663 research outputs found

    Specialty farming in Idaho: Selecting a site

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    Bulletin no. 744 Moscow, Idaho :University of Idaho, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension System, 1992-10-01. Author(s): Barney, D.L.; Finnerty, T.L.; Mancuso, C.J

    Specialty farming in Idaho: Is it for me?

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    Bulletin no. 743 Moscow, Idaho :University of Idaho, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension System, 1992-01-01. Author(s): Barney, D.L.; Finnerty, T.L. ; Laughlin, K.M

    Notes on the History of the Sale Room of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo

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    The author retraces the history of the Sale Room of the Cairo Museum, from the first sales at the Boulaq Museum to the more organised ones at the Giza Museum, up to the Sale Room of the Cairo Museum, still exhisting at the beginning of the 1970s. This latter date is attested by some pages of the Register of the Sale Room, of which some photographs are preserved in the Archives of the Statale University of Milan. The supervisors of the Sale Room through the years are presented, as well as some case studies, including the gifts of State

    to T.L. Treadwell, 24 November 1844

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    https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aldrichcorr_b/1076/thumbnail.jp

    Targeted Policing of Muslim Communities and Its Unintended Consequences: A Case Study of the NYPD’s Post-9/11 Counter-terrorism Programme

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    This chapter is a case study of the New York City Police Department’s (NYPD) efforts to prevent al-Qaeda-inspired terrorism with targeted policing of New York area Muslim American communities between 2001 and 2013, and the resulting long-term negative consequences

    [] to T.L. Treadwell, 4 April 1849

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    https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aldrichcorr_b/1229/thumbnail.jp

    Field, capital and the policing habitus: understanding Bourdieu through The NYPD’s post-9/11 counterterrorism practices

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    This article extends existing Bourdieusian theory in criminology and security literature through examining the practices of the New York City Police Department in the post-9/11 counterterrorism field. This article makes several original contributions. First, it explores the resilient nature of the policing habitus, extending Bourdieusian criminological findings that habitus are entrenched and difficult to change. Second, this article examines the way the resilient habitus drives subordinate factions to displace dominant factions in a field’s established social hierarchy through boundary-pushing practices, a concept previously unexamined in Bourdieusian criminology. Drawing on original documentary analysis, this article uses the illustrative example of the NYPD’s post-9/11 counterterrorism practices, exploring how it sought to displace the existing social structure by using its aggressive policing habitus and an infusion of ‘War on Terror’ capital to challenge the dominant position of the FBI in the post-9/11 counterterrorism field. The NYPD’s habitus driven counterterrorism practices were novel and unprecedented, creating strain with both the FBI and local communities

    [?] to T.L. Treadwell, 24 April 1853

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    https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aldrichcorr_c/1140/thumbnail.jp

    Vergelijking tussen het stromingssimulatieprogramma fluent en experimenten in hydrocyclonen

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    Kramers Laboratorium voor Fysische TechnologieApplied Science
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