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1

Moody, John. Oral history interviews: John Moody. Denver, Colo: Bureau of Reclamation, Oral History Program, 2013.

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Patterson, Roger K. Oral history interviews: Roger K. Patterson. Denver, Colo: Bureau of Reclamation, Oral History Program, 2011.

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Rieke, Betsy. Oral history interview: Elizabeth (Betsy) Rieke. Denver, Colo: Bureau of Reclamation, Oral History Program, 2013.

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Ulrich, Timothy. Oral history interviews: Timothy Ulrich. Denver, Colo: Bureau of Reclamation, Oral History Program, 2013.

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Vissia, Rodney J. Oral history interviews: Rodney (Rod) J. Vissia. Denver, Colo: Bureau of Reclamation, Oral History Program, 2011.

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6

Columbia University. Oral History Research Office. Oral history: Oral history at Columbia, American Craftspeople Project, projects and interviews, 1987-1992. New York: Columbia University, Oral History Research Office, 1992.

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7

The oral character of southern literature: Explaining the distinctiveness of regional texts. Lewiston, N.Y: Edwin Mellen Press, 2008.

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8

Andrews, James L. Oral history interview: James (Jim) L. Andrews, regional engineer, mid-pacific region : October 14, 1994, Sacramento, California. [Denver, Colo.]: Bureau of Reclamation, Oral History Program, 2002.

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Archives, Australian. ' My heart is breaking': A joint guide to records about aboriginal people in the Public Record Office of Victoria and the Australian Archives, Victorian Regional Office. Canberra: Australian Govt. Pub. Service, 1993.

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10

Behind the lines: The oral history of Special Operations in World War II. New York: St.Martin's Press, 2002.

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11

Miller, Russell. Behind the lines: The oral history of Special Operations in World War II. London: Secker & Warburg, 2002.

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12

Cueto, Adolfo O. Archivo oral: En pro de una historia testimonial contemporánea de Mendoza, 1910-1990 : una experiencia metodológica y una contribución a la historiografía regional. Mendoza, República Argentina: Universidad Nacional de Cuyo, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, 1996.

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13

Fraser, Ros. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in commonwealth records: A guide to records in the Australian Archives, ACT Regional Office. Canberra: Australian Govt. Pub. Service, 1993.

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14

Program, United States General Accounting Office History. The San Francisco Regional Office, 1954-1987: Interview with Harold J. D'Ambrogia, Kenneth A. Pollock, Richard A. Sheldon, and Charles F. Vincent. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1991.

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15

Program, United States General Accounting Office History. The San Francisco Regional Office, 1954-1987: Interview with Harold J. D'Ambrogia, Kenneth A. Pollock, Richard A. Sheldon, and Charles F. Vincent. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1991.

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16

Vestiges of old Madras, 1640-1800: Traced from the East India Company's records preserved at Fort St. George and the India Office, and from other sources. New Delhi: Asian Educational Services, 1996.

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17

Love, Henry Davison. Vestiges of old Madras, 1640-1800: Traced from the East India Company's records preserved at Fort St. George and the India Office, and from other sources. Delhi, India: Mittal Publications, 1988.

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18

Quenum, Comlan A. A. Twenty years of political struggle for health. Brazzaville: Regional Office for Africa, World Health Organization, 1985.

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19

Institution, Brookings, ed. The World Bank's lending in South Asia. Washington, D.C: Brookings Institution, 1995.

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20

Davis, Margaret R. A practical guide to organization design. Menlo Park, Calif: Crisp Publications, 1996.

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21

Arnold, Denise. Situating the Andean Colonial Experience. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9781641894043.

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Re-situating Andean colonial history from the perspective of the local historians of ayllu Qaqachaka, in highland Bolivia, this book draws on regional oral history combined with local and public written archives. Rejecting the binary models in vogue in colonial and postcolonial studies (indigenous/non-indigenous, Andean/Western, conquered/conquering), it explores the complex intercalation of legal pluralism and local history in the negotiations around Spanish demands, resulting in the so-called "Andean pact." The Qaqachaka's point of reference is the preceding Inka occupation, so in fulfilling Spanish demands they seek cultural continuity with this recent past. Spanish colonial administration, applies its roots in Roman-Germanic and Islamic law to many practices in the newly-conquered territories. Two major cycles of ayllu tales trace local responses to these colonial demands, in the practices for establishing settlements, and the feeding and dressing of the Catholic saints inside the new church, with their forebears in the Inka mummies.
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22

Carole, Hicke, Rothwell Thomas 1923-, Hecht Kenneth 1934-, DeBenedictis Dario 1918-, and Bancroft Library. Regional Oral History Office., eds. Legal Aid Society of San Francisco, 1916-1991: Seventy-five years of legal services. Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California Berkeley. 1996.

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23

1949-, Helquist Michael, Martin Jeannee Parker 1955-, Schietinger Helen K. 1948-, Hughes Sally Smith, Jones Diane 1952-, Morrison Clifford L. 1951-, Gee Gayling, et al., eds. The AIDS epidemic in San Francisco: The response of the nursing profession, 1981-1994. Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. 1999.

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24

1949-, Helquist Michael, Martin Jeannee Parker 1955-, Schietinger Helen K. 1948-, Hughes Sally Smith, Jones Diane 1952-, Morrison Clifford L. 1951-, Gee Gayling, et al., eds. The AIDS epidemic in San Francisco: The response of the nursing profession, 1981-1994. Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. 1999.

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25

family, DeDomenico. The DeDomenici family: Growth of the Golden Grain Company through innovation and entrepreneurship ; with an introduction by Benton Coit. Interviews conducted by Ruth Teiser and Lisa Jacobson, 1987-1989. Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. 1994.

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26

The Office: The Untold Story of the Greatest Sitcom of the 2000s: An Oral History. Dutton Books, 2020.

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27

The Office : The Untold Story of the Greatest Sitcom of the 2000s: An Oral History. Dutton, 2020.

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28

Ruth, Steiner, Fassler Margot Elsbeth, and Baltzer Rebecca A. 1940-, eds. The Divine Office in the Latin Middle Ages: Methodology and source studies, regional developments, hagiography : written in honor of Professor Ruth Steiner. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000.

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29

Miller, Russell. Behind the Lines: The Oral History of Special Operations in World War II. Pimlico, 2003.

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30

Behind the Lines: The Oral History of Special Operations in World War II. NAL Trade, 2004.

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31

Miller, Russell. Behind the Lines: The Oral History of Special Operations in World War II. Penguin Random House, 2015.

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32

1950-, Norris Frank B., and United States. National Park Service. Alaska Support Office., eds. The Alaska journey: United States Department of the Interior in Alaska. Anchorage, Alaska: The Office, 1999.

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33

Jones, Charles O. 3. Electing presidents (and other ways to occupy the Oval Office). Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780190458201.003.0003.

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The design of the executive leadership helped shape the opportunities and establish the boundaries of presidential power. Would it work? “Electing presidents” looks at how the system of electing presidents developed and adapted and shows that constitutional construction and history were on the side of maintaining the unique method designed by the Founders. There were many initial questions to be ironed out: Who would be the candidates? Would there be political parties? What would be the relationship between presidential and vice-presidential selection? Political parties function first and foremost to organize elections. The strength of parties is measured by their capacity to adapt to regional differences, regulations, and voter policy preferences.
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34

Jones, Charles O. 3. Electing Presidents (and Other Ways to Occupy the Oval Office). Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780195307016.003.0003.

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The design of the executive leadership helped shape the opportunities and establish the boundaries of presidential power. Would it work? ‘Electing Presidents’ looks at how the system of electing presidents developed and adapted and shows that constitutional construction and history were on the side of maintaining the unique method designed by the Founders. There were many initial questions to be ironed out: who would be the candidates? Would there be political parties? What would be the relationship between presidental and vice-presidental selection? Political parties function first and foremost to organize elections. The strength of parties is measured by their capacity to adapt to regional differences, regulations, and voter policy preferences.
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35

Reminiscences. Annapolis, Md: U.S. Naval Institute, 1989.

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36

McCorristine, Shane. The Spectral Arctic: A History of dreams and ghosts in polar exploration. UCL Press, 2018.

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37

Orkaby, Asher. Beyond the Arab Cold War. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190618445.001.0001.

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Beyond the Arab Cold War brings the Yemen Civil War (1962–68) to the forefront of modern Middle East history, in a comprehensive account that features multilingual and multinational archives and oral histories. Throughout six years of major conflict Yemen sat at the crossroads of regional and international conflict as dozens of countries, international organizations, and individuals intervened in the local South Arabian civil war. Yemen was a showcase for a new era of UN and Red Cross peacekeeping, clandestine activity, Egypt’s counterinsurgency, and one of the first large-scale uses of poison gas since World War I. Events in Yemen were not dominated by a single power, nor were they sole products of US-Soviet or Saudi-Egyptian Arab Cold War rivalry. Rather, during the 1960s Yemen was transformed into an arena of global conflict whose ensuing chaos tore down the walls of centuries of religious rule and isolation and laid the groundwork for the next half century of Yemeni history. The end of the Yemen Civil War marked the end of both Egyptian President Nasser’s Arab nationalist colonial expansion and the British Empire in the Middle East, two of the most dominant regional forces. The legacy of the eventual northern tribal defeat and the compromised establishment of a weak and decentralized republic are at the core of modern-day conflicts in South Arabia.
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38

Rubio, Philip F. Undelivered. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469655468.001.0001.

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For eight days in March 1970, over 200,000 postal workers staged an illegal "wildcat" strike--the largest in United States history--for better wages and working conditions. Picket lines started in New York and spread across the country like wildfire. Strikers defied court injunctions, threats of termination, and their own union leaders. In the negotiated aftermath, the U.S. Post Office became the U.S. Postal Service, and postal workers received full collective bargaining rights and wage increases, all the while continuing to fight for greater democracy within their unions. Using archives, periodicals, and oral histories, Philip Rubio shows how this strike, born of frustration and rising expectations and emerging as part of a larger 1960s-1970s global rank-and-file labor upsurge, transformed the post office and postal unions. It also led to fifty years of clashes between postal unions and management over wages, speedup, privatization, automation, and service. Rubio revives the 1970 strike story and connects it to today's postal financial crisis that threatens the future of a vital 245-year-old public communications institution and its labor unions.
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39

Winford, Brandon K. John Hervey Wheeler, Black Banking, and the Economic Struggle for Civil Rights. University Press of Kentucky, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813178257.001.0001.

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This work combines black business and civil rights history to explain how economic concerns shaped the goals and objectives of the black freedom struggle. Brandon K. Winford examines the “black business activism” of banker and civil rights lawyer John Hervey Wheeler (1908–1978). Born on the campus of Kittrell College in Vance County, North Carolina, he came of age in Jim Crow Atlanta, Georgia, where his father became an executive with the world-renowned North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company (NC Mutual). As president of Mechanics and Farmers Bank (M&F Bank), located on Durham’s “Black Wall Street,” Wheeler became the Tar Heel State’s most influential black power broker and among the top civil rights figures in the South. Winford places Wheeler at the center of his narrative to understand how black business leaders tackled civil rights while continuously pointing to the economy’s larger significance for the success and advancement of the postwar New South. In this way, Wheeler articulated a bold vision of regional prosperity, grounded in full citizenship and economic power for black people. He reminded the white South that its future was inextricably linked to the plight of black southerners. He spent his entire career trying to fulfill these ideals through his institutional and organizational affiliations, as part and parcel of his civil rights agenda. Winford draws on previously unexamined primary and secondary sources, including newspapers, business records, FBI reports, personal papers, financial statements, presidential files, legal documents, oral histories, and organizational and institutional records.
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40

Fioritti, Angelo, and Thomas Marcacci. Coercion in Europe. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198788065.003.0018.

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Modern psychiatry developed in Europe with Pinel in the Enlightenment: the concept of human rights was first conceived and the first laws to protect citizens’ rights in psychiatry were introduced. However, Europe is also where some of the worst violations of human rights in psychiatry have taken place. Europe has developed several international institutions such as the European Union and the European Court of Human Rights. Their covenants, along with those from the United Nations, have repeatedly attempted to address the issue of freedom and coercion in medicine and in psychiatry. The World Health Organization Regional Office for Europe has paid extensive attention to coercion and human rights in psychiatry. Europe has a long history and tradition of mental health care and there are significant variations between countries in its delivery and legislation. This chapter outlines some key historical events and attitudes regarding coercion in European society ,with particular attention being paid to coercion in the community.
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41

Geyh, Charles Gardner. Who is to Judge? Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190887148.001.0001.

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An elected judiciary is virtually unique to the American experience, and creates a paradox in a representative democracy. Elected judges take an oath to uphold the law impartially, which calls upon them to swear off the influence of the very constituencies they must cultivate in order to attain and retain judicial office. This paradox has given rise to perennially shrill and unproductive binary arguments over the merits and demerits of elected and appointed judiciaries, which this project seeks to transcend and reconceptualize with a search for middle ground. When the exaggerated arguments of disputants on both sides of the debate are identified and discounted, it becomes possible to approach consensus. By better informing the judicial selection debate with the lessons of law, politics, psychology, history, and anthropology, participants are better able to sort wheat from chaff and limit the scope of their disagreements. While consensus can thus be approached, it is unlikely to be achieved, because disuniformity is both inevitable and desirable. It is inevitable as long as state and regional histories, political cultures, and current events differ significantly enough to cultivate competing views as to whether judges can be better trusted to uphold the law with or without voter supervision. It is desirable, because a menu of viable, alternative selection systems enables states to address the legitimacy problems that their courts encounter over time, without devolving into constitutional crisis.
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42

Benestad, Rasmus. Climate in the Barents Region. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228620.013.655.

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The Barents Sea is a region of the Arctic Ocean named after one of its first known explorers (1594–1597), Willem Barentsz from the Netherlands, although there are accounts of earlier explorations: the Norwegian seafarer Ottar rounded the northern tip of Europe and explored the Barents and White Seas between 870 and 890 ce, a journey followed by a number of Norsemen; Pomors hunted seals and walruses in the region; and Novgorodian merchants engaged in the fur trade. These seafarers were probably the first to accumulate knowledge about the nature of sea ice in the Barents region; however, scientific expeditions and the exploration of the climate of the region had to wait until the invention and employment of scientific instruments such as the thermometer and barometer. Most of the early exploration involved mapping the land and the sea ice and making geographical observations. There were also many unsuccessful attempts to use the Northeast Passage to reach the Bering Strait. The first scientific expeditions involved F. P. Litke (1821±1824), P. K. Pakhtusov (1834±1835), A. K. Tsivol’ka (1837±1839), and Henrik Mohn (1876–1878), who recorded oceanographic, ice, and meteorological conditions.The scientific study of the Barents region and its climate has been spearheaded by a number of campaigns. There were four generations of the International Polar Year (IPY): 1882–1883, 1932–1933, 1957–1958, and 2007–2008. A British polar campaign was launched in July 1945 with Antarctic operations administered by the Colonial Office, renamed as the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS); it included a scientific bureau by 1950. It was rebranded as the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) in 1962 (British Antarctic Survey History leaflet). While BAS had its initial emphasis on the Antarctic, it has also been involved in science projects in the Barents region. The most dedicated mission to the Arctic and the Barents region has been the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP), which has commissioned a series of reports on the Arctic climate: the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA) report, the Snow Water Ice and Permafrost in the Arctic (SWIPA) report, and the Adaptive Actions in a Changing Arctic (AACA) report.The climate of the Barents Sea is strongly influenced by the warm waters from the Norwegian current bringing heat from the subtropical North Atlantic. The region is 10°C–15°C warmer than the average temperature on the same latitude, and a large part of the Barents Sea is open water even in winter. It is roughly bounded by the Svalbard archipelago, northern Fennoscandia, the Kanin Peninsula, Kolguyev Island, Novaya Zemlya, and Franz Josef Land, and is a shallow ocean basin which constrains physical processes such as currents and convection. To the west, the Greenland Sea forms a buffer region with some of the strongest temperature gradients on earth between Iceland and Greenland. The combination of a strong temperature gradient and westerlies influences air pressure, wind patterns, and storm tracks. The strong temperature contrast between sea ice and open water in the northern part sets the stage for polar lows, as well as heat and moisture exchange between ocean and atmosphere. Glaciers on the Arctic islands generate icebergs, which may drift in the Barents Sea subject to wind and ocean currents.The land encircling the Barents Sea includes regions with permafrost and tundra. Precipitation comes mainly from synoptic storms and weather fronts; it falls as snow in the winter and rain in the summer. The land area is snow-covered in winter, and rivers in the region drain the rainwater and meltwater into the Barents Sea. Pronounced natural variations in the seasonal weather statistics can be linked to variations in the polar jet stream and Rossby waves, which result in a clustering of storm activity, blocking high-pressure systems. The Barents region is subject to rapid climate change due to a “polar amplification,” and observations from Svalbard suggest that the past warming trend ranks among the strongest recorded on earth. The regional change is reinforced by a number of feedback effects, such as receding sea-ice cover and influx of mild moist air from the south.
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