Academe is at it again, allowing a one-sided, biased article on the Israeli-Palestinian issue. |
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It is also precisely what we need to sustain us during our sojourn in the groves of Academe. |
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Academe was once thought too high-minded for such cheapening accommodations, but apparently that is no longer so. |
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To what extent does the UFA program reduce the barriers for women and Aboriginal people considering a career in Academe? |
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Furthermore, the goals and system of rewards in academe often appear conflicted. |
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A hundred portraits line the corridors of academe, while offices, lecture rooms and even dining halls boast original art. |
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Those of you who might naively imagine that vitriolic historical disputation is a transient phenomenon of Australian academe should think again. |
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Grand designs to remake nations are dreamed up in the groves of academe and the corridors of power. |
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Or maybe in the groves of academe, not all offensive speech is created equal. |
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He looks as if he would be more at home in the still places of academe than in the hurly-burly of political life. |
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Others concur that a doctorate is a prerequisite to advancement to many of the positions with the most power in academe. |
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The project, based at Pennsylvania State University, focuses on work and family issues in academe. |
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Still, such practices in academe help legitimate the even more extreme forms now commonplace in corporate America. |
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I would go even further by suggesting that when gross imbalances exist they bespeak pathological symptoms in academe. |
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Significant changes are going to happen in academe regardless of what a faculty or an administration desires. |
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Research on faculty retention also documents the unique contributions that faculty of color make to academe. |
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As a consequence, two-year college faculty are implicitly marginalized and devalued within academe. |
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But when we consider the status of women in academe, we may confront not so much a myth as a glass half empty or half full. |
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Thus the decision to leave academe often reflected problems in academia, not irresistible temptations outside. |
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I realized that most of my mentoring came from places outside academe and art institutions. |
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The first two factors are relevant to the advancement of women not only in academe but in the broader society, too. |
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As a result, their decisions can sometimes disregard the values of academe. |
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Student privacy has always been a hot-button issue in academe, and faculty are often on the front lines of this debate. |
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The leadership academe is the only aiguillette allowed on the right shoulder. |
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Just as academe got bashed for appropriating jazz, this show will face criticism for its heady approach. |
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These are a few of the big ideas being vigorously researched and heatedly discussed by some of the brightest minds in academe. |
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The caps, gowns, and diplomas may look the same, but the groves of academe have changed radically over the past quarter century. |
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You might try one of the online job-listing services focusing on academe. |
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At the age of 95 he turned up at his old university in Canberra to protest against the federal government's meanness to academe. |
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Among the authors' best pieces of advice is that companies should ape academe and form hiring committees to vet candidates and make offers. |
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Perhaps the stakes in the groves of academe are not always that low, after all. |
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Why were those who work on defence and security issues in academe either silent or part of the larger effort to secure this deal? |
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With increased specialization in academe, and the vast increase in globalization there is an increasing demand for knowledge of other cultures. |
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Opportunities to bring experts together, including those outside academe, need to be enhanced. |
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One of the major quarrels in academe over the past decade has been the validity of the arguments about such a class of civilizations. |
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In academe women's presence is scarce at decanal levels and higher. |
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But the biggest threat lurks in the leafy groves of academe. |
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These studies, while important, mask individual differences in academe. |
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Few faculty enter academe with the assumption that students are customers. |
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Proposals were reviewed against a detailed set of criteria by a panel of experts from government departments, academe and industry. |
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Additionally, reciprocal exchanges between industry and academe was suggested as a best practice. |
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Amid the groves of academe, entrenched in the ivy covered tranquil buildings, there lurks more politics, latent hostility and simply bad manners than one can imagine. |
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When ideas or concepts emanate from the academe, the transfer from research to policy becomes more complicated and potentially less timely. |
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Born of recessionary, disenchanted times, Pictures art shared menacingly cynical attitudes toward mainstream culture with punk rock, in night-life venues, and with deconstructionist lucubration, in academe. |
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Inclusionary practices enable disadvantaged groups to partake in academe and contribute to the vibrancy of our universities through their expertise and their divergent experiences. |
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We forge productive partnerships between business, government and academe. |
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Two advisory meetings convened knowledge users from several levels of government, industry and civil society along with sustainability researchers from academe. |
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The Executive Committee of the Commission is composed of 16 members representing government departments and agencies, professional associations and academe. |
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While competition has always been a force in academe and can help produce excellence, it can also contribute to a decline in a sense of academic community, mission and traditional values. |
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We get bids from business or academe on what to do with that money to develop new science and technology, and businesses that flow out from that sector. |
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Various outreach mechanisms to address these matters already exist in Canadian society in academe, in non-governmental organizations and institutions, in the legal profession, and through the media. |
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Invariably anything Hamletic intimates a large world and major problems, and who could question the rightness of this suggestion for the humanities, in academe or outside? |
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