22,089 research outputs found
Replacement of Cakile edentula with Cakile maritima in New South Wales and on Lord Howe Island
Two species of Cakile (Brassicaceae) have been introduced to Australia and the genus has been a common feature on the beaches of NSW for over 130 years; Cakile edentula has been present for at least 148 years (in NSW since about 1870), while Cakile maritima arrived approximately 114 years ago, (in NSW since about 1969). Collections at CANB and NSW confirm that since around 1970 plants more like Cakile maritima have almost entirely replaced Cakile edentula along the NSW coast. A similar phenomenon is reported for Lord Howe Island
Dataset supporting the University of Southampton Doctoral thesis "Self-states, attachment and dissociation: relationships and measurement".
Dataset supporting the University of Southampton Doctoral thesis "Self-states, attachment and dissociation: relationships and measurement" by Clarissa Lord.
This data includes an excel file of collected data created by the author as part of their research. </span
Anthony Lord, Hand Forged Iron, Asheville, N. C.
This small leaflet served as a business card for blacksmith or iron worker Anthony Lord and was probably produced during the 1930s. The front is illustrated with an example of his iron work and the back shows his logo. A brief note inside explains that Lord is currently "too busy to accept commissions" but hopes that in the new year "he will be happy to receive your orders for grilles, lanterns, knockers, handles, hinges." Lord worked with blacksmiths Lawrence Boone and Daniel Boone VI. Lord worked primarily as an architect in the Asheville, N.C. area
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Lord & Burnham to D. W. Kempner discussing how to clarify an order of aluminum bar caps
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Lord & Burnham to D. W. Kempner, letting him know that Mr. Impey will call on him
Revisiting the sublime history: Dickens, Christianity, and The life of Our Lord
While the study of Charles Dickens’s religion has produced various results, few would contest that Dickens’s religious views are shaped by his peculiar emphasis on Jesus and the Gospels. As to the precise nature of his views and the degree to which his commitment to the Christian faith extends, however, a much lesser degree of consensus has been established. I attempt to demonstrate here that at the heart of his work is a conspicuous Christian worldview, which is grounded squarely in the imitation of Jesus and which pervades his life and his work in the most profound yet unobtrusive ways. I argue, then, that Dickens’s The Life of Our Lord is a definitive source in the Dickens corpus for our understanding of his Christian thought and worldview. Moreover, as a serious expression of Dickens’s understanding of Christianity, The Life of Our Lord also functions as an index to his Christian thought in the larger Dickens corpus.
Of first importance then, I attempt to establish the authority of The Life of Our Lord as a composition that will bear the full weight of such assertions. Then, I analyze its content as to its implicit theology in order to establish not only its thoroughgoing Christian character but also to demonstrate that it reveals Dickens’s own genuine Christian conviction manifested in all his work. Drawing the work to a close, I attempt to demonstrate how The Life of Our Lord helps us to understand Dickens’s churchmanship and his relationship to the church. In the end, I comment on its intended purpose as moral instruction for his children exemplifying his understanding of Christianity. The study demonstrates throughout how the Christianity embodied and articulated in The Life of Our Lord is consistently and naturally reflected in all of Dickens’s work, whether fiction, journalism or correspondence
Lord, C.
Carte de Visite of C. Lord, 3rd Maine Infantry; From the Janet & Bedford Hayes Collectionhttps://digitalmaine.com/arc_civilwarportraits/3507/thumbnail.jp
Two Journeys Intertwined: Lord Kerr and EU Law
The career of Lord Kerr happens to coincide with United Kingdom membership of the EU. This chapter reflects on the intersection of that career with EU Law, focusing on the cases Lord Kerr heard in the Supreme Court and in particular those EU Law cases where he gave the leading judgment. Lord Kerr heard about four cases a year with an EU Law dimension across a limited number of fields: more than half the cases concerned immigration and asylum; extradition (under the European Arrest Warrant) and employment law. He was adept at navigating the complex relationship between the two legal orders of EU and domestic law while giving principled and significant judgments on a range of issues including the status of the death penalty in both EU law and in the common law; the obligation on public authorities to adhere to the rule of law; and the existence of an EU law principle of non-discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation. As in other fields, when analysing and applying EU Law, Lord Kerr showed himself to be a progressive judge championing the rights of the individual in relation to the exercise of public authority
Lord, C.
Carte de Visite of C. Lord, 3rd Maine Infantry; From the Janet & Bedford Hayes Collectionhttps://digitalmaine.com/arc_civilwarportraits/3507/thumbnail.jp
Women’s Experience in Leadership Roles: Increasing our Understanding of Leadership
The attached document may provide the author's accepted version of a published work. See Citation for details of the published work
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