327,475 research outputs found
Video 1: Supplementary video for Favaro and Duff
<p>In situ recordings of S. maliger feeding attempts in and around traps designed to catch spot prawns (Supplementary video for Favaro and Duff)</p
Mann's Estate, Gosford [cartographic material] : good orchard & farming land on Narara Creek, by order of the Perpetual Trustee Co. Ltd., trustees of settlement of the late Gother Kerr Mann /
Sales plan for Gosford. Includes local sketch and information about terms of sale.; "S.R. Dobbie, licensed surveyor (under R.P. and Mining Acts), Norwich Chambers, Hunter St., Sydney."; "Herbert Robjohns, draftsman, 86 Pitt St., Sydney."; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.map-lfsp975
The Press of the Royal Institution
The essay offers the first detailed account of the Press of the Royal Institution, established in 1801 in order to print the recently launched Journals of the Royal Institution as well as lecture syllabuses, other pedagogical works and a wide range of administrative and promotional documents. Analysing these diverse outputs, the essay also discusses the equipment and finances of the Printing Office, the people associated with it and the symbolism of the Press as an expression of the Institution’s ambitions and public image-building. The relationship with other London printers and booksellers is addressed, as are contemporary developments in printing technology and politically-motivated legislation to regulate the print trade. Later sections explain the reasons for the premature closure of the Printing Office in 1804 and chart its long-term legacy through the work of the printer (and later publisher and author) William Savage and his various collaborators, who included the bibliographer Thomas Frognall Dibdin and, briefly, Samuel Taylor Coleridge.The essay offers the first detailed account of the Press of the Royal Institution, established in 1801 in order to print the recently launched Journals of the Royal Institution as well as lecture syllabuses, other pedagogical works and a wide range of administrative and promotional documents. Analysing these diverse outputs, the essay also discusses the equipment and finances of the Printing Office, the people associated with it and the symbolism of the Press as an expression of the Institution’s ambitions and public image-building. The relationship with other London printers and booksellers is addressed, as are contemporary developments in printing technology and politically-motivated legislation to regulate the print trade. Later sections explain the reasons for the premature closure of the Printing Office in 1804 and chart its long-term legacy through the work of the printer (and later publisher and author) William Savage and his various collaborators, who included the bibliographer Thomas Frognall Dibdin and, briefly, Samuel Taylor Coleridge
duff
duff 1 nTo get your '_duff_' and sugar you had to be able to 'box the compass.' This applied to young fishermen who went to the Labrador on fishing schooners. Duff and sugar was considered a treat, or a popular dessert served after the Jigg's dinner. Apparently it also served as an incentive to youngsters perparing for the fishing occupation. The 'duff' referred to is made with flour water and baking powder, rolled into balls and cooked in the pot with turnip, carrot, potatoes, cabbage, salt meat, and fat back pork. Boxing the compass is saying the copass backward and foward in quarters, e.g. N. to E. , S. to E. , S. to W., N to W. (over).DICT CEN.Used I and SupUsed I and Sup1Not usedThis is from a Newfoundland Folklore Survey card. This is side one of two. Side two is file D_14907
Tim DUFF, Plutarch 's Lives. Exploring Virtue and Vice.
Donnet Daniel. Tim DUFF, Plutarch 's Lives. Exploring Virtue and Vice.. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 71, 2002. pp. 304-305
Duff on the Legitimacy of Punishment of Socially Deprived Offenders
Duff offered an argument for the conclusion that just or legitimate punishment of socially deprived offenders in our unjust society is impossible. One of the claims in his argument is that our courts have the standing to blame an offender only if our polity has the right to do so since our courts are acting as the representatives of, or to use the exact phrases by Duff, "in the name of", or "on behalf of", the whole polity. In this paper I will challenge that claim. I will argue that the courts can be seen as acting, not on behalf of the whole polity, but only on behalf of a subset of its citizens, namely, the just citizens (i. e. the citizens who cannot be seen to have wronged the deprived offenders). © 2012 The Author(s).published_or_final_versionSpringer Open Choice, 25 May 201
Is Accomplice Liability Superfluous?
Preferred Citation: R.A. Duff, Response, Is Accomplice Liability Superfluous?, 156 U. Pa. L. Rev. PENNumbra 444 (2008), http://www.pennumbra.com/responses/04-2008/Duff.pdf
Legal Obligation and the Criminal Law
Antony Duff’s contribution is concerned with the obligations that we might be held to have in relation to the criminal law. In this context, Duff makes two main arguments. First, criminal law theorists often describe the criminal law’s offence definitions as ‘prohibitions’ that citizens are obligated to obey: though this way of talking fits naturally with talk of the criminal law as imposing obligations, it is at best misleading: these offence definitions should not, typically, be understood as imposing obligations to refrain from the conduct they define as criminal, or as consisting in prohibitions that we are to obey. Second, theorists of political obligation also commonly take it that that obligation is an obligation to obey the law. Duff notices that this implies an overly deferential attitude towards the law on the part of citizens; we should instead talk of the responsibility of citizens of a democratic republic to play an active role in the enterprise of criminal law, as part of the larger civic enterprise of self-government under the rule of law
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