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1

Sadiq-Sangster, Azra. An Asian experience. Family Service Units, 1991.

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2

Chi, Keon S. Prepaid health care for welfare recipients: The Oregon experience. Council of State Governments, 1986.

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3

Taylor, Lynne Barney. Workfare: An analysis of community work experience programs. Research Division, Dept. of Legislative Reference, 1993.

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4

Thomas, Brock. Unpaid work experience for welfare recipients: Findings and lessons from MDRC research. Manpower Demonstration Research Corp., 1993.

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5

Plein, L. Christopher. Welfare reform in a hard place: The West Virginia experience. Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government, 2001.

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6

Jane, Pulkingham, Parusel Sylvia 1957-, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. BC Office., and Economic Security Project, eds. Living on welfare in BC: Experiences of longer-term "expected to work" recipients. Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, BC Office, 2008.

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7

Grogger, Jeff. Welfare reform, returns to experience, and wages: Using reservation wages to account for sample selection bias. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005.

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8

Grogger, Jeff. Welfare reform, returns to experience, and wages: Using reservation wages to account for sample selection bias. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2005.

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9

Bunt, Karen. Combined pension forecasts: A report on the experiences and views of CPF providers and recipients. Corporate Document Services, 2004.

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10

Polit, Denise F. Is work enough?: The experiences of current and former welfare mothers who work. Manpower Demonstration Research Corp., 2001.

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11

Taylor, Judith Combes. Learning at work in a work-based welfare system: Lessons from the school-to-work experience. Jobs for the Future, 1997.

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12

(Ontario), Woman and Abuse Welfare Research Project. Walking on eggshells: Abused women's experiences of Ontario's welfare system /bFinal report of research findings from the Woman and Abuse Welfare Research Project. The Project, 2004.

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13

1949-, Butler David, Cross-State Study of Time-Limited Welfare., and Manpower Demonstration Research Corporation, eds. Implementing time-limited welfare: Early experiences in three states. Manpower Demonstration Research Corp., 1995.

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14

Stephenson, Augusta. Work and welfare: Attitudes, experiences and behaviour of nineteen low-income families : a qualitative study carried out on behalf of the Department of Social Security. Analytical Services Division of the Department of Social Security, 2001.

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15

Cumming, Sara J. "Welcome to my life": The experiences of single mothers who are the recipients of multiple state provided benefits. Brock University, M.A. Program in Social Justice and Equity Studies, 2005.

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16

Alt, Martha Naomi. To teach or not to teach?: Teaching experience and preparation among 1992-93 bachelor's degree recipients 10 years after college. U.S. Dept. of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences, 2007.

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17

Choy, Susan P. Ten years after college: Comparing the employment experiences of 1992-93 bachelor's degree recipients with academic and career-oriented majors. National Center for Education Statistics, Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Dept. of Education, 2008.

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18

Levine, Phillip B. An empirical analysis of the welfare magnet debate using the NLSY. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1995.

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19

Lombardo, Luca. Albertino Mussato, Epistole metriche Edizione critica, traduzione e commento. Fondazione Università Ca’ Foscari, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-436-3.

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The Metric Epistles of Albertino Mussato (1261-1329) are a collection of 20 compositions in Latin verse (of which, 12 in elegiac couplets, 8 in hexameters, for a total of 1,570 verses) composed between 1309 and 1326 and addressed to different recipients. The list of recipients includes friends of the author and representatives of the Paduan political and intellectual élite of the early 14th century such as the judges Rolando da Piazzola, Giovanni da Vigonza and Paolo da Teolo, the notary Zambono d’Andrea and Marsilio Mainardini; masters of grammar and rhetoric such as the Venetian Giovanni Cassio, Bonincontro from Mantua and Guizzardo from Bologna; religious personalities such as the Dominican friars Benedetto and Giovannino da Mantova, respectively lecturer and professor of theology at the Studium Generale of the convent of S. Agostino in Padua; collective recipients, such as the College of Artists and fellow citizens of Padua. After an editio princeps was printed in Venice in 1636 on the basis of a now lost manuscript, a critical edition of the Epistles is published here for the first time, including the complete corpus of the texts in the light of their entire manuscript tradition. The texts are accompanied by an Italian translation and a detailed commentary, which mainly aims to bring to light and analyse the dense intertextuality of Mussato’s poem (in particular classical Latin sources), reconsidering the cultural background of the author and his contemporaries in the context of the so-called ‘Paduan prehumanism’ and an ideal dialogue with Dante’s coeval biographical and literary experiences.
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20

Office, General Accounting. Welfare reform: States' experiences in providing employment assistance to TANF clients : report to Congressional requesters. The Office, 1999.

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21

Office, General Accounting. Welfare reform: States' early experiences with benefit termination : report to the Ranking Minority Member, Committee on Finance, U.S. Senate. The Office, 1997.

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22

Legendre, Christophe. Pre-transplant assessment of the recipient. Edited by Jeremy R. Chapman. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199592548.003.0276.

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Recipient assessment pre transplant is a critical step in the overall process of transplantation. It is required to define the surgical and medical strategies, evaluate the prognosis based on the knowledge of global kidney transplantation results, and hopefully improve the individual’s outcome. Each transplant centre will have developed its own experience and its own way of assessing transplant candidates. This chapter describes the transplant candidate assessment according to recognized recommendations as well as the author’s local experience at Necker Hospital, Paris, France. The goals of pre-transplant candidate assessment are to discuss the indications, to fully inform the patient, to determine which tests are useful to help balance risks and benefits, and finally to prepare as many potential kidney transplant recipients as possible to be wait-listed successfully.
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23

Allen, Richard D. M., and Henry C. C. Pleass. Donor and recipient kidney transplantation surgery. Edited by Jeremy R. Chapman. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199592548.003.0278_update_001.

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Kidney transplant surgery is for thinking surgeons who enjoy being part of a multidisciplinary transplant team. Good ones recognize the small margin for error and avoid difficulties by careful preparation and anticipation of potential pitfalls. Progressively, their role has gained in significance and is now the most important variable in kidney graft loss in the first 6 months after transplantation. Deceased organ donation is complex, expensive, and insufficient in numbers to meet the demand for kidney transplantation. Living donor surgery is therefore a procedure of necessity. Laparoscopic approaches have obvious benefits to the patient but are not operations for the beginner. There are few remaining stalwarts of the open nephrectomy procedure. Because of the limited length of the donor ureter, kidney transplant procedures involve placement of the donor kidney into a heterotopic position with vascular anastomoses to the iliac vessels. No two procedures are the same. Observation of the transplanted kidney changing from a flaccid and pale appearance to one that is firm and pink, and within seconds of removing vascular clamps, is an unforgettable experience for the first timer. Even better is the sight of urine, minutes later. Good transplant centres select their new surgeons carefully!
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24

Black, Helen K., John T. Groce, and Charles E. Harmon. Caregiving as Pilgrimage. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190602321.003.0007.

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In this chapter, we explore the experience of an elder husband who was the primary informal caregiver for his wife of 60 years. We describe their encounters as caregiver and care recipient through the years as a pilgrimage. We do so because we believe this word has a revered connotation. Generally, two or more people travel together to a pilgrimage site for the sake of gaining spiritual insight or meaning. In a pilgrimage, the journey toward the site becomes an important part of the sacred quest. The husband who is the subject of this chapter cared for his wife for over 25 years. Through the years, his wife became increasingly impaired and incurred several serious illnesses at the same time that he, as caregiver, experienced his own illnesses and the declines of age.
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25

Clay, Edward, and John Shaw. World Food Aid: Experiences of Recipients & Donors. Heinemann, 1994.

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26

Shaw, John. World Food Aid: Experiences of Recipients & Donors. World Food Programme, 1993.

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27

John, Shaw D., and Clay Edward J, eds. World food aid: Experiences of recipients & donors. World Food Programme, 1993.

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28

Prepaid Health Care for Welfare Recipients: The Oregon Experience (Rm, 769). Council of State Government, 1986.

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29

Ruiz-Casares, Mónica, Shelene Gentz, and Jesse Beatson. Children as Providers and Recipients of Support. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190265076.003.0011.

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Processes associated with the formation of child-headed households (CHH) are complex. Findings are mixed with regard to the impact of living in CHHs on children. On the one hand, children in CHHs do not necessarily have more unmet basic needs than do peers in adult-headed households and, in fact, have more opportunities to develop self-esteem and care for others. Nonetheless, children in CHHs confront specific challenges to their well-being. This chapter summarizes the state of the literature pertaining to CHHs, with a particular focus on CHHs as indicators of “the breakdown of the extended family” as a safety net. The authors present two case studies from Namibia that illustrate changes in children’s relationships and other aspects of the CHH experience and explore immediate and deferred reciprocity as a measure of accessibility and strength of their relationships and as an indicator of the changing status of children and family dynamics.
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30

Mueser, Peter R., and Christopher T. King. Welfare And Work: Experiences In Six Cities. W. E. Upjohn Institute, 2005.

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31

Carole, Kuhns, Virginia. Dept. of Social Services., and Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Institute for Public Policy Research., eds. The Virginia closed case study: Experiences of Virginia families one year after leaving temporary assistance for needy families. The Dept., 1999.

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32

1959-, Gordon Anne, Virginia. Dept. of Social Services., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Center for Public Administration and Policies., and Mathematica Policy Research inc, eds. Experiences of Virginia time limit families in the six months after case closure: Results for an early cohort : final report. Mathematica Policy Research, 1999.

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33

1946-, Myers Ted, and University of Toronto. Faculty of Medicine. HIV Social, Behavioural and Epidemiological Studies Unit., eds. The HIV test experience study: An analysis of test providers' and test recipients' descriptions and critical appraisals of the HIV antibody test experience. HIV Social, Behavioural and Epidemiological Studies, 1998.

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34

The Greater Avenues for Independence (GAIN) program: Early implementation experiences and lessons. Manpower Demonstration Research Corp., 1989.

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35

Immigration and Welfare State Retrenchment: Why the US Experience Is Not Reflected in Western Europe. Oxford University Press, 2018.

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36

A, Riccio James, ed. GAIN: Early implementation experiences and lessons : California's Greater Avenues for Independence program. Manpower Demonstration Research Corp., 1989.

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37

Being better tomorrow: The experience of five pacemaker recipients from the onset of symptoms until 6 weeks after implantation. National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1992.

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38

Welfare And Work: Experiences In Six Cities. W. E. Upjohn Institute, 2005.

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39

California. Legislature. Joint Legislative Budget Committee. Legislative Analyst., ed. Job search, training, and work experience: The lessons for California from eight evaluations of the work incentive program. Legislative Analyst, State of California, 1985.

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40

Glasper, Edward Alan, Gillian McEwing, and Jim Richardson, eds. Palliative care. Oxford University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198569572.003.0024.

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Breaking bad news 778Children, young people, and bereavement 780What happens when a child or young person is dying 782Palliative care 784Breaking bad news is a task that most professionals have little experience with and find incredibly difficult. How this news is given will affect the adjustment and future coping mechanisms of the recipients....
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41

Ashworth, Karl, David Greenberg, and Robert Walker. Welfare-to-Work: New Labour And The US Experience. Ashgate Publishing, 2005.

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42

Cranford, Cynthia J. Home Care Fault Lines. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501749254.001.0001.

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This revealing look at home care illustrates how elderly and disabled people and the immigrant women workers who assist them in daily activities develop meaningful relationships even when their different ages, abilities, races, nationalities, and socioeconomic backgrounds generate tension. As the book shows, workers can experience devaluation within racialized and gendered class hierarchies, which shapes their pursuit of security. The book analyzes the tensions, alliances, and compromises between security for workers and flexibility for elderly and disabled people, and argues that workers and recipients negotiate flexibility and security within intersecting inequalities in varying ways depending on multiple interacting dynamics. What comes through from the book's analysis is the need for deeply democratic alliances across multiple axes of inequality. To support both flexible care and secure work, the book argues for an intimate community unionism that advocates for universal state funding, designs culturally sensitive labor market intermediaries run by workers and recipients to help people find jobs or workers, and addresses everyday tensions in home workplaces.
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43

Shipley, Peggy Z. ALS caregiver quality of life and psychological implications. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198757726.003.0016.

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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) impacts greatly not only those who have the disease, but also family caregivers who provide the majority of care for their loved ones throughout the ALS disease trajectory. In the provision of this care, these family caregivers frequently experience significant threats to their own physical and mental health, and thus to their quality of life. The burden of caregiving can be high, distress is not uncommon, and support is needed to best address these issues. Despite the physical and emotional challenges faced by family caregivers, limited research has been directed at this caregiving phenomenon. The more health care providers understand the key elements of the ALS caregiving experience, the better equipped they will be to recognize the caregivers as not only co-providers of care, but as potential recipients of care to meet the unique physical and mental challenges of this caregiving population.
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44

Vanderschraaf, Peter. Justice as Mutual Advantage? Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199832194.003.0008.

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Necessary and sufficient conditions are proposed for characterizing the general theory of justice as mutual advantage. Justice as mutual advantage has a distinguished history, but is thought to be false because according to this theory vulnerable members of society are apparently owed no benefits of justice. A repeated Provider-Recipient game model shows by example that justice as mutual advantage systems can require that the vulnerable receive benefits, refuting the Vulnerability Objection. Conditions for defining the community of inclusion in justice as mutual advantage systems are proposed in terms of salience. A justice as mutual system is defined as a system of conventions for sharing the cooperative surplus generated from compliance with these conventions that is Baseline Consistent or stable with respect to possible renegotiation in case the community experiences certain changes in their circumstances.
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45

Rose, Diana. Community coercion in mental health: where to for service-user-led research? Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198788065.003.0007.

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Service-user research is increasingly important in health and social care in some countries but is relatively or completely undeveloped elsewhere. This chapter begins with a brief overview of the development of service-user research in the field of mental health. A definition of what is and isn’t service-user research is provided and common misconceptions challenged; its benefits are described alongside any potential disadvantages. Service-user research in mental health care is outlined and the evidence in relation to coercion in psychiatry reviewed. Much of the evidence relates to experience of institutional environments but has clear relevance for community service providers and recipients too. The small body of evidence relating to community coercion is reviewed in detail. The current state of evidence and ongoing research in this field is summarized and the ways in which service-user research can be developed in the future are discussed.
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46

Koepnick, Lutz. Culture in the Shadow of Trauma? Edited by Helmut Walser Smith. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199237395.013.0031.

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In the ruins of World War II, culture was meant to mend the spiritual wounds and traumatic losses of everyday life by providing meanings and orientations unscathed by the functionalization of aesthetic culture during the Nazi era. This article focuses on the culture ballgame cast under the shadow of trauma raged by the war and its aftermath. Art, literature, theater, film, and music, in both emerging Germanys, were no doubt embraced as conduits for a resurrection of the spirit. However, the traumas left by the immediate past led artistic practitioners and their recipients alike to believe that such a resurrection could only succeed if aesthetic experience was allowed to unfold in relative distance to postwar politics. Postwar German culture, in each of its initial four occupational zones and later in both of its Cold War incarnations, cannot be subsumed under one rubric, let alone be retold with the help of one master narrative.
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47

Tomasello, Michael. Commentary on Philip Pettit’s The Birth of Ethics. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190904913.003.0011.

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Philip Pettit begins his account of the evolution of morality with early human individuals reporting their experiences to others linguistically, and he maintains that language is a crucial and necessary part of the process throughout. The key is that there were social pressures on early humans to be honest in their reporting in order to maintain a good reputation. But informing others of things truthfully and helpfully is a cooperative social action that may be effected non-linguistically, for example, by pointing to relevant referential situations. And the reputation one creates by engaging in such behavior is not as a skillful language user but as a cooperative one: telling the truth only matters if it either helps or hinders the recipient in her behavioral decision-making. And so, Tomasello’s claim is that what is actually doing the work in Pettit's account is not language per se, but rather the cooperative intentions and social actions that underlie certain kinds of speech acts. This suggests the possibility of an account of the evolution of morality based not on language but on cooperation more generally.
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48

Legge, Sarah, David Lindenmayer, Natasha Robinson, Benjamin Scheele, Darren Southwell, and Brendan Wintle, eds. Monitoring Threatened Species and Ecological Communities. CSIRO Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9781486307722.

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Monitoring is integral to all aspects of policy and management for threatened biodiversity. It is fundamental to assessing the conservation status and trends of listed species and ecological communities. Monitoring data can be used to diagnose the causes of decline, to measure management effectiveness and to report on investment. It is also a valuable public engagement tool. Yet in Australia, monitoring threatened biodiversity is not always optimally managed.
 Monitoring Threatened Species and Ecological Communities aims to improve the standard of monitoring for Australia's threatened biodiversity. It gathers insights from some of the most experienced managers and scientists involved with monitoring programs for threatened species and ecological communities in Australia, and evaluates current monitoring programs, establishing a baseline against which the quality of future monitoring activity can be managed. Case studies provide examples of practical pathways to improve the quality of biodiversity monitoring, and guidelines to improve future programs are proposed.
 This book will benefit scientists, conservation managers, policy makers and those with an interest in threatened species monitoring and management.
 Joint recipient of the 2018 Whitley Certificate of Commendation for Conservation Zoology 
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49

Huerta, Monica. Magical Habits. Duke University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478021483.

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In Magical Habits Monica Huerta draws on her experiences growing up in her family's Mexican restaurants and her life as a scholar of literature and culture to meditate on how relationships among self, place, race, and storytelling contend with both the afterlives of history and racial capitalism. Whether dwelling on mundane aspects of everyday life, such as the smell of old kitchen grease, or grappling with the thorny, unsatisfying question of authenticity, Huerta stages a dynamic conversation among genres, voices, and archives: personal and critical essays exist alongside a fairy tale; photographs and restaurant menus complement fictional monologues based on her family's history. Developing a new mode of criticism through storytelling, Huerta takes readers through Cook County courtrooms, the Cristero Rebellion (in which her great-grandfather was martyred by the Mexican government), Japanese baths in San Francisco—and a little bit about Chaucer too. Ultimately, Huerta sketches out habits of living while thinking that allow us to consider what it means to live with and try to peer beyond history even as we are caught up in the middle of it. Duke University Press Scholars of Color First Book Award recipient
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50

Tamburello, Anthony C. Prescribed medication abuse. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0031.

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Community abuse of prescription medication is typically limited to overuse or inappropriate sharing of medication. In jails and prisons, the demand characteristics are dramatically altered, creating an elaborate laboratory for medication alteration, diversion, and abuse. While prescription medications are sometimes used to achieve a ‘high,’ they may also be sought to ease discomforts commonly experienced in a jail or prison. Some may seek stimulating medications to counteract the effects of prescribed sedatives to allow them to be ready to respond to real or perceived dangers. Thus, inmates may feign or exaggerate mood, anxiety, psychotic, or somatic symptoms with the goal of being prescribed medications with the desired effects. More insidious is the diversion of prescribed medications to a third party. Many prescribed medicines have a ‘street value’ in correctional settings. A patient with a legitimate need for medication, who may already have poor illness insight, may be enticed or coerced into transferring their medication to a peer. This creates several dangerous problems. The source inmate may worsen or fail to improve, which may lead to dose escalation, an incorrect conclusion about a treatment failure, poor functioning, and behavioral sequelae including disruptive or violent conduct. Meanwhile, the recipient is exposed to medication risks without the benefits of informed consent or medical supervision. This chapter presents data on specific classes of prescribed medication abuses, methods of abuse, and approaches to minimize abuse or diversion of prescribed medications.
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