisargus cingulatum (Lindner, 1968) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Ptectisargus flavifrons (Lindner, 1968) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Ptectisargus flavomarginatus (Loew, 1857) comb. nov. (from Chrysonotus), Ptectisargus gracilipes (Lindner, 1936) comb. nov. (from Ptecticus), Ptectisargus keiseri (Lindner, 1966b) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Ptectisargus longestylum (Lindner, 1966b) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Ptectisargus punctum (Lindner, 1968) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Ptectisargus ranohira (Woodley, 2001) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Ptectisargus unicolor (Lindner, 1968) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Ptilinoxus interruptum (Lindner, 1966b) comb. nov. (from Leucacron), Sargus congoense (Lindner, 1965) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Sargus flavipes (Lindner, 1966a) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Sargus luctuosus (Lindner, 1938) comb. nov. (from Paraptecticus), Sargus opulentum (Grünberg, 1915) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Sargus pallidiventre (Brunetti, 1926) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Sargus ptecticoideum (Lindner, 1966a) comb. nov. (from Chrysochroma), Steleceromys procera (Lindner, 1966a) comb. nov. (from Psapharomydops), Sternobrithes mercurialis (Lindner, 1938) comb. nov. (from Gobertina), Sternobrithes picticornis (Bigot, 1879b). comb. nov. (from Gobertina), Thorasena pectoralis (Wiedemann, 1824) comb. nov. (from Hermetia), Thorasena fenestrata (James, 1949) comb. nov. (from Dolichodema). One genus was resurrected out of synonymy (Thorasena Macquart, 1838 stat. rev.) and one genus removed from the African fauna (Cyphomyia Wiedemann, 1819).
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36

Singh, Frances B. "Three Scottish Cousins in East India Company Service, 1792–1804." Journal of Scottish Historical Studies 38, no. 1 (May 2018): 160–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/jshs.2018.0239.

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This article studies three first cousins, James Thomas Grant, George Cumming, and Henry Mackenzie, who arrived in India in 1792, 1793, and 1797, respectively. Born in the 1770s, the same decade as Scott, none of the cousins reached their thirtieth birthday, and though none of them died in battle, Cumming left behind huge debts, Mackenzie owed money to a Calcutta lender, and Grant chose not to return to Scotland, where, in due course, he would have succeeded to a considerable estate and become the head of his clan. Their history is used to examine Walter Scott's idea of India as a corn chest, a fabulously rich society whose wealth could be squeezed
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37

Opitz, Donald L. "“Behind folding shutters in Whittingehame House”: Alice Blanche Balfour (1850–1936) and amateur natural history." Archives of Natural History 31, no. 2 (October 2004): 330–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2004.31.2.330.

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During the rise of professional biology in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, individual naturalists continued to develop private collections by modest means and often within their own homes. Despite the increasing opportunities for women to participate in the sciences, the number of women entomologists remained relatively few. The amateur entomological career of Alice Blanche Balfour, the younger sister of Arthur James Balfour, first Earl of Balfour, reveals how a confluence of personal and social factors shaped a gentlewoman's capacity to pursue her interests in natural history. This paper revises earlier images of Alice Balfour by presenting her as an accomplished amateur naturalist who balanced her avocation with the responsibility of managing the daily domestic affairs of estate.
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38

Duraiswamy, Jaikumar, Gordon Freeman, and George Coukos. "Modulation of immunostimulatory and inhibitory signals augments T cell function by distinct mechanisms in the ovarian cancer microenvironment (162.15)." Journal of Immunology 188, no. 1_Supplement (May 1, 2012): 162.15. http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.188.supp.162.15.

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Abstract Infiltrating T cells (TILs) with anti-tumor potential exist in patients with ovarian cancer. However, tumor microenvironment mediates induction of immunosuppressive molecules, such as PD-1 and CTLA4, on ovarian TILs. We assessed the interaction between PD1:PD-L1, PD-1:PD-L2, PD-L1:B7.1 and CTLA4:B7.1 pathways and their relative contribution in modulating TIL function. First, we evaluated the functional impact of PD-1 and CTLA4 on antigen-specific TILs in vitro from ovarian cancer patients. For in vivo studies, we used two mouse models: i) ID-8, a syngeneic model of ovarian cancer, and ii) a humanized model (HLA-A2+ NSG mice reconstituted with human CD34+ cells). PD-1 and CTLA4 blockade in ID-8 model resulted in partial tumor rejection. However, combining one or more of the following immune modulators, i) whole tumor vaccines expressing either GM-CSF or Flt3-ligand, ii) CpG-ODN, a TLR9 agonist, iii) anti-4-1BB agonistic antibody or iv) murine IL-15, added value to inhibitory blockade. In case of humanized mice, immune checkpoint blockade alone caused regression of human ovarian tumors. Our study shows that combining immunomodulators reject ovarian tumors by i) elevating T cell infiltration into tumors, ii) decreasing intratumoral regulatory T cell population and iii) increasing inflammatory cytokine production. We thank Drs. James P. Allison and Michael Curran (GM-CSF and Flt3L plasmids), Dr. Rafi Ahmed and Dr. John D. Altman (tetramers).
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39

Hill, Martha. "George Washington's Mount Vernon Estate and Garden Mount Vernon Ladies' Association James Reese Dennis Pogue Ann Bay Mary V. Thompson." Public Historian 25, no. 2 (April 2003): 101–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3379056.

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40

Moffat, Zemirah. "Book Reviews: James Curran and Jean Seaton. Power Without Responsibility: Press, Broadcasting and the Internet in Britain (seventh edition). London: Routledge, 2010. 448 pp. ISBN 13: 978 0415466998." Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 17, no. 3 (August 2011): 343–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1354856511406069.

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41

Greene-Hayes, Ahmad. "Black Church Rumor." GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 28, no. 1 (January 1, 2022): 115–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10642684-9449121.

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Abstract In 1992, Jet published “James Cleveland Infected L.A. Youth with HIV, $9 Mil. Lawsuit Claims,” which detailed how the Chicago-born gospel musician had not only allegedly sexually abused his foster son, Christopher B. Harris, but had also “[given] him the AIDS virus.” This article takes this incident of rumor or accusation as a critical opportunity to think about the archival reality of Black queer sexuality, on one hand, and sexual violence in Black gospel music history on the other. Using the legal documents from Christopher B. Harris v. Irwin Goldring as Special Administrator of the Estate of James Cleveland and commentary from Cleveland's contemporaries, it exhumes Cleveland from dusty church closets for consideration in the history of HIV and AIDS in African American Protestant church and gospel communities and in Black queer studies, ethnomusicology, and gender and sexuality studies. Further, it theorizes “Black church rumor” as a lens for Black queer religious studies and argues that Cleveland's perceived queer sexuality distracted from Harris's allegations of sexual abuse. Thus, it situates Cleveland—the person, the preacher, and the gospel legend—in the literature on “down low” sexuality and explicates the implications of Cleveland's legacy and role in Black gospel music production.
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42

Curran, James, and John Stanworth. "Education and Training for Enterprise: Problems of Classification, Evaluation, Policy and Research." International Small Business Journal: Researching Entrepreneurship 7, no. 2 (January 1989): 11–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/026624268900700201.

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JAMES CURRAN is Midland Bank Professor of Small Business Studies and head of the Small Business Research Unit at Kingston Polytechnic, England, and John Stanworth is Professor and director of the Future of Work Research Group at the London Management Centre, Polytechnic of Central London, England. Small business education and training has grown rapidly in importance as 'enterprise' has assumed a key role in the main political initiatives towards economic restructuring in Britain and elsewhere. This development has, however, been essentially ad hoc and there is now a need to identify more clearly the major forms of enterprise and training education, their target populations and their resource effectiveness. 'Entrepreneurial education' or 'training for entrepreneurship' are widely used phrases, often intended to take on a generic meaning. However, most small business educational activities have little to do with promoting 'entrepreneurship' in any strict sense. To clarify the analysis and disaggregate the main forms of education and training activities linked to the small business, the authors have distinguished four distinct types-entrepreneurial education for small business and self-employment, continuing small business education, and small business awareness education. They conclude that in research terms there is a considerable need for a great deal of further study in all four dimensions for each of the forms of education. In policy terms the most resource effective form currently is probably education for small business ownership but they say that the greatest need is probably for more continuing small business education although this may be expensive in resource terms.
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43

Pimlott, Herbert. "Book review: James Curran, Ivor Gaber and Julian Petley Culture Wars: The Media and the British Left Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005. 240 pp. ISBN 0 748 61917 8." Journalism: Theory, Practice & Criticism 9, no. 3 (June 2008): 355–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/14648849080090030602.

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44

Bowen, James P. "A Landscape of Improvement: The Impact of James Loch, Chief Agent to the Marquis of Stafford, on the Lilleshall Estate, Shropshire." Midland History 35, no. 2 (September 2010): 191–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/004772910x12760023513974.

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45

Shelukhin, V. "CIVIL ACTIVITY AND KINSHIP: MICRO-TO-MACRO TRANSITIONS IN DEVELOPMENT OF THE UKRAINIAN NATIONAL MOVEMENT IN THE 1860-1890S." Bulletin of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. Sociology 8 (2017): 80–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/2413-7979/8.13.

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The author uses James S. Coleman' conception of micro-to-macro transitions as a theoretical tool for reconstruction kinship network as well as network of civil activities among members of "Stara Hromada" (The Old Community). It is impossible to reconstruct social foundations of the Ukrainian national movement according to Ernest Gellner' conception. E. Gellner in his classical book "Nations and Nationalism" explains social origins of modern nationalism as a reaction to industrialization. According to E. Gellner, bourgeois class had the main influence on the process of nation formation during the industrialization. That trend was not possible in Ukrainian social, economic, and political context of XIX century. The main role in Ukrainian nationhood and nation formation played traditional elite (nobles). The Old Community after 1869 was network organization of that social group. The author uses network analysis for empirical evidence. Communication and cooperation between different members of the Old Community were based on principles of estate integration. Marriage was especially significant social practice in the process of community integration. Civil activity with family background was a reaction to contradictory conflation of different social roles. That activity provoked new type of social identity – national identity among representatives of traditional elites. James S. Coleman' conception provides heuristic understanding of aggregation individual actions and attitudes into desirable behaviors at the collective level.
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46

Layton, Susan. "The Divisive Modern Russian Tourist Abroad: Representations of Self and Other in the Early Reform Era." Slavic Review 68, no. 4 (2009): 848–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0037677900024554.

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Taking methodological cues primarily from James Buzard's bookThe Beaten Track(1993), Susan Layton examines the socially divisive construction of the Russian tourist abroad in mainstream writings published in Russia between 1856 and 1863. It was during this early reform era that Russians first began publicly worrying aboutturistyandturizmas components of their national culture. The prism of divisiveness complicates a scholarly tendency to interpret the production of imperial Russian travel narratives as a nation-building enterprise from the eighteenth century onward. Although nationalist sentiments persisted in early reform public discourse concerning leisure travel, writers also fissured the nation along lines of social estate, gender, education, cultural competence, and moral values. Layton's comparative approach establishes parallels between snobbish nineteenth-century English and Russian views of ill-prepared “crowds” of tourists abroad but underlines Russian convictions that all Russian travel to western Europe should pursue educational and moral benefits.
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Bryant, Sarah K., and Martha L. Carter. "Comment on James R. Barth and R. Dan Brumbaugh, Jr.’s “Turmoil among depository institutions: Implications for the U.S. real estate market”." Housing Policy Debate 3, no. 4 (January 1992): 927–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10511482.1992.9521115.

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48

Brueggeman, William B. "Comment on James R. Barth and R. Dan Brumbaugh, Jr.’s “Turmoil among depository institutions: Implications for the U.S. real estate market”." Housing Policy Debate 3, no. 4 (January 1992): 937–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10511482.1992.9521116.

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49

Esposito, Salvatore. "From England to Italy: The Intriguing Story of Poli’s Engine for the King of Naples." Physics in Perspective 23, no. 2-3 (October 2021): 104–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00016-021-00277-1.

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AbstractAn interesting, yet unknown episode concerning the effective permeation of the scientific revolution in eighteenth-century Kingdom of Naples (and Italy more generally) is recounted. The intriguing story of James Watt’s steam engine, prepared to serve a Royal Estate of the King of Naples in Carditello, reveals a fascinating piece of the history of that kingdom, as well as an unknown step in the history of Watt’s steam engine, whose final entrepreneurial success for the celebrated Boulton & Watt company was a direct consequence. This story reveals that, contrary to what claimed in the literature, the first introduction in Italy of the most important technological innovation of the eighteenth century did not take place with the construction of the first steamship of the Mediterranean Sea, but rather thirty years before that, thanks to the incomparable work of Giuseppe Saverio Poli, a leading scholar and an influential figure in the Kingdom of Naples. The tragic epilogue of Poli’s engine accounts for its vanishing from historical memory.
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50

Cosacchi, Daniel. "Catholic Theological Ethics Past, Present, and Future: The Trento Conference Edited by James F. Keenan, and: The Social Mission of the US Catholic Church: A Theological Perspective by Charles E. Curran." Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 34, no. 1 (2014): 216–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/sce.2014.0019.

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