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1

K'Meyer, T. E. "Interview: An Interview with Willa K. Baum: A Career at the Regional Oral History Office." Oral History Review 24, no. 1 (June 1, 1997): 91–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ohr/24.1.91.

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2

Sugarman, Tammy S. "Suffragists Oral History Project200619Suffragists Oral History Project. Berkeley, CA: University of California, Berkeley, Bancroft Library, Regional Oral History Office Last visited July 2005. Gratis URL: http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/ROHO/ohonline/suffragists.html." Reference Reviews 20, no. 1 (January 2006): 29–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/09504120610638492.

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3

Jeremic, Marko, Ana Vukovic, Dejan Markovic, Rade Vukovic, and Ninoslav Stanojlovic. "History of Dentistry in Central Serbia." Balkan Journal of Dental Medicine 20, no. 3 (November 1, 2016): 138–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/bjdm-2016-0022.

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Summary History of dentistry in the Central Serbian District of Jagodina has been influenced by traditional medicine for centuries. Development of dentistry in the region of Jagodina was slow, the level of oral and general hygiene was low and the sanitary prevention was absent. Trained physicians started to practice medicine and dentistry in the first half of the nineteenth century and they were educated in abroad universities. However, common people used to address to these physicians only when the traditional medicine were unable to help. Until the end of the World War II, common, mostly rural people, with the urgent dental treatment need were usually referred to the barbers, healers or empirics in the nearby villages rather than the dentists. Medications used for the urgent dental treatment were balsams and solutions made of herbs. After the World War II, the dental technicians who finished special courses started to practice dentistry. In 1947 the Regional Dental Office in Jagodina was opened and in 1955 the first Doctor of Dental Medicine who graduated from the School of Dental Medicine of University of Belgrade was employed. Nowadays, the Department of Dentistry represents is an important and independent part of the Health Care Centre in Jagodina.
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4

Lima, Tony, and Norma Schroder. "Ernest Gallo, 1909–2007: A Life in Wine." Journal of Wine Economics 2, no. 2 (2007): 109–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1931436100000377.

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Everyone knows the name Ernest Gallo. With his brother Julio they started the E&J Gallo Winery in Modesto, California in 1932. In 70 years the winery grew to be the largest in the world. Some evidence of the scale of the Gallo Winery's operations can be found in the interview itself.“We will crush this year [1971] somewhere around 650,000 tons of grapes. We will produce only somewhere in the area of 50,000 tons” (Gallo, 1995, p.31).A ton of grapes produces about 150 gallons of wine (Gallo, 1995). In 1971 the Gallo winery produced about 105,000,000 gallons of wine. That's a large operation by any standard.This paper is based on an interview with Ernest Gallo conducted during the period 1969–1971 by the Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.
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5

Steen, Harold K. "Building the Sierra Club's National Lobbying Program, 1967–1981. Brock Evans: Environmental Campaigner; From the Northwest Forests to the Halls of Congress and W. Lloyd Tupling: Sierra Club Washington Representative, 1967–1973. Interviewed by Ann Lage. (Berkeley: University of California Regional Oral History Office, 1985. iv + 299 and iii + 54 pp. $53.00.)." Forest & Conservation History 30, no. 2 (April 1986): 95–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4004937.

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Boyd, Doug. "STORIES FROM THE COLLECTION: COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY ORAL HISTORY RESEARCH OFFICE." Oral History Review 28, no. 2 (September 2001): 137–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ohr.2001.28.2.137.

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7

Carlsen, C. "Review Essay: Oral History, Multiculturalism, and Regional Publishers." Oral History Review 21, no. 1 (March 1, 1993): 103–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ohr/21.1.103.

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8

Postnikov, Mikhail, Alexey Gabrielyan, Dimitry Trunin, Artur Kerosirov, Oleg Kaganov, Valentina Kirillova, Vladimir Potapov, and Christina Ganina. "IMPROVED DIAGNOSISFOR ORAL MUCOSAL TUMORSIN THE DENTIST’S OFFICE." Archiv Euromedica 11, no. 1 (March 27, 2021): 104–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.35630/2199-885x/2021/11/1.24.

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Based on currently available literature, clinical examination remains the major method when handling cases of suspected malignancy. However, this method does not allow diagnosing cancer, due to which a large group of patients with possible oral mucosa cancer are referred to an oncologist. The search and use of affordable non-invasive methods for early diagnosis of oral mucosa tumors is an urgent issue facing the health system. The study involved analyzing 134 records of outpatients examined at the Samara Regional Oncological Clinic who were referred by dentists within 2014-2019 from the local polyclinic in Samara due to detection of tumors in oral mucosa and who underwent a biopsy. The patients were divided into two groups according to the examination methods. The inclusion criteria were: detection of various superficial oral mucosa neoplasms; referral from the dentist. The exclusion criteria were as follows: patients with submucosal oral cavity neoplasms referred to the oncologist by other medical specialists or self-referred patients. The control group included 63 patients who, after a conventional examination (including interview, examination, palpation), underwent an incisional biopsy followed by morphological examination at the oncologist’s office. In the major group, in 71 patients at their respective initial dental appointments a special examination algorithm was applied. This algorithm entailed an assessment of the identified risk factors. Indications for biopsy were identified using the histological verification index (HVI). Apart from the conventional examination methods (interview, examination, palpation), autofluorescence stomatoscopy was used, this being done for the purpose of differential diagnostics of inflammation, precancerous and malignant issues, depending on the glow type. In the main group, the initial stages of oral mucosa cancer were detected in 17 patients after biopsy; in the control group – in 4 patients (p=0.004). The developed algorithm used for scoring the patient’s clinical examination data combined with autofluorescence stomatoscopy allowed diagnosing accurately (90% of reliability) precancerous and cancerous diseases, as well as to use invasive research methods (biopsy) strictly following the indications. Aim of study: to improve diagnosis of oral mucosa neoplasms through improvement of the examination algorithm.
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9

Marquardt‐Bigman, Petra. "Project communication: An oral history of the office of strategic services." Intelligence and National Security 12, no. 2 (April 1997): 161–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02684529708432419.

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10

Ashby, Leroy. "The U.S. senate historical office oral history collection: Interviews with senate staff." Government Publications Review 15, no. 4 (July 1988): 379–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0277-9390(88)90012-x.

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11

Sciora, Romuald. "Views from the Secretary-General’s Office: An oral history of the United Nations." International Politics Reviews 6, no. 1 (May 2018): 74–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/s41312-018-0051-y.

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Sciora, Romuald. "Views from the Secretary-General’s Office: An oral history of the United Nations." International Politics Reviews 6, no. 1 (May 2018): 93–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/s41312-018-0052-x.

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Sciora, Romuald. "Views from the Secretary-General’s Office: An oral history of the United Nations." International Politics Reviews 6, no. 1 (May 2018): 88–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/s41312-018-0053-9.

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Sciora, Romuald. "Views from the Secretary-General’s Office: An oral history of the United Nations." International Politics Reviews 6, no. 1 (May 2018): 59–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/s41312-018-0054-8.

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Sciora, Romuald. "Views from the Secretary-General’s Office: An oral history of the United Nations." International Politics Reviews 6, no. 1 (May 2018): 45–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/s41312-018-0055-7.

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16

Sciora, Romuald. "Views from the Secretary-General’s Office: An oral history of the United Nations." International Politics Reviews 6, no. 1 (May 2018): 66–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/s41312-018-0056-6.

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17

Hamilton, C. A. "The Swaziland Oral History Project." History in Africa 14 (1987): 383–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3171851.

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In 1985 an oral history project was established in Swaziland, based in the National Archives at Lobamba. The Oral History Project set itself three tasks; the establishment of an oral archive on Swazi history; the publication of a selection of transcripts form the oral archive concerning the precolonial history of Swaziland; the popularization of precolonial history.The precolonial history of Swaziland is the history of a largely non–literate people. The colonial period is well–documented, but mostly from the perspective of the colonial administration. Oral traditions are thus a primary source for both the precolonial and the later history of Swaziland. The Project is concerned to preserve oral testimonies about all periods of Swazi history, including the immediate past. Special attention however, has been paid to the collection and preservation of the oral record pertaining to the precolonial history of Swaziland, a period for which documentary sources are largely absent.There are several reasons for this. Firstly, the relative stability of the Swazi kingdom and its high degree of centralization imparted to early Swazi traditions a unique chronological depth. Secondly, the varied circumstances of incorporation of its many component chiefdoms have endowed Swaziland with an exceptionally rich corpus of local and regional traditons. This diversity facilitates the development of a picture of precolonial life that moves beyond the elitist versions of history which have long dominated both Swazi history and precolonial history elsewhere in southern Africa. Not only are the surviving Swazi oral traditions about the precolonial past unusually rich, but Swaziland occupied a pivotal political position in nineteenth–century southeast Africa. Its traditions illuminate the processes and forces that shaped the history of the entire region
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18

Leveratto, Jean-Marc, and Fabrice Montebello. "Ethnography as a tool of cinema history." Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media, no. 11 (August 17, 2016): 62–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.33178/alpha.11.04.

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This article shows the heuristic value of a film consumption study that combines oral archives and fieldwork with written sources. Oral archives on film consumption provided by a local film market of Longwy, an industrial town of north-eastern France, during the 1950s allow the researcher to reconstruct the audience’s collective experience of the films released on this market. Combined with a systematic study of local releases and their box office, they give us access to the artistic expertise of local filmgoers in the past and motivate us to challenge the conventional interpretation of film consumption as the ostensibly predictable expression of a social taste.
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19

Jeremić, Marko, Predrag Ćirić, Dejan Marković, and Ana Vuković. "Children with special needs in the dental office." Zdravstvena zastita 49, no. 4 (2020): 53–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/zdravzast49-27433.

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People with disabilities may experience negative relation between their own personal potentials compared to environmental expectations and potentials of healthy peers in terms of functional participation and activity limitations. Therefore, they usually need an individualized dental treatment plan. Dentists have an important role in maintaining and improving oral health in this vulnerable group. Having in mind the United Nation's Declaration on Human Rights, patients with disabilities have human rights to achieve equal health outcomes as their healthy peers. Therefore, all preventive, prophylactic, and therapeutic interventions need to be carefully planned. In addition to precise medical history, the dentist should also have basic psychological knowledge to adjust the approach to patient's needs. Improving the oral health of patients with disabilities involves a primary, secondary, or tertiary level of oral health care, depending on patient's abilities and needs. The team work and a multidisciplinary approach, with the cooperation of experts of different profiles and specialties, is the only approach that gives satisfactory results.
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20

Hudon, William V., Margot E. Fassler, and Rebecca A. Baltzer. "The Divine Office in the Latin Middle Ages: Methodology and Source Studies, Regional Developments, Hagiography." Sixteenth Century Journal 32, no. 3 (2001): 865. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2671569.

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21

Dagli, Pallavi, Jyotsna Singh, Jay Sheth, and Khyati Kakkad. "Incorporation of Dental Health Screening in Paediatric Office Practice." Journal of Nepal Paediatric Society 37, no. 2 (February 24, 2018): 138–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/jnps.v37i2.17028.

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Introduction: Dental health problems in children are often overlooked. Poor oral health negatively affects growth, learning, communication, self-esteem and rarely can also lead to serious fatal infection. Paediatrician can play key role in screening dental health problems. The objectives of this study were to screen children for dental caries in paediatric office and correlate with socio-demographic, dietary and oral hygiene risk factors.Material and Methods: After basic oral health training, paediatrician assessed oral health risk factors with pre-validated questionnaire and carried out dental examination at paediatric OPD.Results: Dental health problems were found in 364(42.8%) out of 850 subjects. Age was significantly associated (p<0.0001) with type of teeth involved. Incisors were most affected in infants and involvement of posterior teeth increased with age. Statistically significant (p<0.05) oral health risk factors were increasing age, lower socio-economic status, malnutrition, lower parents’ education, positive family history, bottle feeding, increased consumption of biscuits, fizzy drinks and chewing gum; delayed start and less time spent on brushing, infrequent change of toothbrush, incorrect brushing technique, inadequate parental knowledge and supervision.Conclusion: Dental screening can easily be incorporated in busy paediatric practice. An identification and record of individual risk factor is useful in selecting counselling strategies and monitoring.
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22

Elman, Philip, and Norman Silber. "The Solicitor General's Office, Justice Frankfurter, and Civil Rights Litigation, 1946-1960: An Oral History." Harvard Law Review 100, no. 4 (February 1987): 817. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1341096.

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23

Casely-Hayford, Augustus. "Prosopographical Approaches to Fante History." History in Africa 18 (1991): 49–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3172053.

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Some of the earliest books written by Gold Coast writers were about then-own family histories and stool institutions. These writers took advantage of the established oral tradition and the authorized stool histories. Such works represent a form of written history that was designed to transcribe and incorporate systematically as much oral tradition as possible. It is only when the oral sources are deficient or are ambiguous that the early European traveler's accounts are used to check or verify the oral sources. There are many reasons why much of the first generation of indigenous literature is by and about a small group of Fante. One undoubted reason is that these early books combine an academic pursuit with a family responsibility to the position of Linguist or Okyiame.The word Kyiame is commonly translated “linguist,” but this is unfortunate because it conveys the impression that the Kyiame is no more than an interpreter. In reality the Kyiame is the spokesman or mouthpiece of the Chief, who, being held sacred, must neither be addressed by, nor address another person directly. According to J. B. Danquah, the word means “He who makes it perfect for me”: the Kyiame repeats and perfects what the Chief, who cannot always be an eloquent speaker, may have to say in public. He is a confidential officer whose place is at the Chiefs right hand; in the Council and Court of Judicature it is he who sums up and declares the Chiefs will. He preserves in his memory and passes on the tradition of the Stool. Deeply versed in the etiquette of the court, he instructs a newly appointed Chief. He can often turn the scales of war and peace since the issue of dispute between contending tribes may depend on whether he presents his Chiefs case in a bellicose manner. When he rises to speak in public he leans upon the gold cane or staff of his office, or a subordinate holds it in front of him. He may be sent by the Chief as a plenipotentiary or legate. What he says binds his Chief. There are two of the office. The superior grade is hereditary and is termed Omankyiame, i.e. the Kyiame of the whole Oman or Council.
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NAKANIWA, Mitsuhiko. "Condition for Making Smart Decision of Regional Development with Oral History as Lesson." Annals of Japan Association for Urban Sociology 2009, no. 27 (2009): 49–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.5637/jpasurban.2009.49.

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25

Ermer, Glenn R., Brenda J. McEleney, and Iris J. West. "An Oral History of the “Joint” Nursing Experience at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center." Military Medicine 165, no. 2 (February 1, 2000): 131–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/milmed/165.2.131.

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26

Lenton, Adam Charles. "Office Politics: Tatarstan’s Presidency and the Symbolic Politics of Regionalism." Russian Politics 6, no. 3 (July 29, 2021): 301–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.30965/24518921-00603002.

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Abstract This article explores developments in center-region relations between the Russian federal government and the Republic of Tatarstan, a federal subject of the Russian Federation. I argue that instrumentalist accounts are unable to satisfactorily explain several key moments in Tatarstan’s relations with the federal center, and that a focus on symbolic politics provides important analytical leverage. I examine three such episodes: aborted plans to introduce a Latin script for the Tatar language in 1999, the expiration of treaty-based relations and the assault on the region’s Tatar-language education policy in 2017, and the institution of the presidency – which exists to this day. In all three cases, interest-based explanations alone fail to account for what actually happened, whereas ideational explanations can help explain and interpret regional leaders’ actions. This has important implications for how we understand regional political dynamics in Russia amidst conditions of centralization.
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27

Kiba, D. V. "Humanitarian Cooperation of Japan and the USSR in the Second Half of the 20th Century." Modern History of Russia 11, no. 1 (2021): 199–213. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu24.2021.113.

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The article provides a periodization of humanitarian cooperation between Japan and the USSR. The first stage was activity of the Press Office of the Soviet Union Council for Japan and the Soviet Information Office in the Land of the Rising Sun in 1946–1957. The second stage was the period of active policy of the USSR Embassy, together with the State Committee for Cultural Relations under the USSR Council of Ministers in 1957–1967. The third stage was defined by the activity of Soviet Embassy and Regional Authorities of Japan and the USSR in establishing cultural relations in 1967–1985. The fourth stage was humanitarian cooperation of both countries carried out under terms of the Soviet-Japan cultural agreement signed in 1986. The fourth stage covers the period from 1986 to 1991. The article identifies the main forms of humanitarian cooperation between two countries. The author believes that connections in the sphere of art were dominant. The Japanese public was an active subject of bilateral relations. The author considers the membership of the Soviet-Japan Friendship Movement and its participants (public organizations, Piece Movement, choral and musical collectives, private companies of Japan) and reveals the reasons for the Japanese public’s interest in Soviet culture based on archival documents and materials of the Japanese and Soviet periodicals. The author points out that the regional cooperation between two countries developed significantly and emphasizes the special role of the USSR Far East as a contact region with Japan.
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Tabata, Wonga. "THE SOUTH AFRICAN HISTORY PROJECT (SAHP) OF THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION – A REFLECTION ON ACHIEVEMENTS, CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES: 2001–2006." Oral History Journal of South Africa 3, no. 1 (January 5, 2016): 15–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.25159/2309-5792/327.

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 This article deals with the contribution of the South African History Project (SAHP) to the development and strengthening of History in the schooling system. One of the key components of the South African History Project was Oral History and Indigenous Knowledge Systems. The national project trained hundreds of school and office-based educators in oral history methodology. It also established ties with the heritage sector. Through oral history, South African historical voices became more diverse and new history materials were developed and introduced in South African public schools. This led to a fresh interpretation of history and an introduction of new materials with a focus on Africa.
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29

Warrin, Donald. "Projecto português do gabinete de história oral regional (Biblioteca de Bancroft, Universidade de Berkeley – Califórnia)." Ler História, no. 56 (May 1, 2009): 211–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/lerhistoria.2027.

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30

Kowalczyk, Krzysztof. "Materiały jednostek wojewódzkiej administracji wyznaniowej w Archiwum Państwowym w Szczecinie jako źródło do dziejów stosunków państwo-Kościół rzymskokatolicki w latach 1945–1989." Archeion, no. 121 (2020): 306–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/26581264arc.20.011.12968.

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Materials of the regional religious administration units in the Szczecin State Archives as a source on the history of the relations between the state and the Roman Catolic Church between 1945 and 1989 The purpose of the article is to analyse the materials of the Szczecin National Archives created by the regional administration units responsible for religious matters as the sources regarding the history of the relations between the state and the Roman Catholic Church between 1945 and 1989. It defines the group of entities implementing the religious policy at a central and regional level, with a special focus on administration. It analyses the contents of the archival fonds that included materials created by organisational units responsible for religious issues. The following methods were used to address the research problem: a historical method, an institutional & legal method, the system method and case study. The files of the religious administration unit can be found in the Szczecin archives in the following fonds: the Szczecin Regional Office, the Executive Committee of the Regional National Council in Szczecin, Regional Office in Szczecin. The materials from those fonds make it possible to recreate various aspects of the religious policy pursued by the state: hindering the pastoral work and religious education for children and teenagers, limiting the property of the church, attempting to create a rift between the clergymen. They contain important information about the social and political attitudes of priests.
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Kowalczyk, Krzysztof. "Materiały jednostek wojewódzkiej administracji wyznaniowej w Archiwum Państwowym w Szczecinie jako źródło do dziejów stosunków państwo-Kościół rzymskokatolicki w latach 1945–1989." Archeion, no. 121 (2020): 306–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/26581264arc.20.011.12968.

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Materials of the regional religious administration units in the Szczecin State Archives as a source on the history of the relations between the state and the Roman Catolic Church between 1945 and 1989 The purpose of the article is to analyse the materials of the Szczecin National Archives created by the regional administration units responsible for religious matters as the sources regarding the history of the relations between the state and the Roman Catholic Church between 1945 and 1989. It defines the group of entities implementing the religious policy at a central and regional level, with a special focus on administration. It analyses the contents of the archival fonds that included materials created by organisational units responsible for religious issues. The following methods were used to address the research problem: a historical method, an institutional & legal method, the system method and case study. The files of the religious administration unit can be found in the Szczecin archives in the following fonds: the Szczecin Regional Office, the Executive Committee of the Regional National Council in Szczecin, Regional Office in Szczecin. The materials from those fonds make it possible to recreate various aspects of the religious policy pursued by the state: hindering the pastoral work and religious education for children and teenagers, limiting the property of the church, attempting to create a rift between the clergymen. They contain important information about the social and political attitudes of priests.
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32

Kosmovskaya, А. А. "“USED FOR TRANSPORTATION FOR RUNS AND SUPPLIES...”: EXPENSES OF THE SOLIKAMSK VOIVODSHIP OFFICE IN THE 1720s–1780s." Вестник Пермского университета. История, no. 1(52) (2021): 129–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.17072/2219-3111-2021-1-129-142.

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The article analyzes the expenses of the Solikamsk voivodship office in the 1720s – 1780s. The problems of forming the expenditure part of the budgets of county institutions at the heyday of absolute monarchy seem to be poorly studied at the regional level. The author systematizes the data on the expenditure of local offices based on the study of materials of expendable and income books, extracts, books of worldly elders, arrears, salary books and other financial documents of the 18th century, many of which were introduced into scientific circulation for the first time. The Solikamsk voevodsky office spent the funds received from the population in accordance with the government's policy in each specific historical period. In the 1720s, the Solikamsk voivodship office financed the creation of enterprises in the Urals, hired workers to build factories, and payed for the services of a surveyor. All fees for various types of tax receipts were recorded in the current documentation of the provincial offices, which makes it possible to assess the items of income and expenses during the study period. The article concludes that local authorities were fulfilling the task of collecting taxes, and the office budget was surplus during the study period. The main part of the collected money went to the central departments for further use. The rest of the money went to the current needs of the voivodship office. The most significant expense items were payments to the Сhamber Board, the State Office, the Berg College, and the Kazan Admiralty Office. The financial activity of the office was associated with the wine monopoly (payment for wine and barrels). Administrative and economic expenses for their own needs did not make up such a significant part of money resources as compared to sending them to central departments. The presence of a constant cash balance in the Solikamsk office proves the success of the voivodship office during the period under study.
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Havik, Philip J. "Regional cooperation and health diplomacy in Africa: from intra-colonial exchanges to multilateral health institutions." História, Ciências, Saúde-Manguinhos 27, suppl 1 (September 2020): 123–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0104-59702020000300007.

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Abstract Tracing the pathways of cooperation in health in sub-Saharan Africa from hesitant exchanges to institutionalized dimensions from the 1920s to the early 1960s, this article addresses regional dynamics in health diplomacy which have so far been under-researched. The evolution thereof from early beginnings with the League of Nations Health Organization to the Commission for Technical Assistance South of the Sahara and the World Health Organization’s Regional Office for Africa, shows how bilateral dimensions were superseded by WHO’s multilateral model of regional cooperation in health. Alignments, divergences, and outcomes are explored with respect to the strategies and policies pursued by colonial powers and independent African states regarding inter-regional relations, and their implications for public health and epidemiological interventions.
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Nikiforov, Yu S. "Tolyatti’s Rivals: The Volga Cities Competing for the New Automobile Plant as an Instance of Regional Lobbying in the Late Socialism Era." Herald of an archivist, no. 3 (2020): 862–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.28995/2073-0101-2020-3-862-874.

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The article addresses the topic of interactions of center and periphery in the recent national history. The publication of the office memorandums that are being thus introduced into scientific use throws light on the construction of the industrial plant. The article examines the problem of regional lobbying in the USSR in the mid-1960s, at the dawn of the Brezhnev era. It focuses on the declassified archival documents from the Russian State Archive of Socio-Political History (RGASPI) and the Center for Documentation on the Contemporary History of the Yaroslavl Region (TsDNIYaO). The article analyzes office memorandums on the organization of a new car plant. The record keeping documents of 1965, sent to the Bureau of the Central Committee of the CPSU for the RSFSR from several regions, are well reasoned petitions. The authors of the memos are Soviet regional leaders of the 1960s: A. A. Skochilov and V. P. Vasiliev (the Ulyanovsk Obkom of the CPSU and the Regional Executive Committee), S. L. Knyazev (Tatar Obkom of the CPSU), F. I. Loschenkov (Yaroslavl Obkom of the CPSU). The analysis of the documents provides answers to a number of questions. Firstly, what were the general trends of lobbying for regional interests in the system of arguments of the local elite? Secondly, what hidden potential problems of regional development of the RSFSR in the mid-1960s can be traced in the petitions of Soviet regional leaders? Thirdly, what were the peculiarities of the local elite language in lobbying for regional interests? Well-reasoned petitions of regional leaders of the late Soviet era on the organization of a new industrial facility are original and little-studied historical sources. The analyzed type of archival documents carries high source study potential, it is of great value for studying regional lobbyism in the early Brezhnev era. The study of such documents can shed light on the invisible processes of the economic life of the late USSR.
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35

Bestor, Jane Fair. "Bastardy and Legitimacy in the Formation of a Regional State in Italy: The Estense Succession." Comparative Studies in Society and History 38, no. 3 (July 1996): 549–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417500020053.

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In Italy during the Renaissance, an age that conjures up open systems of succession and ruthless dynastic struggle, the House of Este stood out for its singular succession practices. For almost one hundred and fifty years, illegitimately born Estense princes held office. Pope Pius II (r. 1458–64) marvelled:It is an extraordinary thing about that family that within our fathers' memory no legitimate heir has ever inherited the principate; the sons of their mistresses have been so much more fortunate than those of their wives. It is a circumstance contrary not only to Christian custom but to the law of almost all nations.
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36

Vorontsov, Mikhail S., and Yuriy S. Nikiforov. ""All in hand": images of power and communicative practices of regional elites in later years of the USSR through the prism of spoken history." Vestnik of Kostroma State University, no. 4 (2019): 58–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.34216/1998-0817-2019-25-4-58-64.

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Oral history data, which were obtained during interviews with representatives of the Soviet regional elite of the second half of the 1960s to 1980s, were analysed as part of the study of the processes of interaction between the Upper Volga regions' local authorities and Moscow. The main attention of the authors of the article is focused on images of power and on communicative practices of regional elites in the later period of existence of the USSR. An attempt to reconstruct the mechanisms and strategies of the regional elite of the Soviet province, including bureaucratic procedures and communicative practices, images and scenarios of power in the local authority functioning in the 1960s to 1980s, is undertaken in terms of oral history. The theoretical-methodological basis of the work is related to the ideas of Viktor Mokhov about regional elites; of Paul Thompson and Marina Sokolova, about the functionality of oral history; to Alexei Yurchak's concept about the last days of socialism; to Richard S. Wortman's scenarius of power.
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37

Holmes, Larry E. "Part of History: The Oral Record and Moscow’s Model School No. 25, 1931-1937." Slavic Review 56, no. 2 (1997): 279–306. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2500786.

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All’s quiet now. Summer vacation has started, the halls and classrooms are deserted. Almost. It is 10 July 1992 and I am inside Moscow’s School No. 175 with Vladimir Dmitrievich Nikolaev, a pupil here from 1933 to 1941. Once this was School No. 25, hallowed ground, from 1931 to 1937 the most famous school in the Soviet Union, where a talented teaching corps instructed the children of Stalin and other representatives of the Soviet elite. The winner of many awards, School No. 25 was the object of my research for several years. It's a bit unnerving to imagine the sounds and images of the people who worked and played in these very rooms sixty years ago. Nikolaev interrupts, then enhances the experience: “This was the library; the deputy director’s office was here; Svetlana, Stalin’s daughter, and I were in the same literature class there.”
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38

Klaebe, Helen. "FACILITATING LOCAL STORIES IN POST-DISASTER REGIONAL COMMUNITIES: EVALUATION IN NARRATIVE-DRIVEN ORAL HISTORY PROJECTS." Oral History Journal of South Africa 1, no. 1 (September 23, 2016): 125–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.25159/2309-5792/1599.

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Cyclone Yasi struck the Cassowary Coast of Northern Queensland, Australia, in the early hours of 3 February 2011, destroying many homes and property, including the destruction of the Cardwell and District Historical Society’s (CDHS) premises. With their own homes flattened, many residents were forced to live in mobile accommodation, with extended family, or leave the area altogether. The historical society members seemed, however, particularly devastated by their flattened foreshore museum and loss of their precious collection of material. A call for assistance was made through the Oral History Association of Australia’s Queensland branch (OHAA-Qld), which, along with a Queensland University of Technology (QUT) research team, sponsored a trip to best plan how they could start to pick up the pieces to rebuild the museum. This article highlights the need for communities to gather, preserve and present their own stories, in a way that is sustainable and meaningful to them – whether it is because of a disaster, or as they go about life in their contemporary communities – the key being that good advice, professional support and embedded evaluation practices at crucial moments along the way can be critically important.
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39

YAGASAKI, Taiyo, and Tomohiro ICHINOSE. "Regional Memory and Image before the Great East Japan Earthquake Narrated in Residents' Oral History." JOURNAL OF RURAL PLANNING ASSOCIATION 32, Special_Issue (2013): 209–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.2750/arp.32.209.

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40

SHETLER, JAN BENDER. "INTERPRETING RUPTURE IN ORAL MEMORY: THE REGIONAL CONTEXT FOR CHANGES IN WESTERN SERENGETI AGE ORGANIZATION (1850–1895)." Journal of African History 44, no. 3 (November 2003): 385–412. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021853703008491.

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This essay argues that the apparent discrepancies between oral tradition and other kinds of historical evidence in the western Serengeti, Tanzania, result from a rupture in time and space. As people were incorporated into a meta-ethnic region to the east dominated by the Maasai in the last half of the nineteenth century, they created new ways of calculating time and organizing space based on new kinds of age-sets. Within this larger context of widespread disasters the small, unconsolidated western Serengeti ethnic groups that we now know as Nata, Ikoma, Ishenyi and Ngoreme formed their identities. New generational and gender contests of power came into play as western Serengeti peoples responded creatively to the pressures of the late nineteenth century by mobilizing their own internal cultural resources.
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41

Sivalal, Sadasivan. "History of health technology assessment: A commentary." International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care 25, S1 (July 2009): 285–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266462309090771.

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I have long felt the need for documentation on the global development—I could probably pin it to the moment I was visiting health technology assessment (HTA) institutions in the United States in 1995, and was looking forward to a trip to the Office of Technology Assessment, only to be told it had just been shut. Instead, I visited the Office of Health Technology Assessment in Washington. In addition, I have observed that some regular attendees of annual meetings of International Society of Technology Assessment in Health Care (ISTAHC) and then Health Technology Assessment International (HTAi), have been slowly dropping out, so that a lot of the history as well as their valuable experiences and expertise have been lost. To be fair, studies have been written about specific HTA institutions, programs, countries, and even regions. Attempts have also been made to chart the history of HTA, but these have, however, fizzled out. Why is this important? Going back to my personal experience, when I first set out to establish HTA in Malaysia, I was plagued with several questions—apart from the obvious one about what HTA really meant, there were others like what organization structure should it have, what should be the work process, how could HTA be used, to name a few. I needed to know what the options were, for example, in coming up with an organizational structure, and to understand these options I would need to look at organizational models in other countries—should it be a national office with regional offices like the Canadian model, or a fully public agency but not within the department of health, like the Swedish model, or an almost independent agency like the Catalan agency in Barcelona. In the absence of a detailed account with the information I sought, I actually had to physically visit various agencies to study their organizational structure, work process, and application, to hear of the challenges they faced, and to learn from their experiences of what could work and what may not.
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42

Edinborough, Kevan, Marko Porčić, Andrew Martindale, Thomas Jay Brown, Kisha Supernant, and Kenneth M. Ames. "Radiocarbon test for demographic events in written and oral history." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114, no. 47 (October 30, 2017): 12436–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1713012114.

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We extend an established simulation-based method to test for significant short-duration (1–2 centuries) demographic events known from one documented historical and one oral historical context. Case study 1 extrapolates population data from the Western historical tradition using historically derived demographic data from the catastrophic European Black Death/bubonic plague (Yersinia pestis). We find a corresponding statistically significant drop in absolute population using an extended version of a previously published simulation method. Case study 2 uses this refined simulation method to test for a settlement gap identified in oral historical records of descendant Tsimshian First Nations communities from the Prince Rupert Harbour region of the Pacific Northwest region of British Columbia, Canada. Using a regional database of n = 523 radiocarbon dates, we find a significant drop in relative population using the extended simulation-based method consistent with Tsimshian oral records. We conclude that our technical refinement extends the utility of radiocarbon simulation methods and can provide a rigorous test of demographic predictions derived from a range of historical sources.
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43

Torpy, David M. "Regional Secure Units: The Creation of a Policy." Journal of Social Policy 18, no. 4 (October 1989): 549–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0047279400001859.

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ABSTRACTThis paper examines the historical context of the policy decision of the (then) DHSS in July 1974 to establish Regional Secure Units with an initial provision for 1,000 places. A brief examination of the history of the detention of the criminally insane and the setting up of the county asylums is followed by an examination of the various problems faced by the authorities concerned with the care of the criminally insane and the mentally ill in general in the 1960s. The paper examines the different streams of influence and power that converged upon this solution: government, special hospitals, public inquiries, unlocking of hospital wards, criminal law, DHSS and the Home Office, judges, voluntary bodies, prisons, psychiatrists and the official government reports known as the Glancy and the Butler Reports. The paper seeks to explain the policy decision to build regional secure units as a dynamic outcome arising from the confluence of opportunities, participants and solutions: a policy formation model put forward by March and Olsen (1976).
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Siemaszko, Karol. "W prowincjonalnym mieście na ziemiach zachodnich. O Prokuraturze Sądu Okręgowego w Głogowie z siedzibą w Nowej Soli (1945–1950)." Krakowskie Studia z Historii Państwa i Prawa 14, no. 2 (2021): 205–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/20844131ks.21.014.13522.

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In a Provincial City in Western Poland. Concerning the Prosecutor’s Office of the District Court in Głogów with Its Seat in Nowa Sól (1945–1950) After World War II, a number of territories that had belonged to Germany before 1945 were incorpo­rated into those of the Polish state. The change of borders resulted in the need to build structures of the Polish judiciary and prosecutor’s offices in these territories. This article is devoted to describing the functioning of the Prosecutor’s Office of the Regional Court in Głogów with its seat in Nowa Sól. The history of this office is an example of how prosecutors’ offices operated in difficult post-war conditions in the recovered territories, as well as of relations between the prosecutors’ offices and other public authorities such as the Citizens’ Militia or the judiciary.
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45

Shcheglova, T. K. "Thirty years in the field: problems and prospects for the development of regional ethnography and regional oral history in the Altai Territory." Field studies in the Upper Ob, Irtysh and Altai (archeology, ethnography, oral history and museology) 15 (2020): 263–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.37386/2687-0584-2020-15-263-271.

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The article examines the conditions, features, results, problems and prospects for the development of science in universities using the example of the formation of a scientific school of ethnography at the Altai Pedagogical University. It is concluded that in most regions of Siberia, in the absence of academic structures, it is universities that are research centers, the advantages and disadvantages of university science are analyzed, as well as trends in its development in recent decades.
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46

Shaw, Alexander Nicholas. "Propaganda intelligence and covert action: the Regional Information Office and British intelligence in South-East Asia, 1949-1961." Journal of Intelligence History 19, no. 1 (September 5, 2019): 51–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16161262.2019.1659579.

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47

Huesing, S. A. "IMIA – A 40 Year Organizational Overview*." Yearbook of Medical Informatics 16, no. 01 (August 2007): 186–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1638547.

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SummaryTo chronicle the history of IMIA, the International Medical Informatics Association, from 1967 to 2007.Describing the key events and accomplishments through the terms of office of its presidents.The IMIA of today has been shaped by the individuals within it. Those influencing and guiding IMIA from its origins to today include its national representatives, Board and Presidents, working group members, regional liaisons, and MedInfo attendees.
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48

Saavedra, Monica. "Politics and Health at the WHO Regional Office for South East Asia: The Case of Portuguese India, 1949–61." Medical History 61, no. 3 (June 12, 2017): 380–400. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/mdh.2017.34.

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This paper analyses how the 1950–61 conflict between Portugal and India over the territories that constituted Portuguese India (Goa, Daman and Diu) informed Portugal’s relations with the World Health Organization’s Regional Office for South East Asia (SEARO). The ‘Goa question’ determined the way international health policies were actually put into place locally and the meaning with which they were invested. This case study thus reveals the political production of SEARO as a dynamic space for disputes and negotiations between nation-states in decolonising Asia. In this context, health often came second in the face of contrasting nationalistic projects, both colonial and post-colonial.
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49

Passerini, Luisa. "A Memory for Women’s History: Problems of Method and Interpretation." Social Science History 16, no. 4 (1992): 669–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0145553200016692.

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This essay describes an oral history project that accompanied the establishment of an archive on the history of recent feminism in the region of Emilia-Romagna, Italy. The archive, which contains both written and oral historical sources, is now in existence at the library of the Bologna’s Women’s Center, the Centro di Documentazione delle Donne. Raffaella Lamberti (1989) has explained why it was politically important for the Women’s Center to establish such an archive. It should be noted that the Centro di Documentazione, since it was officially proposed in March 1982, has been a totally independent institution, although it draws financial and administrative support from the Regional Administration of Emilia-Romagna.
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Kishchenkov, M. S., Yu S. Nikiforov, and D. V. Tumakov. "Yaroslavl Regional Elite Bureaucratic Practices in Working with Citizens’ Letters in the USSR of the 1960s." Modern History of Russia 11, no. 1 (2021): 134–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu24.2021.109.

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This article examines processes that took place in regional centers in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Issues of interaction between the regional party apparatus and ordinary citizens became particularly acute by the end of the Khrushchev era. This study is connected with the analysis of the problem of bureaucratic practices of the Yaroslavl regional elite in working with citizens’ letters in the USSR in the 1960s. We perform an analysis of a diverse source base: official regulatory documents, archival materials, sources of personal origin, including memoirs and interviews through a prism oral history. The context of the study is presented by the analysis of official documents revealing problems of the regional elite of the late socialist era: registry, forgery in state reporting, careerism. Consideration of various complaints took a serious place in the work of the regional bureaucracy. Critical letters in the absence of sociological institutions allowed the authorities to present the real moods and demands of the population. Complaints allowed us to identify the negative aspects of reality and respond to them. The materials contained in the letters were checked, and not always the facts they contained were confirmed. The regional nomenclature sought to protect its interests and not to give a reason for the center to perceive critical letters in its address as objective.
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