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1

Guerrilla radio: Rock 'n' roll radio and Serbia's underground resistance. New York: Thunder's Mouth Press/Nation Books, 2001.

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2

Islands of resistance: Pirate radio in Canada. Vancouver: New Star Books, 2010.

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3

Noches de radio: Escucha Chile. Santiago [Chile]: LOM Ediciones, 2001.

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4

Syvertsen, Trine. Media Resistance: Protest, Dislike, Abstention. Basingstoke: Springer Nature, 2017.

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5

This is Serbia calling: Rock'n'roll radio and Belgrade's underground resistance. London: Serpent's Tail, 2001.

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6

This is Serbia calling: Rock'n'roll radio and Belgrade's underground resistance. 2nd ed. London: Serpent's Tail, 2004.

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7

1950-, Matelski Marilyn J., ed. Messages from the underground: Transnational radio in resistance and in solidarity. Westport, Conn: Praeger, 1997.

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8

Radio London and resistance in occupied Europe: British political warfare, 1939-1943. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.

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9

author, Fontova Rosario, ed. Las cartas de la Pirenaica: Memoria del antifranquismo. Madrid: Cátedra, 2014.

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10

Denis, Moynihan, ed. The silenced majority: Stories of uprisings, occupations, resistance, and hope. Chicago, Ill: Haymarket Books, 2012.

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11

No Ar!: O bombardeio do Piratini em 1961 : a vitória de Brizola e a legalidade. [São Paulo, Brazil]: All Print Editora, 2011.

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12

Thomas Mann und die "Weisse Rose": Der Einfluss der "Feindsender" ; ein Beitrag zur "Weisse Rose"-Forschung. Crailsheim: Baier, 2007.

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13

Cordioli, Ricardo Luiz, and Laurent Brochard. Respiratory system compliance and resistance in the critically ill. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199600830.003.0074.

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Under mechanical ventilation, monitoring of respiratory mechanics is fundamental, especially in patients with abnormal mechanics. In order to appropriately set the ventilator, clinicians need to understand the relationship between pressure, volume and flow. To move air in and out the thorax, energy must be dissipated against elastic and resistive forces. Elastance is the pressure to volume ratio and necessitates an end inspiratory occlusion to measure the so-called plateau pressure. Resistance is the ratio between pressure dissipated and mean gas flow. Finally, the total positive end expiratory pressure must be measured with an end expiratory occlusion. Volume-controlled ventilation is the recommended mode to assess respiratory mechanics of a passive patient. Clinicians must be aware that both chest wall and lung participate in forces imposed by the respiratory system. An oesophageal catheter can estimate pleural pressure, and used to partition the respective role of the lung and the chest wall.
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14

Brodhagen, Marion L. Expression of secondary metabolites following manipulations of the C:N ratio in spotted knapweed, Centaurea maculosa Lam. 1998.

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15

United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., ed. Electrically heated tube investigation of cooling channel geometry effects. [Washington, DC]: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1995.

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16

di Leonardo, Micaela. Black Radio/Black Resistance. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190870195.001.0001.

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Black Radio is a window into the most famous radio show you never heard of. The Tom Joyner Morning Show is a quarter-century-old syndicated black morning radio show reaching more than eight million adult, largely working-class listeners. It offers progressive political talk, soul music, humor, advice, philanthropy, and celebrity gossip. But the TJMS is not just an adult “old-school music” radio show: it is an on-air organizer, fusing progressive politics and aesthetics. It focuses on specific political issues affecting and enraging African Americans. Black Radio analyzes the TJMS’s rise in the Clinton era, and its coverage of key events—9/11, Hurricane Katrina, President Obama’s elections and terms, the murders of unarmed black Americans and the rise of Black Lives Matter, and the shocking 2016 Donald Trump electoral triumph. It showcases the varied, contentious, and blackly humorous voices of anchors, guests, and audience members. Finally, it investigates the new synergistic set of cross-medium ties and political connections now affecting print, broadcast, and online politics in anti-racist directions. Despite the dismal present, this new multiracial progressive public sphere has extraordinary potential for shaping future American politics. Black Radio, then, is more than the project of making the invisible visible, bringing to light a major counterpublic phenomenon unjustly ignored for reasons of color, class, generation, and medium. It tunes us in to an alternative understanding of the black public sphere in the digital age. Like the show itself, Black Radio is politically progressive, music-drenched, angry, and blisteringly funny.
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17

Kreit, John W. Physiological Assessment of the Mechanically Ventilated Patient. Edited by John W. Kreit. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190670085.003.0009.

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This chapter reviews the tests that can be used to determine the type and severity of respiratory failure and the extent to which one or more of the components of normal ventilation and gas exchange have been compromised by disease. Physiological Assessment of the Mechanically Ventilated Patient describes the bedside procedures, measurements, and calculations that allow the assessment of gas exchange and respiratory mechanics in mechanically ventilated patients. Topics include co-oximetry and pulse oximetry, arterial blood gas measurements, venous admixture and shunt fraction, the dead space to tidal volume ratio, time- and volume-capnography, measurement of peak and plateau pressures, and calculation of respiratory system compliance and resistance.
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18

McKibben, Bill. Radio free Vermont: A fable of resistance. 2017.

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19

McKibben, Bill. Radio Free Vermont: A Fable of Resistance. Thorndike Press, 2018.

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20

McKibben, Bill. Radio Free Vermont: A Fable of Resistance. Blue Rider Press, 2018.

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21

Syvertsen, Trine. Media Resistance: Protest, Dislike, Abstention. Palgrave Macmillan, 2017.

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22

Collin, Matthew. Guerrilla Radio: Rock 'N' Roll Radio and Serbia's Underground Resistance (Nation Books). Nation Books, 2002.

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23

Deruelle, Nathalie, and Jean-Philippe Uzan. The law of gravitation. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198786399.003.0011.

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This chapter embarks on the study of Newton’s law of gravitation. It first discusses gravitational mass and inertial mass, a measure of the ‘resistance’ of the point particle to an applied force. The numerical value of the inertial mass of a body can in principle be obtained from collision experiments by assigning to a reference body a unit inertial mass of one kilogram or, more rigorously, one ‘inertial kilogram’. Next, the chapter considers the ratio of gravitational and inertial masses. It considers that, in the absence of friction, all objects, no matter what their inertial mass, or the nature of their constituents, or the internal energy or cohesive forces of their constituents, fall in the same way in an external gravitational field. Finally, this chapter studies Newton’s gravitational force and field, as well as the Poisson equation and the gravitational Lagrangian.
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24

Wittman, David M. Acceleration and Force. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199658633.003.0002.

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This chapter develops crucial distinctions between constant‐velocity (also called inertial) frames of reference and accelerating ones. Inertial frames respect Newton’s first law—objects maintain constant velocity unless acted upon by a net force—while accelerating frames violate this law. Therefore, much of our thinking about whether the laws of physics are the same in all frames will really concern *inertial* frames. Newton’s first law gives us a foolproof test for distinguishing accelerating frames from inertial frames; this testworks even if velocitymeasurements are not directly available. We sometimes invent fictitious forces (such as “centrifugal force”) to explain the acceleration of free objects in accelerating frames, but we know how to determine that these are indeed fictitious.We also examine relationships between acceleration, force, andmass (Newton’s second law).We *define*mass as the ratio of force to acceleration, so mass represents a resistance to acceleration, or inertia.
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25

Black Radio/Black Resistance: The Life and Times of the Tom Joyner Morning Show. Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2019.

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26

Benjamin, Bonavida, ed. Sensitization of cancer cells for chemo/immuno/radio-therapy. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2008.

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27

Graudin, Ryan. Wolf by Wolf: A BBC Radio 2 Book Club Choice: Book 1. Indigo (an Imprint of Orion Childrens), 2001.

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28

British Broadcasting And The Danish Resistance Movement 19401945 A Study Of The Wartime Broadcasts Of The Bbc Danish Service. Cambridge University Press, 2010.

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29

Hagen, Trever. Living in The Merry Ghetto. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190263850.001.0001.

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Living in the Merry Ghetto reframes how people use music to build resistance. To do so, Hagen addresses the social context of illegal music-making in Czechoslovakia during state socialism, asking “How Do Aesthetics Nurture Political Consciousness?”. He tells the story of a group of rock ’n’ rollers who went underground after 1968, building a parallel world from where they could flourish: the Merry Ghetto. The book examines the case of the Czech Underground, the politics of their music and their way of life, paying close attention to the development of the ensemble the Plastic People of the Universe. Taking in multiple political transitions from the 1940s to the 2000s, the story focuses on non-official cultural practices such as listening to foreign radio broadcasts, seeking out copied cassette tapes, listening to banned LPs, growing long hair, attending clandestine concerts, smuggling albums via diplomats, recording in home-studios, and being thrown in prison for any of these activities. Drawing on ethnographic interviews with Undergrounders, archival research, and participant observation, Hagen shows how these practices shaped consciousness, informed bodies, and promoted collective action, all of which contributed to an Underground way of life.
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30

Wade, Stephen. Nashville Washboard Band. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036880.003.0005.

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This chapter describes the recordings of the Nashville Washboard Band. In the spring of 1942 Fisk University music professor John W. Work III welcomed a quartet of street musicians called the Nashville Washboard Band into his home. This visit marked the first of two. The second took place that July when the group, bringing along a fifth player, returned to make their sole recordings. The group was a frequent sight in downtown Nashville, playing less than a hundred feet from the War Memorial Auditorium, where the Grand Ole Opry broadcast its weekly radio show. When not stationed there or beside the Andrew Jackson Hotel nearby, they entertained the lunchtime crowd that gathered on the south steps of the state capitol. The group's four principal members all lived within walking distance of these spots where they toted their largely climate-resistant instruments. They also offered a repertory bound to pique the attention of passersby.
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31

Singh, J. P. International Communication Regimes. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190846626.013.227.

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International regimes are often described as regularized patterns of cooperative interaction or behavior among international actors such as nation-states. They also provide the most concrete instances of international cooperation. One example is the telecommunications regime, which grapples with issues such as satellites, radio and television broadcasting, surveillance, and sending of voice or data messages. Until the late 1970s or early 1980s, the international communications regime was dominated by state- or privately-owned monopolies in the communication industries. Recently, this cartel has unraveled and communication markets worldwide have moved toward privatization and liberalization, which led to changes in the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and Intelsat. The ITU was initially seen as strongly resistant to liberalization, but the current view is that it eventually came around to supporting it. The ITU still remains the premier authority arbitrating interconnection protocols, frequency distribution and arbitrations, and weighs in on prices and standards. Intelsat, meanwhile, has become a much weaker organization as a result of the regime change toward liberalization. As competitive private and regional satellite systems have developed, Intelsat is now one among many telecommunication satellite carriers in the world, although it remains the largest provider of fixed satellite services. Various forms of Internet governance have also emerged, reflecting a mix of private and public authorities at national and international levels. In electronic commerce, the emerging regime reflects the overall rubric of the principles and norms of global liberalization.
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