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1

Soul among lions: The cougar as peaceful adversary. Boulder: Johnson Books, 1989.

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2

Horwood, Harold Andrew. Among the lions: A lamb in the literary jungle. St. John's, Nfld: Killick Press, 2000.

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3

Life lines: Community, family, and assimilation among Asian Indian immigrants. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.

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Godley, Andrew. Credit rationing among small firm networks in the London and New York garment industries. Reading, England: University of Reading, Dept. of Economics, 1996.

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5

Giddings, Paula. Ida: A sword among lions : Ida B. Wells and the campaign against lynching. New York: Amistad, 2009.

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6

ill, Moran Paul, ed. Liar! Liar! Pants on fire!: Can you spot the truth among the lies? New York: Reader's Digest Association, 2012.

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7

Pantoja, Segundo. Religion and education among Latinos in New York City. Leiden: Brill, 2005.

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8

Tartaglia, Andrea, Roberto Bolici, and Matteo Gambaro, eds. La ricerca tra innovazione, creatività e progetto / Research among Innovation, Creativity and Design. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-6655-160-7.

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In the current socio-cultural scenario, the implementation of the university reform aimed at boosting third-level education calls for meditation within the discipline of Architectural Technology (ICAR 12). This review must address the research topics and academic profiles of PhD courses in the Technological Area, also in terms of fostering actions consistent with European strategic lines for the promotion of a knowledge society. Research, innovation, creativity and design are the keywords of this scenario that PhD students and lecturers must bear in mind when considering three fields of study: environmental design and landscape, building production and construction and works and services strategic for the community. This book "Research among innovation, creativity and design" develops the topics addressed during the VII OSDOTTA workshop (the network of PhD courses in the field of Architectural Technology) held at the Mantua campus of Milan Polytechnic on 15th-16th-17th September 2011.
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9

Masahide, Shibusawa. The Private Diplomacy of Shibusawa Eiichi. GB Folkestone: Amsterdam University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9781898823810.

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“This book offers an account of the life of Shibusawa Eiichi, who may be considered the first ‘internationalist’ in modern Japan, written by his great grandson Masahide and published in 1970 under the title, Taiheiyo ni kakeru hashi (Building Bridges Over the Pacific). Japan had a tortuous relationship with internationalism between 1840, when Shibusawa was born, and 1931, the year the nation invaded Manchuria and when he passed away. The key to understanding Shibusawa’s thoughts against the background of this history, the author shows, lies in the concept of ‘people’s diplomacy,’ namely an approach to international relations through non-governmental connections. Such connections entail more transnational than international relations. In that sense, Shibusawa was more a transnationalist than an internationalist thinker. Internationalism presupposes the prior existence of sovereign states among which they cooperate to establish a peaceful order. The best examples are the League of Nations and the United Nations. Transnationalism, in contrast, goes beyond the framework of sovereign nations and promotes connections among individuals and non-governmental organizations. It could be called “globalism” in the sense that transnationalism aims at building bridges across the globe apart from independent nation-states. In that sense Shibusawa was a pioneering globalist. It was only in the 1990s that expressions like globalism and globalization came to be widely used. This was more than sixty years after Shibusawa Eiichi’s death, which suggests how pioneering his thoughts were.” [Akira Iriye]
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10

Bergstein, Mickey. Living Among Lions. Trafford Publishing, 2007.

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11

Baggett, Richard A. Living Among the Lions. 1st Books Library, 2001.

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12

Glendinning, Victoria. Edith Sitwell a Unicorn Among Lions. Phoenix Books, 1993.

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13

Glendinning, Victoria. Edith Sitwell: A Unicorn among Lions. Faber & Faber, Limited, 2013.

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14

Public Art In Vancouver Angels Among Lions. Touchwood Editions, 2009.

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15

Love among the lions: A matrimonial experience. Toronto: G.N. Morang, 1993.

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16

Dannenberg, Jorah. Lying Among Friends. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198743965.003.0011.

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Why are lies told among friends especially vicious? This chapter argues that friends must regard each other as entitled to claim each other’s trust. It defends this claim by appeal to a conception of friendship that involves a special kind of knowledge between friends, born of voluntary acts of self-disclosure. Yet treating someone as entitled to claim your trust also leaves you especially vulnerable to that person: you must be prepared to let her shape your conception of what the world is like. In extreme cases, you may even find you are obliged to believe things you know you cannot justify to others. The viciousness of lies told among friends can be understood in terms of this special and thoroughgoing form of vulnerability, which a lying friend exploits.
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17

Soul Among Lions: Musings of a Bootleg Preacher. Westminster John Knox Press, 1999.

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18

Kellstedt, Lyman A., and Ruth M. Melkonian-Hoover. Evangelicals and Immigration: Fault Lines Among the Faithful. Palgrave Macmillan, 2018.

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19

Shaw, Harley G. Soul Among Lions: The Cougar As Peaceful Adversary. University of Arizona Press, 2000.

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20

Evangelicals and Immigration: Fault Lines Among the Faithful. Palgrave Macmillan, 2018.

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21

Under the Camelthorn Tree: Raising a Family among Lions. Orion Publishing Group, Limited, 2020.

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22

Black Truths White Lies Defining Hope Among Black Student Achievers. African American Images, 2012.

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23

Living Among Lions: How to Thrive like Daniel in Today's Babylon. Thomas Nelson, 2016.

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24

Gordon-Cumming, Roualeyn. Hunter's Life among Lions, Elephants and Other Wild Animals of South Africa. HardPress, 2020.

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25

Ida: A Sword Among Lions, Ida B. Wells and the Campaign Against Lynching. Online: Scribd ebook, 2019.

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26

Gordon-Cumming, Roualeyn. A Hunter's Life Among Lions, Elephants And Other Wild Animals Of South Africa. Franklin Classics, 2018.

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27

Giddings, Paula. Ida: A Sword Among Lions: Ida B. Wells and the Campaign Against Lynching. Amistad, 2008.

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28

Welsh, Mary Sue. In the Lions’ Den. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037368.003.0001.

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This chapter details Edna Phillips' appointment as a member of the Philadelphia Orchestra. Phillips entered the Philadelphia Orchestra as its only woman in 1930. Having chosen the harp, an instrument that women played in drawing rooms in the Victorian era and one that was associated with ethereal, feminine attributes, she was more easily accepted into an orchestra than a player of another instrument might have been, but that did not mean her colleagues or the orchestra's audiences accepted and welcomed her arrival. As a woman invading a male bastion, she was just that, an invader, a pioneer in uncharted territory, and her arrival was met with curiosity at best and hostility at worst. Phillips understood that her life in an all-male orchestra would be full of challenges, but that was not her primary concern when she entered the Philadelphia Orchestra. Her biggest fear was that she wouldn't be able to hold her own as a musician among the orchestra's superb players, not because she was a woman, but because her training had been cut short. In a move that shocked and surprised both Phillips and her teacher, conductor Leopold Stokowski had appointed her to the first-chair position in his orchestra rather than choosing her for the second harp position she thought she was auditioning for.
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29

Pantoja, Segundo. Religion and Education Among Latinos in New York City. Brill Academic Publishers, 2005.

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30

Beach, Lewis. Four One-Act Plays: The Clod; A Guest For Dinner; Love Among The Lions; Brothers. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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31

Beach, Lewis. Four One-Act Plays: The Clod; A Guest For Dinner; Love Among The Lions; Brothers. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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32

Chicago Transit Authority. Research and Planning Dept., ed. Lift-equipped fixed-route bus survey: A comparison of service characteristics and issues among transit operators. Chicago, IL: The Authority, 1990.

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33

Middleton, George. Masks: With Jim's Beast; Tides, Among The Lions; The Reason; The House: One Act Plays Of Contemporary Life. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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34

Miller, Alissa A., and Stacey L. Rucas. Social Aggression, Sleep, and Well-Being among Sidama Women of Rural Southwestern Ethiopia. Edited by Maryanne L. Fisher. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199376377.013.24.

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Many researchers have studied how social competition and aggression affect health and well-being. However, few have made significant theoretical contributions to the understanding of how competition and aggression specific to women’s same-sex social networks may alter their health and well-being. Indeed, several lines of research indicate that positive interpersonal relationships between women are correlated to improved health, and, as a corollary, stressful and competitive interpersonal relationships result in significant health costs. Using evolutionary ecological theory and supporting data from Sidama pastoralist women in rural southwestern Ethiopia, this essay proposes that sleep quality and trade-offs between time spent sleeping for more waking time may be one of the pathways through which women’s health is affected by competition and aggression with other women. Sleep is gained or lost due to ruminations and investments over immediate social situations with other women, and this in turn can affect women’s health and well-being.
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35

Gao, Qin. Anti-Poverty Effectiveness. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190218133.003.0005.

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Chapter 5 investigates Dibao’s anti-poverty effectiveness. The chapter shows that, based on various poverty lines and across urban and rural areas, Dibao’s anti-poverty effectiveness is limited and at best modest, largely due to its targeting errors and gaps in benefit delivery. Dibao is more effective in reducing the depth and severity of poverty than it is the rate of poverty, and its anti-poverty effectiveness is greater among recipients than in the general population. Dibao’s influence on reducing poverty is larger when a lower poverty line is used and smaller when a higher poverty line is used. Because relative poverty lines are often set relative to the median income in society and tend to be much higher than the more widely used absolute poverty lines, Dibao’s effects on reducing relative poverty are particularly limited. Dibao has had minimal effect on narrowing the income inequality gap in society.
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36

假中寻真 Truth Among Lies: 股票技术分析正反例 Postive and Negative Cases of Technical Analysis. Beijing, China: 中国经济出版社 China Economic Publishing House, 2012.

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37

Westover, Daniel, and Thomas Alan Holmes, eds. The Fire That Breaks. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781942954361.001.0001.

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The Fire that Breaks traces Gerard Manley Hopkins’s continuing and pervasive influence among writers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Not only do the essays explore responses to Hopkins by individual writers—including, among others, Virginia Woolf, Ivor Gurney, T. S. Eliot, Elizabeth Bishop, Seamus Heaney, Geoffrey Hill, Derek Walcott, Denise Levertov, John Berryman, Charles Wright, Maurice Manning, and Ron Hansen—but they also examine Hopkins’s substantial influence among Caribbean poets, Appalachian writers, modern novelists, and contemporary poets whose work lies at the intersection of ecopoetry and theology. Combining essays by the world’s leading Hopkins scholars with essays by scholars from diverse fields, the collection examines both known and unexpected affinities. The Fire that Breaks is a persistent testimony to the lasting, continuing impact of Hopkins on poetry in English.
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38

Berry, Craig, and Michael Kenny. Ideology and the Intellectuals. Edited by Michael Freeden and Marc Stears. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199585977.013.0015.

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The question of how intellectuals ought to relate to the ideological traditions of the political cultures of modern societies has been a recurrent theme of European social and political thought over the last two centuries. This chapter explores earlier traditions of European thinking, associated with the work of Karl Mannheim, Julien Benda, and Antonio Gramsci, which established the major lines of debate about the relationship of intellectuals to a sense of nationhood and the political traditions of the polities they inhabited. These ideas form the backdrop to the analysis of the drift towards post-national thinking among important groups of intellectual practitioners in the UK towards the end of the twentieth century. Cosmopolitan thinking, the article suggests, has tended to obscure the ideological character of the main lines of political thinking associated with globalization, and ensured that progressive intellectuals tended to abandon the ‘national-popular’ to their counterparts on the political right, with fateful consequences.
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39

Porras, Ileana M. The Doctrine of the Providential Function of Commerce in International Law. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198805878.003.0014.

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This chapter explores the doctrine of the providential function of commerce in the work of Francisco de Vitoria (c. 1492–1546), Alberico Gentili (1552–1608), and Hugo Grotius (1583–1645). In this chapter, I argue that the doctrine’s persuasive power lies in the interplay between two factors. First is the fact that while the doctrine is not in origin a religious doctrine, its elements and its narrative logic carried an unmistakable religious sensibility that became indissolubly associated with international trade. But the doctrine’s true efficacy lies in a more subtle internal effect. In essence, the doctrine, which holds at its core an act of exchange among distant peoples, allowed its adherents to idealize international trade by blurring the distinction between the act of commercial exchange and that of gift-exchange. In this manner, international exchange came to be portrayed as an act of friendship and community recognition, rather than a commercial act between strangers.
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40

Reeder, Jennifer. The Textual Culture of the Nauvoo Female Relief Society Leadership and Minute Book. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190274375.003.0007.

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Jennifer Reeder’s “The Textual Culture of the Nauvoo Relief Society Leadership and Minute Book” provides a foundation for a deep understanding of the social production of the Nauvoo Female Relief Society’s minute book, which exemplifies the broad activity and discourse among Mormon women in Nauvoo, Illinois, in the 1840s. Typical of contemporary women’s organizations, the Relief Society was led by formally appointed officers who kept careful records of their benevolent efforts and theological discussions. Reeder shows that the Relief Society’s minute book was much more than a ledger of names and donations. Of particular interest is the way relationships played out among the women and how the practice of polygamy influenced the Relief Society, though never openly discussed in meetings. Reeder examines the polygamist relationships of several of the Society’s leaders and clerical officers in order to read between the lines of what was and was not written.
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41

Boisseau, Tracey Jean, and Tracy A. Thomas. After Suffrage Comes Equal Rights? Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190265144.003.0010.

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A politicized culture and century-long debate over women’s nature and role may turn out to be the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA)’s principal contribution to American feminism. Despite perceptions that an equal rights amendment was the next logical step following the Nineteenth Amendment, arguments broke out among feminist activists over whether an equal rights amendment would menace important legal victories, such as protective legislation for women’s employment. Yet even after other federal legislation quieted labor advocates’ concerns, virulent disagreement over an equal rights amendment among politicized women continued for years. Only in the late 1960s did politically active women come to embrace the ERA as a strategic goal. Even then the question of women’s differences from men—whether physical, psychological, or social—did not evaporate. Instead, new battle lines between progressive and newly organized conservative women were drawn in ways that doomed the amendment’s ratification chances.
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42

Godsey, William D. The Estates of Lower Austria. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198809395.003.0002.

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This chapter explores the composition of the Estates and how admission to their ranks was regulated. It also considers relations among the four Estates. Membership in the Estates of prelates and townsmen was largely static over time, while that in the lords and knights was changing. As a body, the Estates were not monolithic. Lines of fissure ran between nobility and clergy, within and between the various formal and informal groups of nobles, and between the townsmen and the others. There were also confessional and geographical factors that produced vertical divisions. These distinctions governed the dynamic not only within the halls of the Landhaus but also between the Estates and government.
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43

Brazil, Kevin. Conclusion. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198824459.003.0005.

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In conclusion, this short chapter surveys the ways in which the novelists discussed in this book have become reference points for contemporary debates about the legacy of modernism and experimentation among novelists such as Teju Cole, Zadie Smith, and Ben Lerner. It also surveys how contemporary novelists’ engagements with art are being driven by different concerns than those of earlier writers—attempts to blur the lines between autobiography and fiction, or to recover the political and aesthetic potential of wonder and enchantment. In doing so, it shows how the interactions between art and the novel traced in this book have become part of literary history.
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44

Soloman, Wm David. Early Virtue Ethics. Edited by Nancy E. Snow. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199385195.013.35.

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This chapter examines some of the main lines of development of virtue ethics in the early days of its revival, roughly from the mid-1950s until the mid-1980s. The emergence of virtue ethics is linked to other changes in Anglophone academic ethics during this time, including attacks on non-cognitivism, the rejection of the sharp distinction between meta-ethics and normative ethics, and the revival of large-scale normative theories. Among the figures whose contributions to the revival of virtue are discussed most fully are William Frankena, G. H. von Wright, Elizabeth Anscombe, and Alasdair MacIntyre. Focus throughout is on the Aristotelian heart of this revival.
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45

Grivno, Max. Conclusion. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036521.003.0007.

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This concluding chapter examines the interplay among the multiple boundaries between slavery and freedom. Northern Marylanders lived on slavery's tattered margin, a circumstance that profoundly influenced how workers experienced both slavery and free labor. Not all of the forces shaping the fault lines were local. Northern Maryland was part of a slaveholding state whose legal and political apparatuses were forged by and for Chesapeake planters. Moreover, residents of the area were inextricably linked to the vibrant slave societies developing along the South's cotton frontier. The tangled intersection where labor systems collided and where local and national forces converged was the setting where the slavery–free labor boundary emerged.
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46

Greer, Ian, Karen Breidahl, Matthias Knuth, and Flemming Larsen. Marketization and Transaction Modes. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198785446.003.0003.

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Marketization in this book is conceptualized in terms of the features of transactions that produce competition between providers. The organization of competition between providers is an important feature of policymaking because it affects the way that public policy is articulated in front-line public services. This chapter distinguishes among three transaction modes under which marketization proceeds along very different lines: grants (which are prior to marketization), purchasing (which is the subject of public procurement law), and vouchers (which rely on customer choice of clients). The chapter then analyzes these in terms of four features of the transaction that determine the intensity of competition between providers: the price mechanism, openness, prescription, and frequency.
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47

Vittoria, Barsotti, Carozza Paolo G, Cartabia Marta, and Simoncini Andrea. II Constitutional Jurisprudence, 5 Powers and Conflicts. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780190214555.003.0005.

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By presenting the Court’s principal lines of case law regarding the allocation of powers in the Italian constitutional system, this chapter explores the constitutionally regulated relationships among the President, Executive, Parliament, and Judiciary. It reveals that rather than a “separation of powers” in the conventional sense of contemporary constitutional models, the Italian system is best described as instituting a set of reciprocal “relations of powers” with the Constitutional Court as the “judge of powers” that maintains and guarantees these interrelationships of constitutional actors. The chapter explores this role of the Constitutional Court in its relations with both Parliament and the President of the Republic, as well as the Court’s regulation of the relationship between the President and the Executive.
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48

Nikoletta, Kleftouri. 10 The US Paradigm: Deposit Insurer as Resolution Authority. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198743057.003.0010.

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Banking crises prompted the United States to make lending of last resort, deposit insurance, and bank resolution federal responsibilities long before banks crossed state lines in large numbers. The US system offers an existing and successful model, whereby the deposit insurance and resolution functions are combined under a single institution, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The key objective underpinning the FDIC’s choice among different resolution options is that the chosen resolution is that which would result in the least cost to the deposit insurance fund. This chapter sets out the role of the FDIC as the deposit insurer, supervisor, and resolution authority, while also examining some key principles of the US approach to dealing with failing banks.
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49

Swartz, David R. Facing West. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190250805.001.0001.

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The dramatic growth of Christianity in the Global South over the last century has shifted the balance of power away from strongholds in Europe and the United States. While we typically imagine religion traveling from West to East and from North to South, David R. Swartz shows that lines of influence also run in other directions. Missionaries and non-Western evangelicals have shaped the American evangelical church. On issues of race, economics, human rights, and social justice, these complex transnational relationships often feature accommodation and mutuality, and they often push toward cosmopolitan sensibilities among elite and establishment evangelicals. But they also feature resistance among American evangelical populists, many of whom voted for Donald Trump in 2016. And on issues of sexuality and the supernatural, they draw sustenance from the Global South. This geographically expansive book, which spans Asia, Africa, and South America, offers new insights into a tradition that imagines itself as both American and part of a global communion. It considers how evangelical networks not only go out to, but also come from, the ends of the earth.
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50

Canfield, Donald Eugene. Oxygen. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691145020.001.0001.

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The air we breathe is 21 percent oxygen, an amount higher than on any other known world. While we may take our air for granted, Earth was not always an oxygenated planet. How did it become this way? This book covers this vast history, emphasizing its relationship to the evolution of life and the evolving chemistry of the Earth. The book guides readers through the various lines of scientific evidence, considers some of the wrong turns and dead ends along the way, and highlights the scientists and researchers who have made key discoveries in the field. Showing how Earth's atmosphere developed over time, the book takes readers on a remarkable journey through the history of the oxygenation of our planet.
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