56,571 research outputs found

    Patel House

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    Author interview: Q and A with Dr Ian Sanjay Patel on we’re here because you were there: immigration and the end of empire

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    In this author interview, we speak to Dr Ian Sanjay Patel about his new book, We’re Here Because You Were There: Immigration and the End of Empire, which explores post-war immigration laws, the afterlives of British imperial citizenship and related attempts to reimagine and rejuvenate British imperialism after 1945. Contributing to transnational histories of decolonisation, the book also explores the interconnections between human rights, post-war migration and international diplomacy. Author Interview with Dr Ian Sanjay Patel, author of We’re Here Because You Were There: Immigration and the End of Empire. Verso. 2021

    Drs. Kiran C. and Pallavi Patel, USF benefactors, c.2005

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    Dr. Kiran C. Patel and his wife Dr. Pallavi Patel gave USF its largest single gift ever in 2005. The bequest funded the Dr. Kiran C. Patel Center for Global Solutions at USF.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/usf_photos/1200/thumbnail.jp

    Castianeira tinae Patel & Patel 1973

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    Castianeira tinae Patel & Patel, 1973 Castianeira Tinae Patel & Patel, 1973: 6, fig. 3a–g (♂ ♀). Castianeira tinae: Feng, 1990: 173, fig. 148.1–4 (not ♂, ♀); Majumder & Tikader, 1991: 140, figs 292–296 (♀). Remarks. This species was described based on male and female specimens collected from Vallabh Vidhyanagar (22 o 32’51.56’’N, 72 o 55’30.50’’E; 41 m alt) in Gujarat. The type material of this species was not examined as it is not deposited in NZC-ZSI. It is noteworthy that Patel and Patel (1973) provided no repository information for this species. The original illustrations, even though they are highly schematic, provide hints regarding similarity of this species with Castianeira zetes Simon, 1897, particularly the shape and orientation of the embolus, and outline of the epigyne. The male pedipalp of this species illustrated in Feng (1990: figs 148.3–4) is, however, not of a Castianeira species, but is of Corinnomma severum (Thorell, 1887) (cf. Feng 1990: fig. 148.3 and Deeleman-Reinhold 2001: fig. 469). The subsequent illustrations of the epigyne of C. tinae (Feng 1990: fig. 148.1–2; Majumder & Tikader 1991: figs 293–294) also indicate its resemblance to C. zetes. However, its synonymy with C. zetes can only be confirmed after examining the type specimen of the species.Published as part of Sankaran, Pradeep M., Caleb, John T. D. & Sebastian, Pothalil A., 2019, New synonymies and transfers in Castianeira Keyserling, 1879 (Araneae, Corinnidae, Castianeirinae) from India, pp. 331-340 in Zootaxa 4623 (2) on page 332, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4623.2.7, http://zenodo.org/record/325549

    Isolation of anaerobic, extremely thermophilic, sulphur metabolising archaebacteria from New Zealand hot springs

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    Enrichments of New Zealand geo-thermal samples, initiated in anaerobic sulphur-containing media and incubated at temperatures above 85°C, yielded rod and coccal shaped organisms which possessed archaebacterial characteristics. Pure cultures were isolated and characterised. Five of the seven isolates, which were rod-shaped organisms and did not have an obligate requirement for sulphur respiration, were similar to Ther-moproteus sp. but had more neutral pH optima for growth. Three of these five Thermoproteus sp. were obligate heterotrophs, which has not previously been reported. The two coccal isolates had an obligate requirement for sulphur as an electron acceptor and were similar to Desulfurococcus sp. but again with more neutral pH optima for growth

    Embedded in the Body: the Poetry, History and Politics of Migritude with Shailja Patel (2021-02-25)

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    Online discussion, reading and Q&A; Thursday, February 25 at 4:00PM CST; Shailja Patel is the bestselling author of Migritude, taught in over 100 colleges and universities worldwide. Patel's poems have been translated into 17 languages, and been featured in the Smithsonian. The Nobel Women's Initiative honored her with a Global Feminist Spotlight. She is currently a Research Associate at Five College Women's Studies Research Center.Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies program; Alworth Institute for International Studies; Department of Anthropology, Sociology & Criminology; English program; Writing Studies programPatel, Shailja. (2021). Embedded in the Body: the Poetry, History and Politics of Migritude with Shailja Patel (2021-02-25). Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/220654

    Figure 2. A–C. Habits. —A. Phegopteris excelsior N. R. Patel & A. V in Phegopteris excelsior (Thelypteridaceae): A New Species of North American Tetraploid Beech Fern

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    Figure 2. A–C. Habits. —A. Phegopteris excelsior N. R. Patel & A. V. Gilman (Gilman 98067 & Lambert, VT). —B. Phegopteris connectilis (Michx.) Watt. (Gilman 2K123, VT). —C. Phegopteris hexagonoptera (Michx.) Fée (Gilman 2K082, VT). D–F. Close-ups of basal pinnae. —D. Phegopteris connectilis (Gilman 2K123, VT). —E. Phegopteris excelsior (Gilman 98067 & Lambert, VT). —F. Phegopteris hexagonoptera (House 289434, UC). The approximate basal pinnae length:width ratio for P. hexagonoptera is 3:1, for P. connectilis 4:1, and for P. excelsior 5:1. The basal pinnae of P. connectilis and P. excelsior are usually widest below the middle, and those of P. connectilis are usually widest above the middle.Published as part of Patel, Nikisha R., Fawcett, Susan & Gilman, Arthur V., 2019, Phegopteris excelsior (Thelypteridaceae): A New Species of North American Tetraploid Beech Fern, pp. 211-218 in Novon, A Journal for Botanical Nomenclature 27 (4) on page 215, DOI: 10.3417/2019409, http://zenodo.org/record/456191

    The Patel trials: further evidence of the need to reform the Griffith Codes

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    This article argues that the two trials of Dr Jayant Patel for criminal medical negligence under s 288 of the Criminal Code 1899 Act (Qld) highlight the inadequacies of the duty provisions in the Griffith Codes of Queensland and Western Australia. The difficulties with these duty provisions extend beyond causation and go to the heart of the construction of the Griffith Codes. The fundamental problem lies in the wording of s 23 of both the Queensland and the Western Australia Codes, the principal section dealing with criminal responsibility, which allows a prosecution for criminal negligence under two alternative routes with different standards of proof, and the importation of common law criminal negligence into the duty provisions in the absence of a specified fault element in the relevant Code sections. It is further contended that other criminal law jurisdictions in Australia, such as the Criminal Code 1995 (Cth), offer a better model for the prosecution of criminal negligence cases that flow from breach of a specified duty. The article has greatly benefited from comments provided to the author by Justice HG Fryberg, who conducted the second Patel trial
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