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1

Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Thirteenth Standing Committee on Delegated Legislation. Draft Freedom of Information (Removal and Relaxation of Statutory Prohibitions on Disclosure of Information) order 2004, Thursday 9 December 2004. London: Stationery Office, 2004.

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2

Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Regulatory Reform Committee. Proposal for the regulatory reform (removal of the 20 member limit) order 2002: Twelfth report of session 2001-02 : report, together with proceedings of the committee. London: Stationery Office, 2002.

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3

Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Regulatory Reform Committee. Draft Regulatory Reform(Removal of 20 Member Limit in Partnerships Etc) Order 2002: Fourteenth report of session 2001-02 : report, together with proceedings of the committee. London: Stationery Office, 2002.

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4

Ray shooting, depth orders and hidden surface removal. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1993.

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5

de Berg, Mark, ed. Ray Shooting, Depth Orders and Hidden Surface Removal. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bfb0029813.

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6

Society, Nottinghamshire Family History. Settlement certificates, examinations and removal orders (1696 to 1863) appertainingto Nottinghamshire. Nottingham: (The Society, 1985.

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7

Phyllis, Hembry, ed. Calendar of Bradford-on-Avon settlement examinations and removal orders, 1725-98. Trowbridge: Wiltshire Record Society, 1990.

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8

East Surrey Family History Society. Lambeth, Surrey: Register of orders of removals and adjudications outwards, 1767-1800. [Surrey]: The Society, 1993.

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9

Sotheby, Parke-Bernet, London. The contents of Fulbeck Hall, Lincolnshire: Removed for sale by order of the executors of the late Mary Fry, neé Fane : auction Tuesday 8 October 2002 .... London: Sotheby's, 2002.

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10

Moure, José, and Dominique Chateau, eds. Post-cinema. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463727235.

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Post-cinema designates a new way of making films. It is time to ask whether this novelty is complete or relative and to evaluate to what extent it represents a unitary or diversified current. The book proposes to integrate the post-cinema question within the post-art question in order to study the new ways of making filmic images. The issue will be considered at three levels: the impression of post-art on "regular" films; the "relocation" (Casetti) of the same films that can be seen using devices of all kinds in conditions more or less removed from the dispositif of the theater; the integration of cinema into contemporary art in all kinds of forms of creation and exhibition, parallel to the integration of contemporary art in "regular" cinema.
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11

Federighi, Paolo, and Francesca Torlone, eds. Low skilled take their qualifications "one step up". Florence: Firenze University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-6453-179-3.

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Adult learning is recognized as a key component of lifelong learning and Member States are required to remove barriers to participation, to increase overall quality and efficiency in adult learning, to speed up the process of validation and recognition and to ensure sufficient investment in and monitoring of the field (European Commission, 2006, 2007; European Parliament, 2008; European Council, 2008). It is unanimously recognized that adult learning can play a pivotal role in meeting the goals of the Lisbon Strategy, by fostering social cohesion, providing citizens with the skills required to find new jobs and helping Europe to better respond to the challenges of globalisation. Such needs are taken into consideration in this Volume where the main issues faced are related to what 33 European countries have been doing in order to raise the skills levels of low-skilled workers, address the problem of the high number of early school leavers, combat social exclusion, ensure the efficiency, effectiveness, quality of adult learning.
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12

Johnston, William Dawson. A catalogue of old and new books: Including many curious and rare works relating to America, Canada, etc., all in good order, unless where otherwise noted, for sale at the prices affixed, by William Johnston, dealer in old and new books, removed from 312 Yonge Street to 428 1/4 Younge Street, Toronto. [Toronto?: s.n., 1995.

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13

The Sheriff (Removal from Office) Order 1992 (Statutory Instruments: 1992: 1677 (). Stationery Office Books, 1992.

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14

Knocke. Removal of Soluble Manganese from Water by Oxide Coated Filter Media Order #90557. Amer Water Works Assn, 1989.

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15

The Value Added Tax (Removal of Goods) Order 1992 (Statutory Instruments: 1992: 3111). Stationery Office Books, 1992.

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16

The Airports (Designation) (Removal and Disposal of Vehicles) Order 1990 (Statutory Instruments: 1990: 54). Stationery Office Books, 1990.

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17

The Airports (Designation) (Removal and Disposal of Vehicles) (Amendment) Order 1993 (Statutory Instruments: 1993: 2117). Stationery Office Books, 1993.

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18

Britain, Great. The Scotland Act 1998 (Transitory and Transitional Provisions) (Removal of Judges) Order 1999 (Statutory Instruments: 1999: 1017). Stationery Office Books, 1999.

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19

Great Britain. Department of Health and Social Services, Northern Ireland. Estate Services Directorate., Great Britain. Department of Health and Social Services, Northern Ireland. Health and Personal Social Services Management Executive., and Great Britain, eds. Removal of crown immunity from health & social services bodies: The Health & Personal Social Services NI Order 1991. Belfast: Department of Health and Social Services, 1992.

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20

Cavelty, Myriam Dunn. Aligning Security Needs for Order in Cyberspace. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198828945.003.0006.

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Due to heightened threat perceptions, states are currently expanding their coercive power in cyberspace. They attempt to reduce the risk of escalation in (cybered-)conflict through traditional norms building. At the same time, their strategic actions remain the biggest threat to stability. Cyber-exploitations are a major part of the problem, hindering the removal of known insecurities, thus reducing the effectiveness of any future order. At the same time, the forceful role that states aspire to play in cyber-security has led to questions of legitimacy. The security arrangements that emerged in the 1990s, focused on protection and risk management, had a high degree of legitimacy because they built on a pragmatic solution of distributed security provision. Unless a future order in cyberspace takes into account the interests of companies and consumers who shape this domain in peacetime, it will be met with considerable resistance, with high costs for all sides.
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21

Darnell, P. W., and J. M. Hoesa. Emerging Technologies Bio Recovery System Removal and Recovery of Metal Ions from Groundwater/Order No. Pb90-252 (5941 Abs). Natl Technical Information, 1990.

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22

Wittendorp, Stef. Reinventing political order? A discourse view on the European Community and the abolition of border controls in the second half of the 1980s. Manchester University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526107459.003.0008.

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This chapter examines from a discourse perspective the debate on the abolition of border controls in the European Community (EC) in the second half of the 1980s. It analyses how the shifting constellation between the border as security device and as economic enabler made possible the removal of border controls as well as to conceive of new forms of regulating security and mobility. In a broader context, the chapter is critical of the view of the EC and now European Union as a post-national entity that has successfully moved beyond a divisionary and exclusive nationally-oriented politics. Instead, the regulation of mobility and thus the politics of inclusion and exclusion continues apace although perhaps in less visible and more unexpected places.
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23

McNeil, Bryan T. Introduction. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036439.003.0001.

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This introductory chapter sheds light on mountaintop removal coal mining and the ways people have reacted to it, including reimagining profound social and personal ideas like identity, history, and landscape. From a different perspective, it looks at the social processes that help create and continue to justify a monster like mountaintop removal, and about the social resources communities assemble to combat those processes. Conflicts of this sort are often associated with globalization. The chapter reveals how people experience in their daily lives the local effects of global processes. In their opposition to mountaintop removal and other coal industry practices, citizen activists narrate a revised version of local and regional history, in order to situate themselves and their position in relation to the black rock and its industry that had fed them for generations.
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24

Tamura, Eileen H. To Manzanar. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037788.003.0004.

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This chapter examines the forced removal and incarceration of the Nikkei. On February 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066. With a stroke of his pen, and without regard for the U.S. Constitution, the president set in motion the process of forced removal and incarceration of an entire people charged with no crime. This episode was “a historical moment when the cultural, racial, and national Otherness of the Asian was most lucidly articulated, most undisputed, and most resolutely dealt with by the American citizenry and state.” The executive order gave the Western Defense Commander, Lieutenant General John L. DeWitt, the power to exclude from designated “military areas” “any or all persons.” As such, Nikkei living within DeWitt's exclusion zone were then herded into temporary detention centers, officially called “Assembly Centers,” managed by the Wartime Civilian Control Administration (WCCA), an agency of the army's Western Defense Command (WDC).
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25

Park, Yoosun. Facilitating Injustice. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199765058.001.0001.

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Social workers were involved in all aspects of the removal, incarceration, and resettlement of the Nikkei, a history that has been forgotten by social work. This study is an effort to address this lacuna. Social work equivocated. While it did not fully endorse mass removal and incarceration, neither did it protest, oppose, or explicitly critique government actions. The past should not be judged by today’s standards; the actions and motivations described here occurred in a period rife with fear and propaganda. Undergoing a major shift from its private charity roots into its public sector future, social work bounded with the rest of society into “a patriotic fervor.” While policies of a government at war, intractable bureaucratic structures, tangled political alliances, and complex professional obligations all may have mandated compliance, it is, nevertheless, difficult to deny that social work and social workers were also willing participants in the events, informed about and aware of the implications of that compliance. In social work’s unwillingness to take a resolute stand against removal and incarceration, the well-intentioned profession, doing its conscious best to do good, enforced the existing social order and did its level best to keep the Nikkei from disrupting it.
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26

Leaver, Jane. Burns and plastic surgery. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199642663.003.0024.

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A burn is a thermal insult to the skin and underlying tissue. A good understanding of the physiology of burns is essential to effectively manage the burn patient’s care, in order to optimize recovery from a potentially life-threatening injury. An ABCDE approach is used to assess the patient, along with gaining a comprehensive history, including mechanisms of injury, the time elapsed since the burn, and any treatment already initiated. Plastic surgery is concerned with correcting or restoring form and function. It can involve reconstructive surgery, the treatment of burns, the removal of lesions, and cosmetic surgical procedures.
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27

Jordan, Jenna. Leadership Decapitation. Stanford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.11126/stanford/9781503608245.001.0001.

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Does leadership targeting work? This question lies at the heart of studies on the efficacy of counterterrorism policy. This book examines whether killing or arresting terrorists is an effective means by which to weaken and degrade a group’s operational capacity. It aims to identify and explain why decapitation works in some cases and not in others. In order to determine whether decapitation is an effective strategy, this project examines nearly one thousand instances of leadership targeting. A group’s susceptibility to leadership targeting is a function of three factors: organizational structure, communal support, and group type or ideology. Leadership decapitation is unlikely to result in the demise of groups that are highly bureaucratized, have high levels of communal support, or are driven by a religious or separatist ideology. Leaders matter less under these conditions, and their removal can have adverse consequences, such as retaliatory attacks or an overall increase in the frequency of attacks. The data reveals that the largest and oldest organizations are highly resistant to destabilization after targeting. Separatist, religious, and especially Islamist groups are unlikely to weaken after the removal of their leaders. In order to develop counterterrorism policies that will degrade and weaken terrorist organizations, it is essential to identify whether our policies are likely to be effective or to have adverse consequences. The book examines the cases of Hamas, al-Qaeda, Shining Path, and ISIS to understand how organizational structure, local support, and ideology contributes to their resilience in the face of repeated leadership attacks.
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28

Society, Nottinghamshire Family History, ed. Settlement certificates, examinations and removal orders (1696 to 1863) appertaining to Nottinghamshire. Nottingham: NottinghamshireFamily History Society, 1985.

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29

M, Hembry Phyllis, ed. Calendar of Bradford-on-Avon settlement examinations and removal orders: 1725-98. Trowbridge [England]: Wiltshire Record Society, 1990.

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30

Valentina, Cadelo, and Peterson Trudy Huskamp. Part II The Right to Know, C Preservation of and Access to Archives Bearing Witness to Violations, Principle 14 Measures for the Preservation of Archives. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198743606.003.0018.

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Principle 14 outlines measures for the preservation of archives, a fundamental corollary to the right to know the truth. In order to preserve governmental and nongovernmental archives, their destruction must be prevented and active steps need to be taken to prolong the life of the materials. Technical measures and penalties must prevent any removal, destruction, concealment or falsification of archives to ensure that there will be no impunity for perpetrators of violations of human rights and/or humanitarian law. Preserving archives is particularly important during periods of governmental transition and regime change. After providing a contextual and historical background on Principle 14, this chapter discusses its theoretical framework as well as state practice on public records and archives.
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31

Raimondi, Guido. Introductory Note. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190923846.003.0027.

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This article comments on four important judgments given by the European Court of Human Rights in 2016. Al-Dulimi v. Switzerland addresses the issue of how, in the context of sanctions regimes created by the UN Security Council, European states should reconcile their obligations under the UN Charter with their obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights to respect the fundamentals of European public order. Baka v. Hungary concerns the separation of powers and judicial independence, in particular the need for procedural safeguards to protect judges against unjustified removal from office and to protect their legitimate exercise of freedom of expression. Magyar Helsinki Bizottság v. Hungary is a judgment on the interpretation of the Convention, featuring a review of the “living instrument” approach. Avotiņš v. Latvia addresses the principle of mutual trust within the EU legal order and the right to a fair trial under Article 6 of the Convention.
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32

Godfrey, Barry, Pam Cox, Heather Shore, and Zoe Alker. In the System. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198788492.003.0005.

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Chapter 5 follows a sample of children into institutional care and outlines their experiences there. It is necessarily reliant on official sources but supplements these where possible with more personal accounts. It draws upon evidence from the young people in the sample, documentation from the selected institutions, and government reports and commissions, to describe the different regimes in place—educational, pastoral, and disciplinary—and the systems that were developed in order to resettle children on their discharge. Crucially, the chapter then analyses the regular scandals and external investigations triggered by child deaths, mutinies, and accusations of ill-treatment within reformatory and industrial schools. Child removal may have offered protective effects in later life but it had a dark side that must colour any assessment of those effects.
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33

Archbold, John Frederick. A Summary Of The Law Relative To Appeals V2: Against Orders Of Removal, Against Rates And Against Orders Of Filiation. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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34

Archbold, John Frederick. A Summary Of The Law Relative To Appeals V2: Against Orders Of Removal, Against Rates And Against Orders Of Filiation. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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35

Ther, Philipp. Ethnic Cleansing. Edited by Dan Stone. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199560981.013.0007.

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One can define ethnic cleansing as a mass-scale, violent, and permanent removal of an ethnically defined group from one territory to a perceived external homeland. Deportations within a state were special in this regard because there was no vision of an external territory to which the cleansed population would be sent. It still needs to be explored why some states treated deported minorities worse than other states treated their supposed external enemies. This article examines the origins and three preconditions of ethnic cleansing: modern nationalism, the concept of the modern nation-state, and the development of population policy. It also discusses four major periods of ethnic cleansing: 1912–1925, ethnic cleansing under the hegemony of Nazi Germany (1938–1944), ethnic cleansing and the postwar order in Europe (1944–1948), and ethnic cleansing in Yugoslavia (1991–1995).
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36

Supernatural Access: Remove Roadblocks in Order to Hear God and Receive Revelation. Charisma House, 2017.

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37

Jerryson, Michael. The Violence of Gender Discrimination. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190683566.003.0004.

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This chapter reviews the doctrinal and historical controversy surrounding the ordination of women in Buddhist traditions. In the contemporary period, Theravāda female monastic orders have attempted to create a female monastic order (bhikkhunī order) in Thailand. The Thai government and its monks have rejected such efforts. In addition to official resistance, people have exhibited violent backlashes to such attempts. While both sides of the polemic provide doctrinal justifications for their arguments, these justifications do not remove the harm caused to women occluded from ordination or those ridiculed and threatened once they ordain. This chapter tracks the violence of the gender discrimination through both monastic practices and the larger Thai society. Finally, it reviews three Buddhists justifications for gendered violence through Buddhist doctrine.
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38

McRae, Elizabeth Gillespie. Mothers of Massive Resistance. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190271718.001.0001.

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Examining racial segregation from 1920s to the 1970s, this book argues that white segregationist women constituted the grassroots workforce for racial segregation. For decades, they censored textbooks, campaigned against the United Nations, denied marriage certificates, celebrated school choice, and lobbied elected officials. They trained generations, built national networks, collapsed their duties as white mothers with those of citizenship, and experimented with a color-blind political discourse. Their work beyond legislative halls empowered the Jim Crow order with a flexibility and a kind of staying power. With white women at the center of the story, massive resistance and the rise of postwar conservatism rises out of white women’s grassroots work in homes, schools, political parties, and culture. Their efforts began before World War II and the Brown Decision and persisted past the removal of “white only” signs in 1964 and through the anti-busing protests. White women’s segregationist politics involved foreign affairs, economic policy, family values, strict constitutionalism, states’ rights, and white supremacy. It stretched across the nation and overlapped with and helped shape the rise of the New Right. In the end, this history compels us to confront the reign of racial segregation as a national story. It asks us to reconsider who sustained the Jim Crow order, who bears responsibility for the persistence of the nation’s inequities, and what it will take to make good on the nation’s promise of equality.
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39

Restuccia, Frances L. Jacques Lacan. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474423632.003.0027.

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Agamben only sporadically alludes to psychoanalysis and invokes psychoanalytic concepts. He does so most prominently in Stanzas, where he dedicates Part III to ‘geniisque Henry Corbin et Jacques Lacan‘ (S 61); refers to ‘the Lacanian thesis according to which […] the phantasm makes the pleasure suited to the desire’, in order to elaborate a point in Plato about desire and pleasure relying on images in the soul (S 74); and takes up melancholia and fetishism – both of which, it is important to note, circumvent lack. But Agamben is by no means ‘psychoanalytic’. He presents and employs melancholia and fetishism as paradigms for accessing the inaccessible (perhaps we can say that he plays with them). Melancholia, in Agamben, becomes an ‘imaginative capacity to make an unobtainable object appear as if lost’ so that it ‘may be appropriated insofar as it is lost’ (S 20), a strategy for saving the unsavable that evolves into his conception of the messianic. And, although Agamben is preoccupied with ‘a zone of non-consciousness’, he underscores that it is ‘not the fruit of a removal, like the unconscious of psychoanalysis’ (UB 64)
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40

Archbold, John Frederick. Summary of the Law Relative to Appeals Against Orders of Removal, Against Rates, and Against Orders of Filiation: Together with the Practice of the Court of Quarter Sessions, in Appeals. HardPress, 2020.

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41

London, Sotheby Parke-Bernet. The contents of Fulbeck Hall, Lincolnshire: Removed for sale by order of the executors of the late Mary Fry, neé Fane. London: Sotheby's, 2002.

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42

Solomon, Miriam. On the appearance and disappearance of Asperger’s syndrome. Edited by Kenneth S. Kendler and Josef Parnas. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198796022.003.0023.

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Asperger’s syndrome was added to the psychiatric disease classifications in DSM-IV (1994), and removed from DSM-5 (2013) almost 20 years later. This is a short life for a psychiatric syndrome. This chapter examines the case in depth in order to see what can be learned from it about appropriate criteria for making changes in the DSM nosology. Scientific criteria, clinical considerations, and patient/family perspectives are considered. In general, I recommend broadening the criteria to include the impact on patient self-understanding and identity.
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43

Ronco, Claudio, and William R. Clark. Haemodialysis. Edited by Jonathan Himmelfarb. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199592548.003.0257.

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End-stage renal disease (ESRD) is common clinical condition for which life-sustaining therapies fortunately exist. On a global basis, more than 2 million patients now receive chronic haemodialysis (HD) for treatment of ESRD. For the vast majority of these patients, treatment is provided in a dialysis unit on a thrice-weekly basis, although there is growing interest in alternative therapies which vary with respect to location or frequency. Based on the number of patients requiring chronic HD now and in the foreseeable future, it is imperative that nephrologists understand the basic principles underlying this treatment. The factors affecting the delivery of therapy in HD can substantially be divided into two groups: (a) factors affecting the performance of the dialytic technique, which are primarily related to the characteristics of the parameters involved in the dialytic technique; and (b) factors affecting the clinical results of a given technique, which are primarily related to the interaction between the water and solute removal capacity of the technique and the kinetics of water and solutes within the human body. In this group, factors including staff compliance with the orders, patient compliance with prescribed time, and the patient’s physical condition are also important.The focus of this chapter is the technical aspects of chronic HD prescription and delivery. After a brief review of the major components of the HD system (machine and extracorporeal circuit), the principles underlying solute and water removal are reviewed. The concept of clearance is then assessed, with particular emphasis on the determinants of small solute clearance with respect both to the dialyser and the patient.
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44

Como, David R. The Rubble of Episcopacy. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199541911.003.0004.

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This chapter explores the politics of the Long Parliament in 1641, focusing on how efforts in parliament to remodel the church interacted with external pressure campaigns and informal propaganda flowing from London presses. The chapter examines the emergence of fissures within the godly front that was challenging the existing church order. Particular attention is devoted to the rise of “independency” as a label used by both friends and enemies to describe varying shades of congregational church government. The chapter also outlines the proactive steps taken by puritan reformists to bury these growing differences. It suggests that those steps paradoxically provided leverage to more militant “independent” ideologues, who were emboldened and abetted by the attack on episcopacy waged by leading MPs at Westminster, and who began to adopt and promote ever more extreme attacks on the existing order.
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45

Tamura, Eileen H. Stepping Back. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037788.003.0006.

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This chapter focuses on the men with whom Kurihara clashed at Manzanar. These include Tokie Nishimura Slocum, Togo Tanaka, and Karl Yoneda. Like Kurihara, Slocum was a veteran of World War I and a member of the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars. As war between Japan and the United States grew imminent, Slocum gained the reputation of being an informer for the FBI and Naval Intelligence. As such, he was thoroughly despised by most Nikkei at Manzanar. Similarly, because of his role as a WRA documentary historian, Togo Tanaka was targeted by Nikkei dissidents as an informer and included him on their death list. On the other hand, Karl Yoneda refused to speak out against DeWitt's removal orders. Yoneda and other Nikkei Communists felt that they had no choice but to “accept the racist U.S. dictum” of incarceration “over Hitler's ovens and Japan's military rapists of Nanking.”
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46

Yamamoto, Eric K. Prologue. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190878955.003.0001.

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This Prologue describes three stories concerning Korematsu. The first is told in late 2015 by U.S. judges. It reaches back to the Supreme Court’s 1944 ruling in Korematsu validating the World War II Japanese American removal and incarceration. And it discerns insights, maybe lessons, for America about fundamental freedoms sacrificed in the name of perceived exigency. The second story starts with Justice Jackson’s loaded weapon warning about expanding Korematsu’s principle to new purposes. In 2014, then-Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia responded to a question about a possible U.S. mass exclusion or roundup of Muslims with a disturbing prophesy. The third story concerns Scalia’s it-could-happen-again prophesy and how the laws fall silent. That story is an amalgam of calls for mass Muslim exclusion and detention by government officials and Republican presidential candidates after the 2015 Paris and San Bernardino attacks—calls that partially coalesced in President Trump’s controversial 2017 exclusion-and-detention executive orders.
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47

Lord Dundonald: Orders in council and correspondence showing why he was removed from office : attacked Canada's government in defiance of military regulations. [Ottawa?: s.n., 1995.

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48

Carpentieri, Loredana, and Stefano Micossi. Removing Cross-border Tax Barriers. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198813392.003.0026.

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To achieve a fully fledged capital market union, many legal and regulatory obstacles must be confronted and removed in order to harvest the full benefits of the freedom of capital movements. Amongst these obstacles, capital market investors and member states continue to single out withholding tax procedures as a long-standing and highly damaging barrier to cross-border investment. This chapter first analyzes the contents of the freedom of circulation of capital and the consequent prohibition of restrictions. It then considers tax derogations expressly envisaged to the free circulation of capital and the tax hurdles to cross-border investments, which mainly arise from withholding taxation of interest and dividend incomes and attendant procedures.
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49

Moodie, Deonnie. Sacred Space Becomes Public Space. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190885267.003.0004.

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At the turn of the twenty-first century, middle-class men and women formed non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and filed public interest litigation suits (PILs) in order to expand temple space, knock down buildings that block views of Kālīghāṭ’s façade, and remove undesirable materials and populations from its environs. Employing the language of cleanliness and order, they worked (and continue to work) to make Kālīghāṭ a “must-see” tourist attraction. Scholarship has shown that India’s new middle classes—those produced through India’s economic liberalization policies in the 1990s—desire highly visible forms demonstrating their modernity as well as their uniqueness on the international stage of urban space. The example of Kālīghāṭ indicates how India’s new middle classes build on the work of the old middle classes to deploy the temple as emblematic of both their modernity and their Indian-ness. In so doing, they read the idioms of public space onto sacred space.
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50

Schiff, Brian. Interpreting Interpretations. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199332182.003.0007.

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“Interpreting Interpretations,” Chapter 6 of A New Narrative for Psychology, discusses the premises for the analysis of narratives in research in the field of psychology and in everyday life. The chapter focuses on how researchers think about narratives after the data have been collected and on how narratives should be understood and analyzed. It details an interpretative, hermeneutic approach to narrative analysis in which the interpreter is always once removed, always interpreting the interpretations of others. It argues that there are no recipes for narrative analysis, only general analytic strategies. The process of narrative analysis is one of asking questions in order to open up the data and understand the complex relationships between a particular interpretative action and the contexts of person, time, and space.
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