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1

Canada, Canada Information Commissioner of. Revenue Canada : report card on compliance with response deadlines under the Access to Information Act =: Revenu Canada : fiche de rendement observation des délais prévus dans la Loi sur l'accès à l'information. Ottawa, Ont: Information Commissioner of Canada = Commissaire à l'information du Canada, 1999.

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2

(Canada), Conseil national du bien-être social. Un revenu pour vivre? Ottawa, Ont: Conseil national du bien-être social, 2004.

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3

Browning, Martin. Le revenu et le niveau de vie en période de chômage. Ottawa, Ont: Développement des ressources humaines Canada, 1995.

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4

Ice-T. Kings of vice. New York: Forge, 2012.

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5

Wyoming. Joint Legislative-Executive Committee on State Government Expenditures and Revenues. Macro report: A global view of state revenues and expenditures. [Cheyenne, Wyo: The Committee, 1999.

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6

Moore, Natalie. Walking to the newsstand online newspapers and the pay-to-view revenue model. London: LCP, 2002.

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7

Grawe, Nathan D. Biais lié au cycle de vie dans l'estimation de la persistance intergénérationnelle des gains d'emploi. Ottawa, Ont: Statistique Canada, 2003.

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8

IRS: A view from the inside. Huntington, NY: Kroshka Books, 2000.

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9

Ice-T. Kings of vice. New York: Forge, 2011.

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10

Ross, David P. Le bien-être de l'enfant et le revenu familial: Un nouveau regard au débat sur la pauvreté. Ottawa, Ont: Conseil canadien de développement social, 1999.

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11

Lao-Araya, Kanokpan. How can Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, and Viet Nam cope with revenue lost due to AFTA tariff reductions? Manila: Asian Development Bank, 2002.

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12

Nouwen, Henri J. M. Le retour de l'enfant prodigue: Revenir à la maison. [Saint-Laurent, Québec]: Bellarmin, 1995.

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13

Lao-Araya, Kanokpan. How can Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, and Viet Nam cope with revenue lost due to AFTA tariff reductions? Manila: Asian Development Bank, 2002.

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14

Office, General Accounting. Land management agencies: Revenue sharing payments to states and counties : report to the Honorable Vic Fazio, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1998.

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15

Gagné, Hélène. Maximisez votre capital retraite: Faites de votre retraite la plus belle aventure de votre vie, planifiez-la! Montréal: Éditions Transcontinental, 2002.

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16

Another season's promise: Hope and despair in Canada's farm country. Toronto, Ont: Penguin Canada, 2001.

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17

Boyens, Ingeborg. Another season's promise: Hope and despair in Canada's farm country. Toronto: Viking, 2001.

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18

Provost, Dany. Arretez de planifier votre retraite, planifiez votre plaisir. Montreal: Editions Transcontinental, 2005.

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19

Court, Nova Scotia Vice-Admiralty. The case of the legal tender, argued before, and decided by, the judge of the Vice-Admiraly [sic] Court at Bermuda, 1812, for a breach of the revenue laws. Halifax [N.S.]: Printed by Howe and Son, 1993.

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20

Court, Nova Scotia Vice-Admiralty. The case of the legal tender, argued before, and decided by, the judge of the Vice-Admiraly [sic] Court at Bermuda, 1812, for a breach of the revenue laws. Halifax [N.S.]: Printed by Howe and Son, 2000.

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21

Holder, Nancy. Great expectations: A contemporary view. London: Reader's Digest, 2002.

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22

Longer hours, fewer jobs: Employment and unemployment in the United States. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1994.

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23

Canada. Human Resources Development Canada. Government of Canada response to "Listening to Canadians: A first view of the future of the Canada Pension Plan Disability Program" = Réponse du gouvernement du Canada au rapport intitulé "À l'écoute des Canadiens : une première vision de l'avenir du programme de prestation d'invalidité du Régime de pensions du Canada". Ottawa, Ont: Human Resources Development = Développement des ressources humaines Canada, 2003.

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24

Office, United States Census. Statistical view of the United States: Embracing its territory, population--white, free colored, and slave--moral and social condition, industry, property, and revenue, the detailed statistics of cities, towns and counties : being a compendium of the seventh census to which are added the results of every previous census, beginning with 1790, in comparative tables, with explanatory and illustrative notes, based upon the schedules and other official sources of information. New York, N.Y: N. Ross Pub., 1990.

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25

Shipler, David K. The working poor: Invisible in America. New York: A. Knopf, 2004.

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26

Shipler, David K. The working poor: Invisible in America. New York: Knopf, 2006.

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27

Mcdermott, Leeanne. GamePro Presents: Sega Genesis Games Secrets: Greatest Tips. Rocklin: Prima Publishing, 1992.

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28

A Token's View from Inside the Internal Revenue Service. iUniverse, 2000.

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29

Jakob, Michael, Ottmar Edenhofer, Ulrike Kornek, Dominic Lenzi, and Jan Minx. Governing the Commons to Promote Global Justice: Climate Change Mitigation and Rent Taxation. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198813248.003.0003.

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Climate change mitigation means restricting the use of the atmosphere as a disposal space for greenhouse gas emissions, which would create a novel scarcity rent. Appropriating this rent via fiscal policies, such as taxes, together with already existing scarcity rents of land and natural resources, could be an economically efficient source of public revenues to advance human development objectives. This chapter discusses how an international climate agreement would turn the atmosphere into a common property regime and describes equity principles that determine how the resulting climate rent is distributed. It then estimates how carbon pricing in combination with appropriate revenue recycling could advance human development goals. It also considers equity aspects of distributing land and natural resource rents as well as the potential of these rents to promote global justice. Finally, it assesses the political feasibility of combining rent taxation with targeted investment, drawing conclusions for the potential implementation of such an approach.
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30

Stillwell, John. Statistical Inference via Convex Optimization. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691197296.001.0001.

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Reverse mathematics is a new field that seeks to find the axioms needed to prove given theorems. Reverse mathematics began as a technical field of mathematical logic, but its main ideas have precedents in the ancient field of geometry and the early twentieth-century field of set theory. This book offers a historical and representative view, emphasizing basic analysis and giving a novel approach to logic. It concludes that mathematics is an arena where theorems cannot always be proved outright, but in which all of their logical equivalents can be found. This creates the possibility of reverse mathematics, where one seeks equivalents that are suitable as axioms. By using a minimum of mathematical logic in a well-motivated way, the book will engage advanced undergraduates and all mathematicians interested in the foundations of mathematics.
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31

Kim, Diana S. Empires of Vice. Princeton University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691172408.001.0001.

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During the late nineteenth century, opium was integral to European colonial rule in Southeast Asia. The taxation of opium was a major source of revenue for British and French colonizers, who also derived moral authority from imposing a tax on a peculiar vice of their non-European subjects. Yet between the 1890s and the 1940s, colonial states began to ban opium, upsetting the very foundations of overseas rule—how did this happen? This book traces the history of this dramatic reversal, revealing the colonial legacies that set the stage for the region's drug problems today. The book challenges the conventional wisdom about opium prohibition—that it came about because doctors awoke to the dangers of drug addiction or that it was a response to moral crusaders—uncovering a more complex story deep within the colonial bureaucracy. The book shows how prohibition was made possible by the pivotal contributions of seemingly weak bureaucratic officials. Comparing British and French experiences across today's Burma, Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia, Singapore, and Vietnam, the book examines how the everyday work of local administrators delegitimized the taxing of opium, which in turn made major anti-opium reforms possible. The book reveals the inner life of colonial bureaucracy, illuminating how European rulers reconfigured their opium-entangled foundations of governance and shaped Southeast Asia's political economy of illicit drugs and the punitive state.
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32

Plantinga, Carl. Narrative Paradigm Scenarios. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190867133.003.0013.

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This chapter examines the revenge scenario, arguing that, from an ethical perspective, screen storytellers should approach the scenario with caution and, when using it, complicate, nuance, and question it. The revenge scenario works because it is a reliable way to elicit the strong emotions that draw viewers. The pleasures of revenge scenarios depend upon Manichaean distinctions between good and evil—the good tribe and the bad tribe, the morally upright protagonist and the vile offender. If humans are tribal creatures, the typical revenge scenario exaggerates tribal feelings through narrative means and uses them to elicit strong and pleasurable emotional responses dependent on clear distinctions between us and them and simplified exaggerations of the Good and the Bad. The chapter examines the revenge scenario as it is employed in Django Unchained, Funny Games, and True Grit.
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33

Moses, Jonathon W., and Bjørn Letnes. Wealth Management. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198787174.003.0007.

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This chapter deals with another aspect of wealth management: the utility of petroleum investment funds (or sovereign wealth funds) to protect the domestic economy from Dutch Disease and the volatility of government revenues derived from oil. Hence, it functions as a companion to Chapter 6. After a general introduction to the literature on petroleum funds, the second part of the chapter examines the size and nature of Norway’s Government Pension Fund, Global (GPFG); and how the revenues from this fund are carefully reintroduced into the Norwegian economy via the government’s “budgetary rule” (handlingsregel). It is the latter, the “budgetary rule”, that is perhaps the most unique characteristic of the Norwegian wealth management arsenal.
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34

Stillwell, John. Reverse Mathematics. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691196411.001.0001.

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Reverse mathematics is a new field that seeks to find the axioms needed to prove given theorems. Reverse mathematics began as a technical field of mathematical logic, but its main ideas have precedents in the ancient field of geometry and the early twentieth-century field of set theory. This book offers a historical and representative view, emphasizing basic analysis and giving a novel approach to logic. It concludes that mathematics is an arena where theorems cannot always be proved outright, but in which all of their logical equivalents can be found. This creates the possibility of reverse mathematics, where one seeks equivalents that are suitable as axioms. By using a minimum of mathematical logic in a well-motivated way, the book will engage advanced undergraduates and all mathematicians interested in the foundations of mathematics.
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35

Harford Vargas, Jennifer. Plotting Justice. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190642853.003.0005.

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This chapter explores how the novel can plot out fantasies of justice, using Héctor Tobar’s novel The Tattooed Soldier to demonstrate how the novel can challenge mass impunity in the Americas. The novel’s protagonist takes advantage of the chaos of the Rodney King uprisings in Los Angles to shoot and kill the Guatemalan military soldier who murdered his wife and son and who received counterinsurgency training at the United States’ School of the Americas. These diverse acts of rage against institutionalized impunity are comparatively illuminated in the novel via intersecting plot lines, rotating points of view, disruptive flashbacks, iterative events, and shifting geographies. The chapter further unpacks the political and formal valences of plot, arguing that the novel’s structure is at odds with the two main protagonists’ narrative desires. Though the novel’s revenge plot is resolved, the novel does not resolve the larger plot for justice; the chapter ends by considering alternative means of generating social transformation and attaining justice.
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36

Lin, Yi-min. FDI and Privatization. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190682828.003.0007.

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Chapter 6 extends the analysis of local state actions to the privatization function of FDI. The focal issue is how and why foreign investors were able to overcome centrally imposed regulatory and policy constraints on their entry, expansion, and organization before trade liberalization associated with China’s WTO accession in 2001. Again, rule bending by local governments was the centerpiece of the story. As in the case of locales experiencing early privatization, local officials took calculated political risk by using economic hardship and the benefits of FDI for addressing revenue and employment imperatives as justifications. The extent of their deviations from centrally set boundaries nevertheless varied, depending greatly on the bargaining power of local political leaders vis-à-vis their supervising authorities. In particular, whether a locale was perceived as a major fiscal burden or an important resource contributor to higher-level authorities was an important differentiating factor.
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37

Tax practitioners' analysis of the Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1993: October 26, 1993, live via satellite to 70⁺ cities : study materials. Philadelphia, PA (4025 Chestnut St., Philadelphia 19104-3099): American Law Institute-American Bar Association, Committee on Continuing Professional Education, 1993.

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38

Maslon, Laurence. “And My Fair Lady Is a Terrific Show, They Say”. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199832538.003.0008.

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When Goddard Lieberson assumed the role of executive vice president at Columbia Records in the mid-1940s, he established the greatest powerhouse for the recording of Broadway material in the twentieth century. Lieberson produced studio versions of unrecorded Broadway classics; acquired and produced some of the biggest hit albums of the 1950s and 60s; and oversaw a battalion of single releases of Broadway material for the pop charts. He also masterminded the initiatives of the Columbia Record Club and the advent of stereo, both of which enabled additional revenue streams for Broadway material. Lieberson’s masterwork was the cast album of My Fair Lady, released originally in mono, then rerecorded in stereo; it became one of the most ubiquitous and successful albums of all time.
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39

Songster, E. Elena. Nation Building and the Nature of Communist Conservation. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199393671.003.0003.

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Through a thorough examination of government policies from the 1950s and 1960s, this chapter demonstrates a shift in the Chinese governmental view of nature. Nature had been seen alternately as either a hurdle to overcome or a well of resources and hidden knowledge. Following the Great Leap Forward (1958-9) and subsequent famine, government officials acquired a new perspective of nature and, for the first time, saw nature simultaneously as a means of generating revenue and a place in need of protection. I position these policies in the context of broader communist ideological rhetoric to illustrate that government officials and scientists engaged in rigorous dialogue and expressed varied views on the place of nature in communist thought. The rhetoric in China’s nature protection policies offers striking parallels to the arguments posed by Progressive-era American conservationists.
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40

Lehmann, Volker. Natural Resources, the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, and Global Governance. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198805373.003.0012.

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This chapter analyzes the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) as a global governance tool to curb adverse effects of non-renewable natural resource extraction and commodification, and its interlocking challenges for environment, security, and justice. EITI’s premise that transparency in state resource revenues will foster broader societal transformations so far seems illusory. EITI lacks sanctioning mechanisms vis-à-vis participating companies that hinder full transparency, for example by evading the payment of taxes through tax loopholes. Such problems cannot be solved by resource-rich countries alone, but require political intervention by states that host global financial hubs as well as the most powerful multinational resource extraction companies. Going forward, an “EITI Plus” should also include environmental sustainability standards, so it may strengthen, not contradict broader global agreements such as the UN’s Agenda 2030 for sustainable development and the Paris Climate Accord.
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41

Stoneman, Paul, Eleonora Bartoloni, and Maurizio Baussola. Product Innovation and Welfare. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198816676.003.0012.

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This chapter addresses the impact of product innovation on economic welfare, initially defined as the sum of consumer and producer surpluses. In a static framework, it is shown how product innovation can increase welfare via additions to consumer surplus and increased firm profits; and an estimate that the value of the increase for a typical product innovation might equal 2.5 per cent of the innovator’s revenue is reported from the literature. Problems with measuring welfare by the sum of consumer and producer surplus are raised, especially because of changes in the producers’ incentives to innovate. In an intertemporal framework, it is further shown that the optimal diffusion path could arise under either monopoly supply or competitive supply, depending on buyers’ price expectations formation processes. It is also argued that variety itself may generate welfare, and whether free markets would generate optimal variety is discussed. The literature suggests not.
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42

Mandal Commission report: Myth and reality : a national view point. Delhi: H.K. Publishers and Distributors, 1991.

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43

A View of the rise, progress, and present state of the Newfoundland fishery: With some observations on its government, civil establishment, revenue and expenditure. [Poole, England?: s.n.], 1987.

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44

Adams, Douglas. Le Guide galactique, tome 3: La vie, l'univers et le reste. Gallimard, 2001.

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45

Eisen, Robert. Summary and Conclusions. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190687090.003.0009.

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This chapter summarizes how the five rabbis dealt with the major issues this study focused on: which varieties of war in medieval Halakhah are still permitted, who has legitimate authority to wage war, whether the conscription of soldiers is permitted, and whether soldiers may kill civilians even accidentally. It concludes with a discussion of how the positions of these thinkers stack up against the norms of international law, finding some overlap but also marked differences. For instance, all five rabbis believed that war could be waged for defensive purposes, and international law would support that view. However, some of the rabbis believed that wars could be waged for other purposes as well, such as revenge or to conquer the land God promised to Israel in the Bible. International law would not consider such reasons legitimate for waging war.
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46

Landau, Iddo. Determinism and Contingency. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190657666.003.0008.

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Some claim that determinism renders our lives meaningless because it suggests that we have no free will and, therefore, lack moral responsibility, deserve no praise for our achievements, and are no different from plants or animals. In response, this chapter explains why life can be regarded as meaningful even if we lack free will. Other arguments for the meaninglessness of life are based on the roughly reverse view, namely, that much in our lives is not necessary but, rather, arbitrary or governed by chance. The discussion in the chapter also explains why neither arbitrariness nor contingency renders life meaningless.
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47

Series, Michigan Historical Reprint. Statistical view of the United States, embracing its territory, population ... moral and social condition, industry, property and revenue; the detailed ... of the seventh census; to which are adde. Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library, 2005.

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48

Manne, Kate. Humanizing Hatred. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190604981.003.0006.

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This chapter explores and contests a popular rival approach to “man’s inhumanity to man”—or, in this case, women—as applied to misogyny. On this view, dubbed “humanism,” misogyny would have its source in a failure to recognize women’s full humanity. But that misogyny takes women to be human, all-too-human, is suggested by some of the ways they are resented, blamed, and punished for social norm violations. Dehumanizing attitudes and treatment are explained (away) in terms of insults, defusing the psychic threat posed by certain women, and taking revenge on those who, in failing to provide dominant men with feminine-coded care, make him feel like less of a person. Finally, women’s socially unexpected behavior may lead to disgusted, startled responses, and ascribing to her an “uncanny,” robotic quality. But this, too, involves recognizing her successful participation in characteristically human activities, albeit in ways that effect gendered role reversals.
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49

Hardy, Duncan. Lordship and Administration. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198827252.003.0005.

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The Holy Roman Empire, and especially Upper Germany, was notoriously politically fragmented in the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries. A common way to interpret this fragmentation has been to view late medieval lordships, particularly those ruled by princes, as incipient ‘territories’, or even ‘territorial states’. However, this over-simplifies and reifies structures of lordship and administration in this period, which consisted of shifting agglomerations of assets, revenues, and jurisdictions that were dispersed among and governed by interconnected networks of political actors. Seigneurial properties and rights had become separable, commoditized, and highly mobile by the later middle ages, and these included not only fiefs (Lehen) but also loan-based pledges (Pfandschaften) and offices, all of which could be sold, transferred, or even ruled or exercised by multiple parties at once, whether these were princes, nobles, or urban elites. This fostered intensive interaction between formally autonomous political actors, generating frictions and disputes.
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50

Amos, Martyn, ed. Cellular Computing. Oxford University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195155396.001.0001.

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The completion of the first draft of the human genome has led to an explosion of interest in genetics and molecular biology. The view of the genome as a network of interacting computational components is well-established, but researchers are now trying to reverse the analogy, by using living organisms to construct logic circuits. The potential applications for such technologies is huge, ranging from bio-sensors, through industrial applications to drug delivery and diagnostics. This book would be the first to deal with the implementation of this technology, describing several working experimental demonstrations using cells as components of logic circuits, building toward computers incorporating biological components in their functioning.
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